Such antennas are several hundred dollars new. The A50-3S was used from a local club for $80. Yes, I'm cheap, but it has served me well. Since then, I've been looking for a reasonable, used antenna. I'm even willing to do some minor repairs.
As I was leaving the Dalton, GA hamfest at the end of February, I stopped by a tailgate area where a guy had a trailer load of stuff. I could see a Cushcraft tribander, a Hy-Gain tribander, house brackets, guy brackets, feed lines, a gin pole and other stuff. I wondered if he might have something for 6m. So I asked.
The owner wasn't present, so his kid called him on a digital walkie-talkie. He said he had a 5-element Cushcraft 6m beam. By the time he made it back to the trailer, we pulled it out, and he changed his tune, he said it was a 6-element Hy-Gain beam. You could see the gamma feed on the driven element.
Sounded great to me. I negotiated him down to 63% of his asking price, and walked away with the antenna bundle for $125. Sweet.
Getting home, before I took the antenna off the truck, I went looking for Hy-Gain six-element 6m antennas. I found manuals for models 66B and VB-66DX. They are very similar. The VB-66DX appears to be a hardware-update of the 66B design. These antennas are also fed with a beta-match, not a gamma-match. What I bought is not a Hy-Gain antenna.
Taking the antenna off the truck, cutting it apart and laying the pieces out on the deck.What I found was surprising:
REF - 3/4" Al - 9' 9" - 117"The components I purchased - DE - 3/4" Al - 9' 2" - 110" (Gamma match)
- D1 - 3/4" Al - 8' 9" - 105"
- D2 - 3/4" Al - 8' 8" - 104"
- D3 - 3/4" Al - 8' 7" - 103"
- Misc - 1/2" Al - 50" - Swaged to 5/8" last 6" (2) - Hy-Gain bracket adds 1 1/2" - 101 1/2" total
- Boom - 1 1/4" Al totalling 24 feet in three sections with 1" thicker wall inner tubing
First five elements mount with a single 1 3/4" U-bolt and saddle in the center. The Misc segments could mount in a single Hy-Gain bracket, giving a total element length of 101 1/2" -- which might be a forth director.
Gamma match is a total of 16" 1/2", most of which is a 1/4" Aluminum rod. The shorting bar is at 14 1/2". The first 1 1/2" is a 1/2" Al tube flattened at one end for a screw. The open end hid a disc ceramic capacitor that sadly I broke in transit. Looks like a 3-6 kV capacitor, value unknown.
The boom is a piece of work. There are three 1" Al pipe sections: 75 3/4", 144", 68". The 68" section has a 156" piece of 3/4"Al pipe with a ticker wall as reinforcement. It is mounted asymmetrically, so more of the end extends into the 144" piece than the 75 3/4" piece. There is no boom to mast bracket.
I'll note that the boom is aluminum pipe. Not tubing. It's designed to carry liquids, not be structural.
Clearly, this is not the parts to a Hy-Gain nor a Cushcraft 6m beam. First off, no commercial 6m beam ships with single-tubing size elements. They all use a taper schedule. There are two good reasons for this. 1) It makes the antenna adjustable. 2) they can ship sections shorter than 7 feet, which allows the package to go UPS,
These parts are a collection different ideas. The U-bolt mounting is Cushcraft-style, but the boom size is too small for a Cushcraft. The boom is 24 feet long, but it is clearly not a Hy-Gain. The boom is way too small, since Hy-Gain used a 2" boom. Plus, it apparently had a truss (now broken), probably because the for the 24 foot length.
What I appear to have is a collection of parts used to cobble together a poor imitation of something like the Hy-Gain 66B / VB-66DX. Not at all what the guy at the hamfest told me.
There's plenty here to put together a solid five element beam on a 12 to 18 foot boom. The elements are already cut. The hard question is how far should they be spaced? Once I know what the right spacing is, I would then know how much boom I need.
The broken gamma match is annoying, but fixable. Once I know where to place the elements....
This project is going to take some work.