There is a lot of controversy surrounding the Double Bazooka Coaxial Dipole.
Its bandwidth claims have sometimes been exaggerated.On this page I give details of how to build two different versions of the Double Bazooka Antenna.
One antenna uses all coax the other uses coax and twin lead for the antenna.
A DOUBLE BAZOOKA antenna is an extremely broad banded Half Wave Antenna which can operate efficiently across an entire Ham band with little change to the SWR.
The BAZOOKA antenna design was developed by the staff of M.I.T. in the early 1940's for use by the U.S. Government as a radar antenna.
It was modified for amateur radio use in the 1950's.
This unique design eliminates the need for antenna matching baluns and can be fed directly with 50 Ohm coax.
The DOUBLE BAZOOKA is 98% efficient and typically provides S.W.R. readings of less than 2:1 over the entire amateur band.
Since this antenna has no exposed metal wire static charges can not build up thus reducing noise by 6dB over antennas constructed of exposed wire.
The DOUBLE BAZOOKA antenna will handle full legal limit power with no effect to performance.
The DOUBLE BAZOOKA is recommended to be mounted in an inverted "V" configuration for optimum results.
However the DOUBLE BAZOOKA can be configured horizontally with equally good results.
The 80 Meter DOUBLE BAZOOKA antenna will operate on 80 through 10 meters with the aid of an antenna tuner.
The following chart gives overall antenna lengths and recommended height placement above
ground for a single DOUBLE BAZOOKA.
|
BAND
|
ANTENNA
LENGTH
|
RECOMMENDED
CENTER HEIGHT ABOVE GROUND
|
RECOMMENDED
END HEIGHT ABOVE GROUND
|
|
17 M
|
25.4 feet |
25 - 35 feet |
7 - 10 feet |
| 20 M |
32.4 feet |
25 - 35 feet |
7 - 10 feet |
| 40 M |
64.0 feet |
25 - 35 feet |
10 - 15 feet |
| 80 M |
121.0 feet |
40 - 60 feet |
15 - 20 feet |
| 160 M |
248.0 feet |
60 - 90 feet |
15 - 20 feet |
|