At the large-scale Krot facility (Gaponov-Grekhov Institute of Applied Physics of the Russian Academy of Sciences), a new device was developed for laboratory simulations of the effects of the interaction of ultrawideband electromagnetic pulses with the partially ionized atmosphere and ionosphere: the “gigantic” coaxial line with a length of 10 m and diameter of 1.4 m that is filled by the decaying plasma of the inductive discharge. Two radiofrequency methods of wave diagnostics used in the device are described, the cutoff method and the wave interferometer, which can be used to determine the electron density of the plasma in the line in a wide range of values, Ne = 107–1011 cm–3. The measurement results are compared with the values obtained by the contact diagnostic, a probe with a microwave resonator. The interferometric method is implemented taking into account the nonuniform distribution of plasma density both along and across the transmission line, which, in the working range of pulsed and continuous diagnostic signals, is an oversized waveguide. The specific features of application and the limitations of the contact (probe) and contactless (wave) methods of diagnostics are discussed, taking into account the nonuniform plasma distribution in the coaxial line and the specific features of its construction.