®

My Favorite Multi-Band Antenna

The "WINDOM"

By G. E. "Buck" Rogers Sr;  K4ABT

In September of 1949, I was tired of climbing poles and trees to move, remove, add, or change my single-band HF antenna's.  I had used single band dipoles and doublets for almost every HF Amateur band.  I had tried a few "long-wire" and Zepps, but again, operation was restricted to single band operation, maybe two bands at most.

I had heard of the "Windom" and read a few articles about the Windom, but most of my thoughts were ... ho-hum.. just another dipole fed a bit off-center.  Then one evening at a meeting of the GARC in the old "Sea Scouts" club house near the Coosa River in Gadsden, Alabama; I heard some of my "elmers" Gale Caudle (then W4CFB), Jack Kennamer W4YPC, Bob Bynum W4USM, Vic W4CWF, Ed Elkins W4CDI, Homer Dupree W4OZK... and others discussing the Windom all-band HF antenna.  It was when Jack mentioned using one (Windom), on most all HF bands "without an antenna tuner"  that my ears went directional!

It was that last phrase that really caught my attention.  "most all HF bands, without an antenna tuner....etc"  What !  A multi-band HF antenna without a tuner?   Surely I had been blessed. 

To think that I could put up a Windom, and no longer have to climb the poles and trees to hang another (single band) HF antenna was great news to me.  To be able to use it without an antenna tuner was icing-on-the-cake.  For a kid without any extra funds, an antenna tuner was a luxury that I could not afford.  Even my transmitter was a single 807 rig I homebrewed on an old Atwater-Kent radio chassis, my grand-father had given me.

In those days, a BALUN was unheard of.  My Elmer's described, a means of connecting the coax to the off-center fed antenna using a nine (9) turn coil of the coax feed-line at the feed point.  This coil of feedline coax formed a "de-coupling" loop.  The de-coupling loop provided a crude means of matching the feed coax to the antenna, and at the same time, it would reduce the "re-radiation" (RF currents) along the outside (shield) of the feeder coax.

Today we have toroid cores and BALUN devices that provide a more efficient means of coupling RF energy to the antenna (reducing the VSWR, "standing-waves"), while performing better impedance matching.  In the drawing shown above, I've drawn the exact dimensions of the Windom I built in 1949.  The only differences in my Windom of 1949 and today are:

1) the material the insulators are made of, and
2) I've substituted a 4 to 1 BALUN for the 9 turn, 8 inch diameter, decoupling loop.

We're having fun, on PSK31     73 de BucK4ABT

The "Windom Antenna" was described by Loren G. Windom in QST magazine, September 1929.
Pages 19 through 22.  It is named after its inventor/designer.

CLICK HERE:  and  read more about the evolution of the WINDOM, to ZEPP, to VHF J-POLE.

4:1  BALUN
(and 1:1 BALUN)
BUX BALUN 41 is used to feed Dipoles and off-center-fed HF antennas.  Prevents high VSWR, and provides maximum transfer of RF energy to your HF antenna.

50 ohm, SO-239 unbalanced input

Balanced output

3.5 to 30 MHz

Power Rating; 250 Watts

Toroid (current type) design

Lightweight construction

Sealed against moisture

4:1 Balun, Order No. BUXBALUN 41  $24.95

1:1 Balun also available, Stock No. BUXBALUN 11 $24.95

ANTENNA  INSULATORS

Weatherproof, (TENYTE) insulators.  Perfect for your DIPOLE or Windom antenna.
For the apartment dweller, you can now hang the 20 meter doublet in the attic.   I've QSO'd with stations all over the world with the 33 ft dipole in my garage attic.  One insulator at the center, and one each end.   It's great for other HF WINDOM and single-band dipole antennas.  Dielectric strength is comparable to the old ceramic insulators, without susceptibility to cracking or breakage under impact or severe temperature change.

Package of   3,     $4.95
Order No.    3INSULTR

SECURE, On-line order form, Click Here!

FAX or Mail order form, Click Here!

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G. E. 'Buck' Rogers Sr K4ABT d/b/a BUX CommCo™® ©
Copyright © 1996-2002
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