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#41
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On Sat, 25 Jun 2005 18:24:43 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "ric" wrote in message ... Robert Morein wrote: 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. Hmmm...the website you give above contradicts that. It says: 1/2 WL dipole length = 468/f = 468/88.3 = 5.3 feet = 63.6 inches. Since none of the existing FM dipoles I have are 63.6 inches long (the longest being just under 5 feet), should I assume that is why they are so poor in the "college" (88-90 MHz) FM band? I'm sorry, Ric. I made a mistake. The folded dipole is cut to 1/4 wavelength, which is why it works out to 33.5 inches for your frequency of interest. ********! 1,2,3,4. . .mistakes. |
#42
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![]() Margaret von B. wrote: How many vacuum tubes did you find in it? A little math. Simple, really. Each frequency has a specific length of antenna that it is received best at, so match your antenna to your station and presto. Or didn't you ever think of shortening the antenna? It does telescope for a reason, you know. |
#43
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![]() ric wrote: Joseph Oberlander wrote: Thanks. Are you familiar with the FM-2G-C? http://www.fanfare.com/fm-2g-c.html I am leaning toward trying it, indoors (next to a window) first. Their marketing is rubbish, btw. Any standard "whip" type antenna will work like that - just shorten it to the exact frequency that you desire and aim it around until you get a good signal. A lower frequency requires a *shorter* antenna?? I thought it would have to be *longer*. Please explain. Sorry - I got it reversed. but the theory is the same - find the right length and make it so. Then aim. |
#44
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![]() ric wrote: Robert Morein wrote: 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. Hmmm...the website you give above contradicts that. It says: 1/2 WL dipole length = 468/f = 468/88.3 = 5.3 feet = 63.6 inches. Since none of the existing FM dipoles I have are 63.6 inches long (the longest being just under 5 feet), should I assume that is why they are so poor in the "college" (88-90 MHz) FM band? Ah. you *can* get 6 fters. They are custom parts, though, and not sold at Radio Shack and simmilar places. |
#45
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Joseph Oberlander wrote:
1/2 WL dipole length = 468/f = 468/88.3 = 5.3 feet = 63.6 inches. Since none of the existing FM dipoles I have are 63.6 inches long (the longest being just under 5 feet), should I assume that is why they are so poor in the "college" (88-90 MHz) FM band? Ah. you *can* get 6 fters. They are custom parts, though, and not sold at Radio Shack and simmilar places. Even the $25 "FM Select" dipole has only a 54" element. That's optimized for 104 MHz. No thanks. http://www.ccrane.com/fm-reflect-antenna.aspx |
#46
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![]() "Joseph Oberlander" wrote in message ink.net... ric wrote: Joseph Oberlander wrote: Thanks. Are you familiar with the FM-2G-C? http://www.fanfare.com/fm-2g-c.html I am leaning toward trying it, indoors (next to a window) first. Their marketing is rubbish, btw. Any standard "whip" type antenna will work like that - just shorten it to the exact frequency that you desire and aim it around until you get a good signal. A lower frequency requires a *shorter* antenna?? I thought it would have to be *longer*. Please explain. Sorry - I got it reversed. but the theory is the same - As I said before, to call you an idiot would be an insult to idiots. Margaret |
#47
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Margaret von B. wrote:
"Joseph Oberlander" wrote in message ink.net... ric wrote: Joseph Oberlander wrote: Thanks. Are you familiar with the FM-2G-C? http://www.fanfare.com/fm-2g-c.html I am leaning toward trying it, indoors (next to a window) first. Their marketing is rubbish, btw. Any standard "whip" type antenna will work like that - just shorten it to the exact frequency that you desire and aim it around until you get a good signal. A lower frequency requires a *shorter* antenna?? I thought it would have to be *longer*. Please explain. Sorry - I got it reversed. but the theory is the same - As I said before, to call you an idiot would be an insult to idiots. Maggie is obviously yet another graduate of the Middius school of tact and charm... |
#48
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![]() "Joseph Oberlander" wrote in message ink.net... Margaret von B. wrote: How many vacuum tubes did you find in it? A little math. Simple, really. Simple, stupid and wrong - your trademark. Margaret |
#49
