📡 Elevate Your Communication Game with the MFJ-1778M!
The MFJ-1778M G5RV Junior Wire Antenna is a high-performance, multi-band center-fed dipole antenna designed for amateur radio enthusiasts. With a robust power handling capability of 1500 Watts and a length of 52 feet, it features a 17-foot 450 Ohm matching section and an SO-239 coax connector, making it an ideal choice for versatile and efficient communication across 40-10 meters.
B**I
Great portable antanna for the park
It is hard to write a review for HF antennas, especially when conditions have been so crappy. However, I was able to get contacts on both 40 and 20 meters today on a QRP rig. So it works. The reality is an antenna is just wire cut at a certain distance and mounted in a particular way. After getting this up into a tree it worked pretty good for a basic park station. I did read some of the reviews about the material and build quality on this and I agree there is a tiny bit of coming apart and vulnerability. The ceramic on one of the weights chipped on me from holding it down with a screw. Other than that I'm happy. I will probably seal the connections and put some kind of clips with a BNC connector on it.
C**Y
Works great in my application
After finding a nice HF rig at a local swap meet, I needed something to connect it to, so I could get on the air. I picked this up and then for support got a "painters pole" at the local hardware store. The painter's pole can extend something like 20 feet, so tall enough for the center window line. I have this set up in a bit of an inverted-V, with the peak above the peak of my house and the legs sloping down to the side fence, with 10 feet of paracord attached to the insulators before down to the fence.My rig is an old Kenwood TS-450SAT (with internal tuner). I turned it on and was surprised to hear voices coming through the radio...I've been using this antenna now for a bit and have made contacts across the US on 20 meters. I haven't worked many other bands but have reached from CA to North Carolina on 20 meters at under 100 watts. This to me is pretty impressive as I live in flatland suburbia. The next house is like 8 feet from my antenna yet somehow I'm still getting out there. Over the air reports suggest that I am TXing better than RXing so I'll be attempting to get this up in the air more. I'd say if you are looking at this, then it's probably going to work for you.
G**R
Mighty Fine Junk, but a good antenna
Very cheaply made. The connectors are just mounted on Printed Circuit Boards. There's no weather proofing or strengthening to hold the coax. I took coax seal and wrapped the UHF connector to weatherproof it and support the coax without stressing the PCB.That’s the negative points, but the antenna works well. I’m using mine as part of a portable setup with a QRP transceiver. As soon as I called CQ, I got an answer from Kansas (I’m in Pennsylvania.). The G5RV is a good antenna. I have the full sized version installed and use it as part of my base station.The G5RV Jr. works well on 10-40 meters. MFJ could ave spent a little more money and included better connectors. It looks like something a Ham would cobble together out of his junk box.MFJ = Mighty Fine JunkDon’t let that stop you. It’s a good antenna. It’s just overpriced. Be prepared to reenforce the connectors. Easily done.
S**R
G5 RVs are proven
I I'm not deployed this antenna as I bought it for portable events like Pota I have no doubt that it will work as well as my G5 RV that I use at my home just won't operate on 75 m this one is for 40 through 6
G**Y
Works Very Well
I'm just getting started with HF transmitting and I didn't want to spend a ton of money on my first antenna. I wanted something that would just work, yet not require too much work to set up, cost too much, or have far too many technical hurdles.This antenna did the job. Best of all, it does the job. Again, I'm just getting started with HF, however, using this antenna I was able to work contacts from Massachusetts all the way to Key West in Florida and a whole bunch of places in between.The material that makes up the antenna is solid. When I was first hanging it, I was concerned that any part might be weak, however, weeks in to having the antenna up and everything is nice and solid. I did follow another reviewer and coated the terminals in liquid tape to try to extend the life a bit.I can absolutely recommend this antenna, especially for the size. I'll replace it at some point, probably with something I build, but this was excellent to help me get off the ground easily for a good price. Everything I wanted.
E**C
Great for a small lot.
I live in a row home and set this up along the side yard. I have it about 20' up and slightly slopped to the south west. I've made Phone and FT8 contacts all over the world with this antenna and 100 watts with a manual tuner (MFJ-986). The antenna tunes 40-30-20-17-10 meters just fine. It will tune up on 80 but it has a lot of loss in the tuner. Mine won't tune 15 meters at all. It could be I don't have it high enough and the feed line is touching the ground. For the money this is a decent antenna that works if you are limited on space or have HOA restrictions. It is hardly noticeable if there are trees in the background. The only thing you can really see is the feed line dropping down.
V**F
Nice antenna
It is built well, contrary to comments about poor build quality.I installed it in my attic and made my first contact using it today. It works better than I had hoped given the compromised installation. It loads up well with low SWR using my antenna tuner on 80,40, and 20. I haven’t tried the higher bands.
P**N
G5RV Jr is a good antenna...
With the tuner that is built into my radio, I can easily tune 10 meters to 80 meters, with the exception of 30. This is very much a compromise antenna, but it serves me well under the circumstances. It is MFJ, so be prepared to resolder and fix the sloppy work, or buy another brand, or build it yourself. The materials themselves are reasonable quality though, and it works well.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
1 month ago