{"ai_pass_count":5,"analysis_step_count":14,"confidence":0.8811977762315009,"created_at":"2026-07-14T05:50:27.889722+00:00","id":161682,"node_number":"683211","processing_time":2.6310765743255615,"recent_steps":["net.store_session","net.llm_structured_analysis","net.rules_detect","net.context_window","net.store_session"],"recording_id":165151,"text":"That is a nice antenna. I see if I'm looking at the photograph on Telegram right now. And of course folks, I have another one. Of dislike it, 25 feet single pole. Yes, it's only going to be, you only have an antenna. Folks, if you have just one pole, you have only half an antenna. You need another pole or a counterpoint, which is just another pole or a ground plane, which is the other pole. All antennas, this is perhaps no for simplification, but all antennas are dipole. So if you have just one thing sticking up, you've got half of an antenna. And that's what you do put counterpoises of different lengths. So you can have different resonant frequencies because your impedance matcher, or ATU as they call them incorrectly, can match it, the different impedance. That's easy. It's like if you're feeding somewhere that's not at the center of a dipole."}