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Hi Allen, I think yours is an accurate and nicely balanced report. I am a little out of the loop as I have been in Europe for a decade now and, on the water, the east side of the North Atlantic uses SSB far less than the American side. Casual reports from friends supports the use of the KISS set up for participating in the Caribbean nets and using Sailmail, but suggest the more traditional installation designs for work in areas likely to have more marginal conditions. Your admonition on continuing maintenance and quality of initial installation is wise. Electrical connections are the first place to look when deteriorating communication is noticed. Please also note that, in my view, many professional SSB installers do not do good jobs. A handy amateur who has done good research will likely do as good a job, with maybe a hire of a local expert to review the installation. At least the owner should have educated him/herself enough to look over the installer’s shoulder. If there continues to be trouble look into toroidal coils/chokes and line isolators: easy to install and, sometimes, make a huge difference. Backstay spacers are the most common error I see. Of course it is the most visually easy to see, but I wonder, if something so fundamental is in error, what other installation problems lie in the less visible areas. My best, Dick (KC2HKW) Stevenson, s/v Alchemy
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