I agree with Dave. The problem is very likely somewhere in your antenna system, including the feedlines, matching stuff, etc. FWIW, I've been using KAT500s with KPA500s since they were in beta, and we've used a pair of them in W6GJB's contesting trailer for almost that long, and we've never had the sort of issues you describe.

A LOT of antenna system problems like what you're describing are caused by JUNK connectors. If it doesn't say Amphenol or is a MIL-surplus connector stamped with a part number, it's junk. These no-name connectors have all sorts of issues -- dissimilar metals, out of tolerance dimensions, crummy dielectrics. I've been a ham since 1955, but was off the air for long periods running my own small engineering biz. When I got back on the air in 2003, I bought a bunch of adapters, like inter-series, Tees, elbows, barrels. Over the next ten years, they caused me a lot of problems that were tricky to find. Several were exactly the sort of things you're describing.

A more fundamental question is, why are you not using resonant dipoles in those trees? A 20-15-10 fan is easy to build and needs only 34 ft horizontal. An 80-40 fan also loads on 15M. There's also a very nice design using a pair of loading coils that resonates on two harmonically related bands, like 80 and 40 or 40 and 20. The loading coils approximately at what would be the end of the shorter dipole, with a fairly short length of wire beyond the coils, so would fit in about 80 ft. If you decide you want to try one of those 2-band antennas, I'll work up a design for you.

There's another very important reason for using resonant half-waves like this -- receive noise. With an antenna that's matched to a coaxial feedline, we can add a serious common mode choke at the feedpoint to kill the noise that's picked up on the feedline and coupled to the antenna and then to the receiver. Where most of us live, there's a lot of noise that limits what we can work.

73, Jim K9YC

On 7/19/2025 11:52 AM, David Gilbert via Elecraft wrote:
You are making some very flawed assumptions here.  The very fact that both KAT500's are showing the exact same thing should have told you that they are not the likely problem.  Having "new coax" doesn't mean a thing since there are several other possibilities ... connectors, the antenna itself (including the ladder line or the connection to it), or even your new coax.  All of those could be fine at low power and yet be problematic at higher power.  In fact, if the problem showed up shortly after you installed the new coax I'd bet $100 that the amps aren't the source.

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