R7
Vertical...Maintenance and Repair
The Cushcraft R5 and R7
verticals are favorites of mine, ever since Alex
EI6AG, my friend and "Elmer" for many years, gave me a present of
a set of faulty R7 traps.. It was fun to repair the
traps, and then "home brew" the rest of the antenna, including the
matching box..
Many thanks to Joe
Reisert W1JR, whose advice helped me get it up and running. Thanks
also to Dave Moore EI4BZ, who allowed me to dissect his R5 "Black
Box" in the name of Science...!
I like the idea of the
1/2 w/l radiator, as against the usual 1/4 w/l fed against
ground.. My "home brew" version works extremely well, and I use
it as my "standby" and "reference" antenna.
(Circuit diagram of
the matchbox)
There are a few problems
which arise from time to time in older units.. especially in
wet and windy areas.. or close to the Sea.
Varying,
or high SWR on one or two bands.
This is
usually caused by bad connections on the trap clamping arms.
They should be carefully loosened, moved aside, and the contact
area cleaned with steel wool. When clean, the area should be
greased with Vaseline, or one of those dissimilar metal contact
greases used by the electrical power utilities.
If this treatment doesn't
work, and you still have high SWR one band, Then you have a
....
Faulty
trap.
Traps usually go
faulty because the heat shrink seal on the trap fails, and water
gets inside the coaxial "trombone" capacitors on the traps. If the
inside of the tube gets wet,
this changes the dielectric constant of the capacitor, and the
value of the capacitor changes, thus moving the resonant frequency
of the trap. You will find that the SWR minimum point has moved,
and normal adjustment will not bring it back on
frequency.
If this situation
is not corrected, eventually the capacitor will short out,
especially if you're running high power..
Running high
power into a bad SWR can eventually destroy the matching
unit..!!!! More on that later...
To repair the
trap, you must carefully note the length that the capacitor "rod"
extends out of the "Tube". The rod can slide in and out of the
tube, and is one plate of the capacitor, so you need to get it
back the way it was before you dismantled it...!
Carefully dismantle this
capacitor. Dry and clean all of the components, and reassemble.
Re-seal the tube with "self-amalgamating" tape.
All should now be well
again...
If the insulator tubing is badly
damaged, you should go to Gerry
VE6LB's page . He has a great method of
repairing traps using Hot Melt Glue. When you see the
original damaged trap, you'll be amazed that it could ever
be fixed.. Well done Gerry!
If you have high SWR on ALL bands, then
you probably have a
Faulty Matching
Unit..
A -
Matching capacitors. These are a pair of 86pF in series,
to give an actual value of 40/50pF. These can, and do go
open-circuit. Replace them with a single HIGH CURRENT type (doorknob) of 50pF if you can. ( I use three 15pF caps
in parallel)
B - 4:1 BALUN transformer. These can actually
disintegrate with bad SWR and high power...Ouch !! Replace with an
Amidon Iron Dust core T200-2 wound as in pic
above. Or with a Q1 material
Ferrite core ( FT240-61) wound with 6 bifilar turns (as against
11 in the pic above).
C - This antenna, being asymmetrically fed, needs
an effective Choke Balun to keep RF from the exterior of
your feedline. This should not give any
trouble...But if it does, an Iron Dust Core will NOT work here.. I use a ferrite core, Q1
material.
D
- Make sure that all hardware connections are clean and
secure
E - Moisture release vent.
F
- Feed point (SO239)
G - PC board .
H - RF choke effectively DC grounds the radiator
to help prevent static electricity from entering your
shack. If everything else looks OK in
the unit, and the SWR is high on ALL bands.. Disconnect this
choke. After heavy static, turns on the choke can become shorted.
This damage may be impossible to see with the naked
eye.
( Pic of my home brew
R7 matchbox.. Not as pretty as the commercial one, but works just
as well! )
Measure your trap
frequencies..
It's a good idea to take a note of your trap's
frequencies, in case you need to repair one in the
future..
I measured my traps under the following
conditions..
Disconnect Each trap unit from the rest of the
antenna.
My measurements were taken with the trap
unit resting on a large cardboard box, well away from all metallic
objects..
I used my MFJ 259 analyzer with a piece of
insulated wire , configured as a single loop around the end of the
coil on the trap assembly.
Vary the frequency on the MFJ until a strong dip
is seen..
Now move the single turn link away from the end
of the coil, while retuning for the dip, until a very shallow dip
(least loading on the trap) is seen, and take note of the
frequency read out.
Make sure that you do not touch any part of the
trap while taking the reading.
These readings, though not strictly accurate
because of the loading effect of the attached tubing and hardware,
are very useful.
Make a note of your readings for each band, and
keep them safe. If, in the future, you need to readjust a
trap, then you can set it to the original reading.
I obtained the following readings from my
R7...
TV1
10m 26.5
mHz
12m 23.2
TV2 15m 20.05
TV3
17m 17.5
TV4
20m 12.85
TV5
30m 9.73
You can see from these readings, how the
hardware loads the traps, and gives a lower frequency reading than
the actual.
Ken KA1VMR, who was very helpful to me, told me
that Cushcraft, when making these traps, used a Signal generator
and oscilloscope to set up the traps on the following
frequencies..
TV1
10m 28
mHz
12m 24
TV2 15m 21.2
TV3
17m 18.11
TV4
20m 14.47
TV5
30m 10.25
Any manuals that you may require for
these antennae are available in .PDF format from the Cushcraft
website
.