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Margaret von B. wrote: As I said before, to call you an idiot would be an insult to idiots. Maggie is obviously yet another graduate of the Middius school of tact and charm... Hah! Thanks for admitting you were offended!! Haw, haw, haw. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#50
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: Margaret von B. wrote: "Joseph Oberlander" wrote in message ink.net... ric wrote: Joseph Oberlander wrote: Thanks. Are you familiar with the FM-2G-C? http://www.fanfare.com/fm-2g-c.html I am leaning toward trying it, indoors (next to a window) first. Their marketing is rubbish, btw. Any standard "whip" type antenna will work like that - just shorten it to the exact frequency that you desire and aim it around until you get a good signal. A lower frequency requires a *shorter* antenna?? I thought it would have to be *longer*. Please explain. Sorry - I got it reversed. but the theory is the same - As I said before, to call you an idiot would be an insult to idiots. Maggie is obviously yet another graduate of the Middius school of tact and charm... I wonder if she'll do the "Middius Meltdown" for us some day soon? :-D |
#51
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Clyde Slick wrote:
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Margaret von B. wrote: As I said before, to call you an idiot would be an insult to idiots. Maggie is obviously yet another graduate of the Middius school of tact and charm... Hah! Thanks for admitting you were offended!! Haw, haw, haw. Offended? No, but I did feel a profound sense of pity for Maggie. Not only is she burdened with her own faults, but she's picked up a boatload of new faults from Middius. |
#52
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Clyde Slick wrote: "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Margaret von B. wrote: As I said before, to call you an idiot would be an insult to idiots. Maggie is obviously yet another graduate of the Middius school of tact and charm... Hah! Thanks for admitting you were offended!! Haw, haw, haw. Offended? No, but I did feel a profound sense of pity for Maggie. Not only is she burdened with her own faults, but she's picked up a boatload of new faults from Middius. The Big Stilton is just boiling in his loneliness. As he put it so eloquently a couple of days ago "why aren't I getting more love?" Come to think of it, I have to let the dogs out to make sure there are no Dahmer looking things "with or without rain coats" hiding in the bushes. A girl has to take certain precautions these days, you know. :-) And dear Arny, since I know you're reading this, you should really consider joining an ***adult*** masturbation circle. Menopause is a long and hard ordeal for both parties. I'm praying for you and your wife. Cheers, Margaret |
#53
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On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 20:56:44 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: The twinlead from a folded dipole is part of the antenna system itself. Therefore, it picks up more signal, which can cancel with that received by the nominal antenna. ********! (7) It is a balanced transmission line which is matched to the balanced 300ohm folded dipole. The fields associated with the twin conductors of the feeder cancel in the far field. It cannot radiate/recieve itself if it is properly balanced. Back in the 60's, people would prewire their houses with twinlead for a rooftop TV antenna, and the ghosting (visual multipath) was vicious. Replacing it with coax eliminated the distribution system as a secondary antenna. "twinlead" has lower losses than coax, (for similar size/cost) however the disadvantage is that the fields extend outside the bounds of the cable, whereas with coax it is within. To get the best out of balanced feed it should be spaced away from other materials. Coax can be attached to walls, taped to metal poles, etc. It also needs a decent balun to connect to a dipole. |
#55
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On Tue, 21 Jun 2005 02:38:10 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: There really isn't. It is a common misconception that a station is not received due to inadequate signal strength. This is actually quite rare. ******** (run out of fingers) It is the rule that the vast majority of VHF stations are out of range. |
#56
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Joseph Oberlander wrote:
Their marketing is rubbish, btw. Any standard "whip" type antenna will work like that - just shorten it to the exact frequency that you desire and aim it around until you get a good signal. A lower frequency requires a *shorter* antenna?? I thought it would have to be *longer*. Please explain. Sorry - I got it reversed. but the theory is the same - find the right length and make it so. Then aim. Sorry, but I am having trouble figuring out how to extend a whip antenna to a length longer than its maximum. Hints? |
