I made a HUGE mistake. Up until the day before, I've been having big problems with noise at different times of day in different bands. After quite a bit of DD, I realized that I cannot use a 9:1 unun with an inverted L. Unlike the feedpoint of an end fed horizontal antenna, which is WELL above the ground and has an impedance of at least a couple thousand ohms, the inverted L's feedpoint is at or near the ground... making the feedpoint impedance MUCH lower... so you don't need that unun! I don't know how I overlooked this all this time!
Solution? I removed the 9:1 unun, left the current choke in place at the feedpoint, and hooked the antenna up directly to the coax... with the fence and radials connected to the shield. WHAT A DIFFERENCE!
Last night, I picked up lots of pirates with an S3 level of noise instead of S5 or more. BIG difference! So picking up an S5 signal with an S3 noise floor gives me 2 S units of headroom at a minimum. Made all the difference in readability without question.
So... being that the vertical part of the antenna only goes up 20', and the horizontal part maybe another 40', that's only 60' total. Which is fine for somewhere between 3.9-11.7MHz as a rough 1/4 wave. But a big problem if I want to tune lower.
Now that all the snow and ice is melting here, I'm gonna climb the trees and elevate the antenna height another 20' and add wire for horizontal length, but that still puts me somewhere around 2.6MHz at the very bottom of a 1/4 wave above ground (electrically). So, I've opted to include a tapped, base loaded coil, wired in series with the antenna, where I can tune the antenna, on a whim, for the band I want to hone in on.
If I want to tune to LF or below, I'm gonna need A LOT of wire. But so far, I can still tune in to the 400-500kHz WSPR and navtex signals. WWVB and the Navy signals are still really good, and a few NDB's.
Gonna order an Amazon special LC meter soon and eventually a Nano VNA of some kind. I DO NOT like buying antennas if I can make them myself.
Anyway, stay tuned!