I was curious about how my sky loop antenna actually behaves, resonant frequency wise. I've always assumed the antenna is about 670 ft in total perimeter. I say about because it has been both extended (from the original 635 ft) as well as repaired after several storms over the years. It is entirely possible it is a different length, possibly shorter. I took some quick and dirty measurements and come up with these measurements for the four sides of the loop:
140
160
165
185
So a total of 650 ft. I paced it vs dragging out a tape measure, so assume a +/- 10% error easily.
In theory a loop antenna is resonant at one wavelength, and at odd harmonics. If we split the difference and say the loop is 660 ft, that would be 1477 kHz. My loop is not circular, but rather more of a deformed quadrilateral. Throw in the fact that the height varies above the ground, it is run through trees, etc. and the actual resonant frequency can be very different.
Using a noise bridge, I tried to identify all the resonance frequencies I could find (those where the reactive component of the impedance was zero). Here is what I found, along with the resistive component at that frequency, as well as the number of kHz this resonance was above the previous:
kHz Real Ω kHz above previous resonance
1950 20 ohms -
2630 25 ohms 680
3740 75 ohms 1110
5850 30 ohms 2110
6490 40 ohms 640
10260 40 ohms 3770
14350 40 ohms 4090
18430 40 ohms 4080
22480 40 ohms 4050
26620 40 ohms 4140
30770 40 ohms 4150
The antenna is fed with a balun (I *think* 4:1, did I mention the antenna has been up for some time?)
For the higher frequencies there's a nice roughly 4100 kHz spacing between resonant frequencies, which seems to imply the fundamental resonant frequency is 2050 kHz. The first resonance measured is 1950 kHz, so that seems to fit.
There's several rather strange resonances in the list above, namely 2630 and 6490 kHz. I suppose this could be due to some interaction between this antenna and other antennas (there's an approximately 200 ft beverage that runs down the center of part of it, at a much lower height, as well as a tilted folded dipole for the 48m band near one side, but also inside).
I had two primary reasons for looking at the antenna. First, how does it perform on the 43 meter pirate band, my main area of interest. While there's no resonance in this band, from experience I find it works well there. I also compare it to my 48 meter band tilted folded dipole, and it is similar, sometimes one antenna wins vs the other, depending on the station.
The second reason is for performance around the 4096 kHz pirate beacon band. I used to have regular reception of these beacons every morning. Then, a few years ago, they almost completely vanished. It could be propagation, but it seems odd that I would go from daily reception to almost never hearing them. That made me wonder whether something with the antenna changed, perhaps from one of the repair jobs. I do notice the resonance around 3740, and if the antenna was somewhat shorter, that would be moved to around 4096 kHz. But the antenna performs well over most of HF (actually it even works into the VHF band, once I got the downconverter for my netSDR I started to explore VHF and even UHF with it.), so I am not sure how important the resonance is.
The antenna does work very well on the upper half of the MW band, as you'd probably expect.
I have tried modeling the antenna with NEC, but, well, you know how that goes. Nothing seems to match reality with an antenna like this, and a lot of unknowns and guesses. Maybe I can use NEC to predict lottery numbers instead

I'm looking for feedback from anyone else who might have had experience with a similar antenna.