#57
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![]() "Goofball_star_dot_etal" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jun 2005 02:38:10 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: There really isn't. It is a common misconception that a station is not received due to inadequate signal strength. This is actually quite rare. ******** (run out of fingers) It is the rule that the vast majority of VHF stations are out of range. The range is usually not determined by signal strength. It is loss of phase coherency, due to the increasing number of multiple paths as distance from the station increases. |
#58
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![]() "Goofball_star_dot_etal" wrote in message ... On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 20:56:44 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: The twinlead from a folded dipole is part of the antenna system itself. Therefore, it picks up more signal, which can cancel with that received by the nominal antenna. ********! (7) It is a balanced transmission line which is matched to the balanced 300ohm folded dipole. The fields associated with the twin conductors of the feeder cancel in the far field. It cannot radiate/recieve itself if it is properly balanced. The cancellation is not perfect, because the conductors are not coincident. In the 60's and 70's, twinlead used as antenna feed was a major cause of ghosting, which is a multipath related effect. Your belief that the far field cancels is based upon the analysis of a point-source dipole, which is merely a theoretical tool. |
#59
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On Sun, 26 Jun 2005 17:04:04 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "Goofball_star_dot_etal" wrote in message ... On Wed, 22 Jun 2005 20:56:44 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: . Therefore, it picks up more signal, which can cancel with that received by the nominal antenna. ********! (7) It is a balanced transmission line which is matched to the balanced 300ohm folded dipole. The fields associated with the twin conductors of the feeder cancel in the far field. It cannot radiate/recieve itself if it is properly balanced. The cancellation is not perfect, because the conductors are not coincident. In the 60's and 70's, twinlead used as antenna feed was a major cause of ghosting, which is a multipath related effect. LIke I said, plastering it into walls is not ideal. . . "The twinlead from a folded dipole is part of the antenna system itself." seems clear enough and wrong. Your belief that the far field cancels is based upon the analysis of a point-source dipole, which is merely a theoretical tool. If it leaked it would be lossy. Coax is convienient. |
#60
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On Sun, 26 Jun 2005 17:00:32 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "Goofball_star_dot_etal" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jun 2005 02:38:10 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: There really isn't. It is a common misconception that a station is not received due to inadequate signal strength. This is actually quite rare. ******** (run out of fingers) It is the rule that the vast majority of VHF stations are out of range. The range is usually not determined by signal strength. It is loss of phase coherency, due to the increasing number of multiple paths as distance from the station increases. There is no doubt that multiple paths can mess up your TV or FM stereo but there is also no doubt that signal decreases with range, rapidly for VHF over ground and more rapidly when the path passes close to or over the horizon. 40miles is a long way unless the antennae are high up. High antenna gain is good whatever but at 88.3 MHz indoors that is not really much of an option. Get the antenna out and UP if one can. |
#61
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Goofball_star_dot_etal wrote:
