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![]() "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... "Margaret von B." wrote in message ... "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... "ric" wrote in message ... Robert Morein wrote: Are you familiar with the FM2G-C? It is being strongly considered. http://www.fanfare.com/fm-2g-c.html This is an omnidirectional antenna, which means it will be very susceptible to multipath. The fact that it is cut for the educational band gives it a little more gain, but, as I said, gain is seldom the problem. The problem is phase cancellation caused by reception of a signal that is reflected by two or more different paths. This causes the signal to actually cancel 100% at certain frequencies. More gain on nothing does not result in something. The solution is a directional antenna, which attenuates all but one of the reception paths, eliminating the phase cancellation. Hmmm...I'm getting a slew of opinions on this, and few of them reach the same conclusion. Such as: http://www.hawaiipublicradio.org/recep.htm I've tried various dipole antennas, all with similar results. Best results so far was an RCA powered indoor TV "rabbit ear" type antenna. I'm tempted to have an antenna cut specifically for 88.3 MHz, as that is the only FM I listen to. Oh well... You can do it yourself. Take a look at http://www.ycars.org/EFRA/Module%20C/AntDip.htm The wavelength of 88.3 mHz is 66.88 inches. Your dipole should be 1/2 that length: 33.5. All you need is a piece of twinlead, which is just junky antenna lead-in wire. Cut it to 33.5 inches. At each end, twist the conductors together. At the center, break one conductor. Connect the loose ends to your feed wire. It is not essential, but nice, if you can have t the connections soldered. Protect the wires from bending and breaking by encasing the joints in some RTV (GE silicone goo). I do not understand why the station engineer recommended the Fanfare. I do. It worked in his location. This antenna has 0 dB gain. 0 is a very small number. The only advantage to the Fanfare is for external use, since it is self-supporting. An indoor dipole, which can be taped or tacked to any convenient surface, does not need mechanical rigidity. A properly cut dipole has twice the signal strength: 3 dB. There's more to antennas than theory, especially these "little ones". As I stated before, I don't have any experience of this particular antenna but I have plenty of experience of seemingly similar design, The Magnum Dynalab ST-2. http://www.magnumdynalab.com/x_st2.htm It has worked admirably well over the years in many urban locations except one. NYC RF hell rendered it pretty much useless. However, at the time I did not have the Signal Sleuth that greatly complements the whip albeit at a considerable cost. http://www.magnumdynalab.com/x_sleuth.htm Based on my "nontechnical" opinion I can say that the whip alone generally outperforms the "grocerybagful" of dipoles I've accumulated over the years by a comfortable margin. With the Sleuth, it is the ultimate quick and small FM antenna solution. One of my favorite tuners has a scope that allows the monitoring of multipath signals and contrary to what one might think, the ST-2 is not all that easily bothered by it. That said, there are locations, such as NYC, where the cheap but nearly unobtainable Dennesen dual whip cannot be beat. I suspect that the Dennesen would be an easy DIY project for those so inclined. But no one should fool themselves into thinking that any of these products will succesfully compete with a competent outdoor antenna such as those made by APS. Cheers, Margaret Margaret, without contradicting your experience, I think that the difference in sound has to do with the placement of the antenna. That's probably most of it. As I said, "there's more than theory"... Perhaps the freestanding whip was placeable in a way that the dipole was not. The real solution comes from an antenna arrangement with some directionality. If the multipath signal(s) can be reduced below one particular strongest signal, then phase cancellation cannot occur. Two whips separated by 1/2 wavelength can be directionally oriented by a combining phase shift network, which is probably why your Dennesen worked so well. It still works, if I can stand to look at it. :-) However, my primary residence sports a Sniper these days with Yaesu rotor. A single vertical whip receives equally well from all directions. This means that reduction in multipath can be accomplished only by moving the antenna about the room. By contrast, a dipole can be rotated through 180 vertically, and 180 degrees horizontally, while in the same location, provided one can find a way to support the floppy wires. Taping it to a dowell stick would work. I hear you, but when using an A/B switch and watching the trace as you switch antennas, any changes in multipath reception are easily detected. Using such setup, I can only conclude that the ST-2, generally speaking, is not impeded by multipath reception and will deliver a stronger, cleaner signal to a tuner than a R/S dipole and its cousins. Cheers, Margaret |
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