Click on image to enlarge

* Yaesu FT-1000 MP

*Icom IC 706 MK II G HF/6M/2M/70cm

* Yaesu FT 51 Handy and FT 5100 Base both Dual Bander (VHF/UHF)

* Kenwood TL922 A (3500Zx2)

*MFJ 989 C 3KW. tunner - * MFJ artificial ground

* Daiwa 80w. amp. VHF bilineal

* Shure 526T S2 mic - Yaesu MD1 Mic - Headset Heil with HC4/HC5

*W2IHY 8 band audio EQ and noise gate

*RigExpert digimode interface

* Pentium IV 2.4Mhz PC - Centrino Notebook - 1Mb Internet Acces

and other little things...

   

Special thanks to LU1YE, LU4YT, LU7YS, LU7YW and LU7YZ

Click on image to enlarge

* SpiderBeam Heavy Duty (20,17,15,12 y 10m)

* Cubical Quad 6 bands (20/17/15/12/10 and 6m.)

*JVP 34DX 4 el. (20/15/10m.)

*  40m. Rotary Dipole

* 80 to 10m. Rombi Dipole

* Carabajal C35 Tower - 18 meters -Galvanized 1 inch tubbing

* Walmar Heavy Duty rotor - Inside of the tower

* VHF/UFH  5el. phased yagis and Vertical

* Amertiron RCS-10 Remote-External antenna switch

 

 

OLD TIMES - The beautiful "Wind Knot" and the "Watermill" setup

Click to see

This was the only way to make a rotor last some time. To resist the strong winds we have in this part of the world I used a watermill tower made of galvanized iron and a "home made" rotor protection device system. Wind frequently blow at speeds over 100 km/h. (... a nice spring breeze ...) and do "knots" as you can see with a "dream duo": a two elements yagi for 40mts. and  a four elements 20/15/10 mts. This happened 24 hours after I finished with the very hard job of putting the 40 beam "on the air". Things like this happen here all the time...

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