On Sun, 26 Jun 2005 17:00:32 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "Goofball_star_dot_etal" wrote in message ... On Tue, 21 Jun 2005 02:38:10 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: There really isn't. It is a common misconception that a station is not received due to inadequate signal strength. This is actually quite rare. ******** (run out of fingers) It is the rule that the vast majority of VHF stations are out of range. The range is usually not determined by signal strength. It is loss of phase coherency, due to the increasing number of multiple paths as distance from the station increases. There is no doubt that multiple paths can mess up your TV or FM stereo but there is also no doubt that signal decreases with range, rapidly for VHF over ground and more rapidly when the path passes close to or over the horizon. 40miles is a long way unless the antennae are high up. High antenna gain is good whatever but at 88.3 MHz indoors that is not really much of an option. Get the antenna out and UP if one can. Agreed. Which is more important - strength of the signal or purity of the signal is dependent on the specfic sitaution. When I was a teen-ager I DXed the midwest from my a roof antenna on my parent's house on the northeast side of Detroit. There were multipath issues with some stations downtown, but signal strength and propigation situations limited my ability to pull stations out of mid-Ohio, etc. My all-time DX record involved picking up stations in Miami Florida from El Paso Tx, but this was one-time thing. Quite clearly over the horizon. I also picked up some stations in New Mexico, possibly by means of a known means of popagation of VHF signal through solid mountains. I was generally able to distinguish audibly between stations that were trashed by multipath, versus stations that were trashed by low signal strength, versus stations that were trashed by interferring signals. |
#62
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On Sun, 26 Jun 2005 19:53:53 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: Agreed. Which is more important - strength of the signal or purity of the signal is dependent on the specfic sitaution. When I was a teen-ager I DXed the midwest from my a roof antenna on my parent's house on the northeast side of Detroit. There were multipath issues with some stations downtown, but signal strength and propigation situations limited my ability to pull stations out of mid-Ohio, etc. My all-time DX record involved picking up stations in Miami Florida from El Paso Tx, but this was one-time thing. Quite clearly over the horizon. Sporadic -E possibly. I also picked up some stations in New Mexico, possibly by means of a known means of popagation of VHF signal through solid mountains. That's news to me. I was generally able to distinguish audibly between stations that were trashed by multipath, versus stations that were trashed by low signal strength, versus stations that were trashed by interferring signals. You would have to rather unlucky to spend your life in a null but Bob does not seem to be very lucky, Multipath is not an issue at sea but the signal still disappears. NY might well be different. . . |
#63
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On Sun, 26 Jun 2005 13:34:31 -0700, ric wrote:
Joseph Oberlander wrote: Their marketing is rubbish, btw. Any standard "whip" type antenna will work like that - just shorten it to the exact frequency that you desire and aim it around until you get a good signal. A lower frequency requires a *shorter* antenna?? I thought it would have to be *longer*. Please explain. Sorry - I got it reversed. but the theory is the same - find the right length and make it so. Then aim. Sorry, but I am having trouble figuring out how to extend a whip antenna to a length longer than its maximum. Hints? Stick a saucepan lid on the end (capacitive loading) or a crock clip with wire attached. The possibilities are endless. |
#64
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Google "top hat" antenna
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#65
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Goofball_star_dot_etal wrote:
Sorry, but I am having trouble figuring out how to extend a whip antenna to a length longer than its maximum. Hints? Stick a saucepan lid on the end (capacitive loading) or a crock clip with wire attached. The possibilities are endless. Would that be a steel or an aluminum saucepan lid? |
#66
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On Mon, 27 Jun 2005 22:03:59 -0700, ric wrote:
Goofball_star_dot_etal wrote: Sorry, but I am having trouble figuring out how to extend a whip antenna to a length longer than its maximum. Hints? Stick a saucepan lid on the end (capacitive loading) or a crock clip with wire attached. The possibilities are endless. Would that be a steel or an aluminum saucepan lid? I don't think it matters. All the current is at the bottom end so the resistance or non linear properties of steel will not have any significant effect at the top end where the impedance is high. A half-eaten can of baked beans or even wet cardboard might do. . Getting a good connection and the right diameter is more of an issue. I have little idea of the size required but if you have a telescopic whip, make the "top hat" just large enough to be withinn the range of adjustment. It may be difficult to notice any diffence without some form of transmitter or reflected power meter but if you can't hear the difference then it does not