75 Meter Turnstile Antenna
During the past several Virginia QSO Parties, members in our club have experimented with several antenna solutions.
Some have the big bad beam high in the sky with an 80 meter dipole added.
Others have smaller beams and more wire antennas.
Others go mobile on VHF and HF.
Still others go expedition and construct antennas that lend themselves towards portability.
I am considering added a 75 meter turnstile antenna to my station.
My club is very active in the Virginia QSO Party. All members have supplied their logs for analysis with Cabrillo Analyzer resulting in these graphs of QSOs over time categorized by band…
80 meter contacts are shown in dark purple. It is quite obvious the band that brings in the points is King 80.
During our sunspot minimum we figure concentrating on 80 and 40 antennas for VAQP 2009 is essential. 20 and 15 are important too. 10 is almost pointless except for some local contacts.
Last year my 75 meter inverted V worked just fine. The apex was about 50 feet up with the wire tips dropping to within ten feet of the ground. This plus several other antennas worked OK. NVIS was most certainly the rule for 80 and 40 this contest.
For 2009 I am wondering if there is something more I can do with 75 and 80 meters. I read some notes about ionospheric sounding techniques that sometimes uses turnstile antennas to transmit their ping upwards and most always use turnstile dipole sets to receive the reflected ping from the ionized layers.
Is this a technique I can use to improve my 75 meter antenna’s performance?
If I create two inverted v antennas arranged orthogonally in EZNEC, but not quite touching at the top…
…and feed feed each like a normal dipole with 90 degrees phase difference between them…
…we get…

75 meter CP pattern for turnstile
Research on the Internet reveals little information except for the occasional “Wow, so and so was sure loud with his 75 meter turnstile.” This is enough for me to at least try this.
The ionosphere folks suggest providing a way to switch the handedness of the polarization by simply inverting the connections of one of the feeds. If I have enough time I will put together a relay box that can select one, the other, both in RHCP or both in LHCP. It will be an experiment.
Listen for kx4o during the weekend of March 20 on 80 meters and tell me if you think my turnstile antenna is worth the effort.
Tags: circular polarization, cp, nvis, turnstile





Last year’s results with this turnstile antenna on 75/80 meters were positive during the March Virginia QSO Party. NVIS contacts were made with ease and the band was almost too loud.
This antenna will be going up again for this QSO Party again this year.