QST ARTICLE BIBLIOGRAPHY - Antennas, 160-40 Meter Thank you for requesting the following information from the ARRL Technical Information Service (TIS) or the ARRL Automated Information Server (Internet: info@arrl.org). ARRL HQ is glad to provide this information free of charge as a service to League members and affiliated clubs. For your convenience, you may reproduce this information, electronically or on paper, and distribute it to anyone who needs it, provided that you reproduce it in its entirety and do so free of charge. Paper copies of these bibliographies are available from the ARRL Technical Department Secretary. Send a separate SASE for each bibliography desired to: ARRL Administrative Headquarters Technical Department Secretary 225 Main St. Newington, CT 06111 Electronic copies are also available from the following: Telephone bulletin boards: N8EMR - (614) 895-2553 ARRL - (203) 666-0578 Internet sites: Info@arrl.org (E-mail only: Send an E-mail with the message text "Help" for instructions) oak.oakland.edu (FTP - pub/hamradio/arrl/infoserver) ------------------------------------------------------------------- ARTICLE REPRINT INFORMATION Article reprints can be obtained from the Technical Department Secretary at the address or phone number below. The nominal fee for article reprints is $3 per article, which you will be billed. ARRL Administrative Headquarters 225 Main St. Newington, CT 06111 Telephone: (203) 666-1541 Back issues can be obtained from the Circulation Department at the address or phone number above. Back issues are $5, and quantities are limited. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Note: There is a lot of antenna information contained in the following ARRL publications: The ARRL Antenna Book The ARRL Handbook W1FB's Antenna Notebook Antenna Compendium HF Antennas for All Locations Yagi Antenna Design "Low-Band DXing" contains 160-40 M antenna information and theory, as well as a few practical antenna descriptions. 1978 June QST p. 16 Build This Novice Four-Band Vertical 1979 February QST p. 33 A 40-Meter Midget April QST p. 32 A Big Signal from a Small Lot July QST p. 19 Putting the Quarter-Wave Sloper to Work On 160 QST p. 20 Additional Notes on the Half Sloper October QST p. 40 The Log-Periodic V array 1980 May QST p. 31 The Half-Sloper - Succesful Deployment is an Enigma June QST p. 32 A Two-Band Half-Sloper Antenna October QST p. 38 A Deluxe RV 5-Band Trap Vertical December QST p. 36 Broad-Band 80-Meter Antenna 1981 February QST p. 19 Combined Vertical Directivity 3 pages March QST p. 40 A Kite-Supported 160- (or 80-) Meter 3 pages Antenna April QST p. 32 The ZS6U Minishack Special May QST p. 15 Coaxial Cable Antenna Traps September QST p. 27 A Modest 45-Foot DX Vertical for 160, 80, 40 and 30 Meters October QST p. 31 More Thoughts on the Confounded Sloper November QST p. 26 Compact Multi-Band Antennas without Traps 1982 January QST p. 11 The Classic Beverage Antenna, Revisited 7 pages February QST p. 23 The "Lowbander's" One-Antenna Farm 2 pages March QST p. 27 Dual Full-Wave Loop Antenna 1 page June QST p. 18 Try the "TJ" 2 pages QST p. 40 A 40-Meter Quad, the EZ Way 2 pages 1983 January QST p. 20 The Inverted-L Revisited (160-m) 2 pages QST p. 22 Beverage Antennas for Amateur 6 pages Communications February QST p. 20 Efficient Ground Systems for Vertical 6 pages Antennas March QST p. 36 The Two-Band Delta-Loop Antenna 2 pages April QST p. 22 The Search for a Simple Broad-Band 5 pages 80-Meter Dipole June QST p. 15 Lightweight Trap Antennas - Some 4 pages Thoughts August QST p. 14 The Boom-Excited Beam Antenna 2 pages September QST p. 25 A Top-Fed Vertical Antenna for 1.8 MHz 3 pages November QST p. 27 Dual-Frequency Antenna-Traps 4 pages 1984 January QST p. 37 A New Antenna Twist - The "Windom J-L" 3 pages July QST p. 26 The Half-Delta Loop Goes Rectangular 4 pages October QST p. 24 The Full-Wave Delta Loop at Low Height 3 pages 1985 February QST p. 21 Build a 4-X Array for 160 Meters 7 pages May QST p. 26 Multiband Trap and Parellel HF Dipoles 6 pages A Comparison QST p. 37 A Remotely Switched, Inverted L Ant. 3 pages November QST p. 20 The Loop Skywire 3 pages 1986 April QST p. 23 A Truly Broadband Antenna for 80/75 3 pages Meters QST p. 26 The KI60 160-Meter Linear Loaded Sloper 1 page August QST p. 21 Construct a Wire Log-Periodic Dipole 4 pages Array for 80 or 40-Meters October QST p. 27 Broadband Dipoles - Some New Insights 12 pages November QST p. 26 How to Build a 160-Meter "Shortie" 4 pages 1988 April QST p. 30 On-ground Low-noise Receiving Antennas August QST p. 15 Preamplifer for 80- and 160-Meter Antennas 1989 March QST p. 29 Collinear Phased Antennas for the HF Band April QST p. The Coaxial-Resonator Match and the Broadband Dipole 1990 March QST p. 26 Evolution of the Short Top-Loaded Vertical April QST p. 28 Loading Coils for 160-Meter Antennas August QST p. 28 The Off-Center-Fed Dipole Revisited: A Broadband, Multiband Antenna November QST p. 30 The 160-Meter Antenna Dilemma 1991 June QST p. 23 Antenna Here is a Dipole July QST p. 38 A Simple, Effective Dual-Band Inverted-L Antenna 1992 May QST p. 49 Phased Driven Arrays for the Low Bands July QST p. 35 Build a Space-Efficient Dipole Antenna for 40, 80 and 160 Meters October QST p. 45 Home-Brewing Large Antenna Coils 1993 March QST p. 22 The NRY: A Simple, Effective Wire Antenna for 80 through 10 Meters April QST p. 24 Fighting Antenna Corrosion June QST p. 32 A Small Loop Antenna for 160 Meters August QST p. 31 A High-Directivity Receiving Antenna for 3.8 MHz September QST p. 27 A Simple Broadband Dipole for 80 Meters September QST p. 33 The 1/3-Wavelength Multiband Dipole