Baluncore said:
8 pairs of 100 ohm, will make an 800 ohm cable in theory,
Uhmm... What I see in the OP's drawing is seven Gimmick capacitors in series between the antenna and receiver, definitely not an impedance transformer! See posts #8 (by
@Baluncore), and #9. The rest of this post is valid but irrelevant.
Please note that the RF impedance of a transmission line is an inherent characteristic describing the Voltage/Current ratio when driven with a given power.
For twin-lead or coaxial cable, the Characteristic Impedance is a function of conductor diameter, conductor spacing, and the dielectric constant of the material between the conductors. Putting 8 transmission lines in series does not change the impedance they present to the signal source, it just makes a longer transmission line.
A single wire between an antenna and receiver is conceptually just an extension of the antenna, but since it is generally near other objects like trees and walls of a building its impedance is generally varying and indeterminate. As a vague rule-of-thumb, if the length of the downlead is less than 1/10 wavelength you can ignore the proximity effects from nearby objects.
Some of the active Ham Radio operators here can probably fill in the details much better than I can; it has been too long since I've dealt with the subject.
Much detail is available in "The Radio Amateurs Handbook" published by the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), and in "Reference Data for Radio Engineers: Radio, Electronics, Computers, and Communications" published by Howard W. Sams & Co. Inc.
Cheers,
Tom