The Skyline 33: The 40-Meter Height, Built In Two Pieces
Thirty-three feet is not an arbitrary number. It is the textbook quarter-wave on 40 meters, the height operators have been building toward for a century of low-band work. Take the 24-foot DX Vertical, add the 9-foot DX Whip, and you stand exactly there — the classic 40-meter geometry, no tower, no radials, no guy wires.
Here is the honest version of what that height buys you, band by band, with no marketing fog.
What 33 Feet Is For
Forty meters has a favorite height, and this is it. The classic quarter-wave, delivered in two pieces.
Why Add The Whip At All
A bare 24-foot vertical is already the most popular height in the Greyline line, and for good reason — it is the all-rounder. So why bolt nine more feet on top? Because adding height does something specific and worth understanding: it shifts the antenna’s sweet spot onto a lower band than the bare antenna reaches. The whip does not give you a higher band, it gives you a lower one, and 40 meters is exactly the band most operators are starved for.
That is the move. The 24-foot vertical alone lands its best work up the stack. Add the whip and the whole geometry slides down, putting real current maximum and a lower radiation angle onto 40 and 30 meters — and on 40, it lands on the quarter-wave number the textbooks were written around.
The Gain, Band By Band, Honestly
We model our antennas rather than guess at them, and we will tell you plainly where the combo shines and where the physics gets complicated. The numbers come from modeling on the published work of Bob Zavrel W7SX. No rounding up, no hiding the messy bands.
Where it shines, 40 through 20 meters. On 40 meters the Skyline 33 stands at the classic quarter-wave height — this is the band the 33-foot build exists for, and it models real gain over the bare vertical there. On 30 meters it stays strong, the added height still paying. On 20 meters it remains positive and clean. If your logbook lives on 40, this is your height.
Where it gets interesting, 15 through 10 meters. Seventeen meters sits near the antenna’s five-eighths-wave point — still useful, but transitional. Above that, on 15, 12, and 10, a radiator this tall on a short wavelength stops behaving like a simple vertical and develops a multi-lobe pattern, some lobes at useful angles and some not. That is physics, not a defect. The combo still works up high, but the clean single-lobe story belongs to 40 through 20. We would rather you know that going in than discover it on the air.
The Bob Test
We model the gain, we name the bands where the pattern gets complicated, and we say so out loud. That is the difference between a spec sheet and a sales pitch.
Who This Is For
Reach for the Skyline 33 if 40 meters is your home band and you want the height the band actually rewards. It is the working DXer’s build: the most popular base antenna in the line, topped to the classic 40M number, still clean and strong on 30 and 20.
The open vertical configuration is the taller, cleaner build, no flag hardware in the way of the physics. If you are in an HOA and need the antenna to read as a flagpole, the combo comes in a Flag Kit configuration too — same height, same physics, with the flag hardware that keeps the peace with the neighbors.
The Build // 33 Feet, Two Pieces
Base: 24-foot DX Vertical, 160-6M, no radials, the most popular height in the Greyline line.
Top: 9-foot DX Whip, five-eighths wave geometry, installs in about two minutes, no tools, field-upgradeable any time.
Total height: 33 feet — the classic 40-meter quarter-wave.
Best bands: 40M, 30M, 20M (modeled positive gain). 17M transitional; honest multi-lobe behavior 15M and up.
FT8 / digital: Full duty cycle at rated power — a solid radiator with no traps or loading coils to heat.
Configurations: Open DX Vertical (taller, no flag) or Flag Kit (HOA-friendly, flies a flag).
Add The Height, Work The Band
Forty meters does not reward cleverness, it rewards being the right height. Thirty-three feet of aperture, modeled honestly, landing on the number the band was practically designed around — with 30 and 20 riding along strong.
Bob teaches the physics. Greyline ships the height. Now go work the band.
Build Your Skyline 33
Open DX Vertical (taller, no flag) — 24' DXV plus 9' DX Whip — $1,325
Flag Kit (HOA-friendly) — 24' DX Flagpole plus 9' DX Whip — $1,370
The Skyline Ladder + Keep Reading
The Skyline 37 — the tallest build, for the operator who lives on 40 and 30.
The Skyline 29 — the balanced build, clean pattern further up the dial.
The Aperture Page — why height is the highest-leverage upgrade, from Bob Zavrel’s published work.
The Antenna Selection Guide — tell it your bands, it finds your height.