matter. A preamp/rf amp may well help despite what you may have been told. In and ideal world,with a good outdoor antenna, the signal to noise is at these frequencies limited by the "sky" noise (sun etc.). Amplifying both the signal and noise does not improve the ratio. With an indoor antenna, however, both will have been attenuated by the fabric of the buiding and the signal to noise will be determined by the radio front end. This is unlikely to be up to the standards of a good preamp ie. a Ham 4 metre preamp although this would probably need to be tweaked. The potential disadvantage of a preamp is that the higher signal levels in the mixer etc may lead to greater spurious responses and an unpleasant background noise between channels (without a squelch control). On the other hand, driving weak signals to limiting at the IF should help FM demodulation performance. |
#67
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![]() ric wrote: Joseph Oberlander wrote: 1/2 WL dipole length = 468/f = 468/88.3 = 5.3 feet = 63.6 inches. Since none of the existing FM dipoles I have are 63.6 inches long (the longest being just under 5 feet), should I assume that is why they are so poor in the "college" (88-90 MHz) FM band? Ah. you *can* get 6 fters. They are custom parts, though, and not sold at Radio Shack and simmilar places. Even the $25 "FM Select" dipole has only a 54" element. That's optimized for 104 MHz. No thanks. http://www.ccrane.com/fm-reflect-antenna.aspx Try looking in CB supply stores and also marine equipment. These ultra-long antennas are common on shortwave radios as well. http://www.qsradio.com/QuickSticks.htm 96 inches should be long enough for any application. |
#68
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On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 15:41:39 GMT, Joseph Oberlander
wrote: ric wrote: Joseph Oberlander wrote: 1/2 WL dipole length = 468/f = 468/88.3 = 5.3 feet = 63.6 inches. Since none of the existing FM dipoles I have are 63.6 inches long (the longest being just under 5 feet), should I assume that is why they are so poor in the "college" (88-90 MHz) FM band? Ah. you *can* get 6 fters. They are custom parts, though, and not sold at Radio Shack and simmilar places. Even the $25 "FM Select" dipole has only a 54" element. That's optimized for 104 MHz. No thanks. http://www.ccrane.com/fm-reflect-antenna.aspx Try looking in CB supply stores and also marine equipment. These ultra-long antennas are common on shortwave radios as well. http://www.qsradio.com/QuickSticks.htm 96 inches should be long enough for any application. Sigh. Size isn't everything. Those are HF aerials with blobby things. |
#69
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Goofball_star_dot_etal wrote:
Stick a saucepan lid on the end (capacitive loading) or a crock clip with wire attached. The possibilities are endless. Would that be a steel or an aluminum saucepan lid? I don't think it matters. All the current is at the bottom end so the resistance or non linear properties of steel will not have any significant effect at the top end where the impedance is high. A half-eaten can of baked beans or even wet cardboard might do. . Hmmm...all that I have available is a 3/4 eaten can of lentel beans. I would have to do the math, I suppose. |
#70
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On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 13:36:55 -0700, ric wrote:
Goofball_star_dot_etal wrote: Stick a saucepan lid on the end (capacitive loading) or a crock clip with wire attached. The possibilities are endless. Would that be a steel or an aluminum saucepan lid? I don't think it matters. All the current is at the bottom end so the resistance or non linear properties of steel will not have any significant effect at the top end where the impedance is high. A half-eaten can of baked beans or even wet cardboard might do. . Hmmm...all that I have available is a 3/4 eaten can of lentel beans. I would have to do the math, I suppose. Go for it, forget the maths. BTW 4 metres is a little used British only band, I have discovered. Pity. I did find one preamp but it is not worth the expense on the off chance it would help. http://www.microwave-modules.com/summary.html |
#71
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Goofball_star_dot_etal wrote:
Hmmm...all that I have available is a 3/4 eaten can of lentel beans. I would have to do the math, I suppose. Go for it, forget the maths. BTW 4 metres is a little used British only band, I have discovered. Pity. I did find one preamp but it is not worth the expense on the off chance it would help. http://www.microwave-modules.com/summary.html ACK! All those prices in British Pounds. Will the conversion rate to Euros affect my reception? |
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