Excuse me for the specificity of this question, but this is a silly computation that's been giving trouble for some time.

I want to explicitly realize the order 21 Frobenius group over &#8450;(x), as &#8450;(x,y,z) where y<sup>3</sup>=g(x) and z<sup>7</sup>=h(x,y). The order 21 Frobenius group is C<sub>7</sub>&#8906;C<sub>3</sub>, where the generator of C<sub>3</sub> acts by taking the generator of C<sub>7</sub> to its square. Or in other words < a,b|a<sup>3</sup>=1, b<sup>7</sup>=1, ba=a(b<sup>2</sup>) >. Furthermore, I want it to branch at exactly three points, two of which will have 7 preimages, each with ramification 3, and the third will have 3 points over it with ramification 7 each.

This can easily be shown to exist: Take &#8473;<sup>1</sup> minus three points (say x=6,5,2); look at its algebraic fundamental group (=the profinite completion of < c, d, t| cdt = 1 >), and map it to the Frobenius group surjectively by c goes to a, d goes to b, and t goes to b<sup>-1</sup>a<sup>-1</sup>. This gives you a Galois cover of &#8473;<sup>1</sup>, with said ramification (because order(a)=3, order(b)=7, and order(b<sup>-1</sup>a<sup>-1</sup>)=3), and group the 21 order Frobenius group.

Of course, this construction is extremely difficult to track because of the topology involved. It would be much easier to deduce the field extension from the ramification behavior. 

So: this can be broken down to two cyclic Galois extensions. The first, a &#8450;(x,y), of the form y<sup>3</sup>=(x-2)<sup>2</sup>(x-6) is pretty easy to deduce (I need it to ramify at x=2 and x=6 and nowhere else -- this must be the equation up to change of variables). The second, a z<sup>7</sup>=h(x,y) is tricky. I want it to ramify only above x=5. There's some Abhyankar's lemma things going on here, and that makes the guesswork difficult, and my life much harder.

I should note that the distinction of the Frobenius group of order 21, and the reason that I'm at all interested in this example, is that it is the only order 21 group which isn't cyclic. Geometrically, it means that h is a function of both x and y, and not just x.

Thanks in advance.