OH...yes...I've heard of NVIS antennas. My base station antenna..is a long wire loop antenna consisting of a 500 foot 12 gauge stranded roll of Lowes black insulated wire run through the tops of the trees on my property....and hooked up to a tuner. I've tuned this through the 50 MHZ band...from down to the AM broadcasting band.... ICOM 706 MK II and the G90 Xiegu Radios.
I keep a G5RV antenna and coaxial cable rolled up in the back of my truck for when I am traveling and want to temporarily set something up more efficient than my truck mounted antennas. MY truck rig is a Yaesu FT 100 D....and I like it very much.
Oh..and the Olde Elmers were correct and as time went on ..with experience...you learn that you don't always have to run gobs and gobs of power....and antenna efficiency is a big part of that. Antenna Efficiency./.System Efficiency is a huge part of radio operations.
I've made the trip to my friend's home in Eastern Tennessee a distance of some 400 miles on 5 watts on LSB mode on 75 meters. Before any lower put me down in the weeds so to speak.
A certain amount/kind of efficiency is always a good thing nor matter what kind of labors or tasks in which one is involved. One tries to be efficient without getting too complexity involved...which brings to mind another olde military saying....the KISS principle....Keep It Simple Stupid!!
The two seem to run together...quite well if properly applied...
And NVIS antennas fit the bill for me....Efficient and Simple...
Oh...and you are correct Tugaloo..in that many preppers are not naturally inclined with radios or antennas.
People like us are more naturally inclined and have certain curiosities...also we tend towards wanting to know if we can cut it...if we can do it ...make the grade...problem solve..have the right stuff so to speak.
A kind of natural curiosity in this arena.
Oh...this brings to mind something I told a prepper at work about security...
He was asking about scramblers..on radios....
There are some available, but most I've seen at any affordable cost are inverters..and invert the audio on the microphone...
This meaning that all one has to do is select the correct sideband mode and unscramble...most do not know or are not aware of this about voice inverters/scramblers.
A more simple and efficient manner of security in radio operations would be split frequency....but takes some skill and learning/experience to do this well. Transmit on one frequency and receive on another. The individual to whom you are speaking does this in reverse...receives on your transmit frequency and transmits on your receive frequency.
I have used this method...on occasion and some newer radios can be set up to do this automatically with the key up of the microphone.
This is also how one learns to operate one's radio when the channels/Frequencies are packed/crowded.
Thanks,
Orangetom
Not an Ishmaelite.
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