I receive many questions about the arrow antenna and tripod mounting used in my AO-51 video. This video covers, what the arrow antenna is, where to buy it, and how it mounts to the tripod. I show show how easily the antenna is assembled. I forgot to mention, the antenna got its name from using arrows as the elements. Please click on the rating stars below the picture. Links: Arrow Antennas – www.arrowantennas.com AES – www.aesham.com HRO – www.hamradio.com Antenna Warehouse – www.antennawarehouse.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Video showing bracket
Video Rating: 4 / 5

50 replies
  1. KC2QBU
    KC2QBU says:

    I agree with Sparky. Did you just drill through the boom of the arrow? I guess you have to be careful not to hit the duplexer!

    73
    Chris

    Reply
  2. K7AGE
    K7AGE says:

    The arrow antenna boom is drilled and tapped for a 1/4-20 standard tripod thread. The hole in my bracket allow the tripod screw to pass through the bracket and screw into the boom. It is a bit tricky to assemble. Randy

    Reply
  3. Hamgeek
    Hamgeek says:

    Very nice set-up. Is there any way that you can draw up the schematic on this and share? New to home-brew, very interesting to hear it working. Keep up the good work.

    Reply
  4. K7AGE
    K7AGE says:

    There isn’t much to it that you don’t see. I made the long part about 18″ to match the length of half of the 2 M elements. Then it fits to the roll up case that all of the antenna elements and boom fit into. Randy

    Reply
  5. k7nhb
    k7nhb says:

    Randy, How do you attach the Arrow itself to the aluminum bracket. The handle/foam area seems a bit short. Do you use hose clamps? Does the angle aluminum extend beyond the foam handle to the antenna boom? Thank you and 73, Paul

    Reply
  6. K7AGE
    K7AGE says:

    It just overlaps the boom by a couple of inches. It has a hole in it to allow the tripod screw to pass through the bracket then into the boom. Randy

    Reply
  7. lioii
    lioii says:

    My Arrow antenna isn’t drilled to accept the tripod screw. I’ll do it myself but I think I’ll make the bracket out of plastic.

    Reply
  8. stewartx5
    stewartx5 says:

    Greetings, Randy. Have a quick question. By adding aluminum to the antenna boom, wouldn’t that couple somewhat with the antenna causing a change in the radiating pattern and perhaps an increase in the SWR? Even if insulated from the boom itself (with rubber gaskets or whatever), it would seem metal so immediately close to an antenna would surely couple causing umpredictable results. Given that, wood or plastic would seem a better choice for the bracket.

    Reply
  9. K7AGE
    K7AGE says:

    I don’t think extending the boom messes up the pattern very much. I think the pattern is probably more affected by holding the antenna close to your body. The antenna still seems directional. It works. Randy

    Reply
  10. KC2RBE
    KC2RBE says:

    Hey Randy, Thank you for the great video. Great idea to use the block of wood as a spacer at the bottom of the boom to form a HT holder. The simplest solutions are always the best.
    -73-
    Patrick KC2RBE

    Reply
  11. Qstick333
    Qstick333 says:

    I like your bracket a lot. When I tried to mount my arrow on a tripod mount, it seemed that the screw went too far in and I was worried about puncturing the duplexer cables etc…How tight do you fasten the screw and what do you do to prevent that?

    Reply
  12. K7AGE
    K7AGE says:

    @Qstick333 I don’t think that was a problem for me. The duplexer must be out of the way. Or, my tripod screw was not very long.

    Reply
  13. USNERDOC
    USNERDOC says:

    Randy – Great informative video of the Dual Band Arrow Yagi and your tripod mounting system. I just got the 2-meter Arrow Yagi for backpacking and look forward to adding the Dual Band for satellite work in the future. Would be great to log a QSO with K7AGE in the future! 73’s KF7ETX

    Reply
  14. K7AGE
    K7AGE says:

    @layed39 Distance on V/UHF is mainly line of sight. The higher you are the further you can work. This is why repeaters are up high. For the car a common 5/8 2M antenna works good.

    Reply
  15. paulobrasilhawaii
    paulobrasilhawaii says:

    Aloha Randy.
    I just got my antenna 2 weeks after watch your video, thanks for all informations.
    73
    PU2LPQ/KH6 – Paulo

    Reply
  16. thegeoffphillips
    thegeoffphillips says:

    Just ordered the antenna after watching your videos. Thank you for taking the time to explain this new part of the hobby to so many people. Also, I appreciated the blooper reel at the end. 73’s!

    KF5HTK

    Reply
  17. shooter34488
    shooter34488 says:

    Love your videos Randy, very informative. I like the bloopers too, lets us nimrods know that video production is not as simple as you make it look.
    73’s
    Monte WB3CCN

    Reply
  18. AB9RN
    AB9RN says:

    curious how you attached the extra bracket you created for the tripod? Did you remove the duplexer temporarily and tap some threads in the existing hole?

    Reply
  19. AB9RN
    AB9RN says:

    curious how you attached the extra bracket you created for the tripod? Did you remove the duplexer temporarily and tap some threads in the existing hole?

    Reply
  20. mercnun
    mercnun says:

    the people at arrow do a GREAT job! I stopprd in their factory a few years ago and got a tour. I will buy more ants from them again,

    Rich

    Reply
  21. Arabhacks
    Arabhacks says:

    There seems to be some misconceptions.
    Antenna elevation is first, gain is second, power is third.
    The reason satellites work so well is the elevation and excellent antennas, a few watts covers the entire CONUS.
    What the arrow antenna does is allows one to carry a dual band Yagi that can easily be disassembled and transported.
    The satellites are the true key elements, without them range on VHF/UHF would be very limited indeed.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.