Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
If you can't contribute anything positive to this question, then stay out of
it, with your trash! I have a 10m base loaded mag mount antenna, that I had to put a piece of felt over the magnet as not to scratch a new vehicle. When I did this I apparently changed the capacitance between the mag mount and the roof of the vehicle. Someone suggested that I might want to replace the felt with either a large balloon or a large prophylactic as it is thinner and the capacitance would then return to almost where it should be. Positive comments only! |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
John Doe wrote:
... Someone suggested that I might want to replace the felt with either a large balloon or a large prophylactic as it is thinner and the capacitance would then return to almost where it should be. Positive comments only! Using the latter, at least you would insure the antenna would NOT become preggers! :-) Positive regards, JS |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "John Doe" wrote in message ... If you can't contribute anything positive to this question, then stay out of it, with your trash! I have a 10m base loaded mag mount antenna, that I had to put a piece of felt over the magnet as not to scratch a new vehicle. When I did this I apparently changed the capacitance between the mag mount and the roof of the vehicle. Someone suggested that I might want to replace the felt with either a large balloon or a large prophylactic as it is thinner and the capacitance would then return to almost where it should be. Positive comments only! John I would have thought that the felt would make the mag mount more likely to slip against the roof. You might not get any scratches, but you probably would be minus one antenna at the end of a fast drive. I have had good results using strips of insulating tape or adhesive backed plastic type materials, similar to the stuff they print stickers on covering the magnet. For best results, you want a soft resiliant type of plastic, something that wont slip against the roof metal. Or have a look for some of that plastic sheet that sticks to glass and smooth surfaces and is used to secure licence or insurance details to car windscreens. That should protect your paintwork and be removable at a moments notice. A favourite trick for mincab or unlicensed cab drivers is to cover the antenna base with a stout sandwich bag and secure it in place with a plastic tie wrap. Take the antenna off the roof and no traces left behind. Any of the above methods should work okay and they will all be a lot thinner than a piece of felt. Mike G0ULI |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 3, 5:54 pm, "John Doe" wrote:
If you can't contribute anything positive to this question, then stay out of it, with your trash! I have a 10m base loaded mag mount antenna, that I had to put a piece of felt over the magnet as not to scratch a new vehicle. You are wasting your time trying to protect the paint when using a magnetic mount. Grit will find its way under your magnet, and within a year of normal driving, you will have scratched paint. Take a deep breath, get out the hole saw or metal punch, and punch a hole in your new car. Your radio will be happier and so will you as the paint around your antenna will not be subjected to the inevitable damage caused by magnet mounts. BTW, before anyone says anything about lowering the value of the vehicle, I've sold and traded-in multiple vehicles with holes punched in them, and not once has anyone ever said a word about the holes. When I trade it in, I just put in a rubber plug and no one notices. When I did this I apparently changed the capacitance between the mag mount and the roof of the vehicle. Someone suggested that I might want to replace the felt with either a large balloon or a large prophylactic as it is thinner and the capacitance would then return to almost where it should be. Positive comments only! However, if you have committed yourself to using a magnetic mount, I would suggest using ultra thin vinyl sheeting, this should give you enough grip to keep it on the vehicle. Nevertheless, anything that you use is going to require that you retune the antenna, a longer whip may be also be required because of the decreased capacitance. 73, Dloyd |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 3, 9:27 pm, Dloyd Lavies wrote:
On Nov 3, 5:54 pm, "John Doe" wrote: If you can't contribute anything positive to this question, then stay out of it, with your trash! I have a 10m base loaded mag mount antenna, that I had to put a piece of felt over the magnet as not to scratch a new vehicle. You are wasting your time trying to protect the paint when using a magnetic mount. Grit will find its way under your magnet, and within a year of normal driving, you will have scratched paint. Take a deep breath, get out the hole saw or metal punch, and punch a hole in your new car. Your radio will be happier and so will you as the paint around your antenna will not be subjected to the inevitable damage caused by magnet mounts. BTW, before anyone says anything about lowering the value of the vehicle, I've sold and traded-in multiple vehicles with holes punched in them, and not once has anyone ever said a word about the holes. When I trade it in, I just put in a rubber plug and no one notices. When I did this I apparently changed the capacitance between the mag mount and the roof of the vehicle. Someone suggested that I might want to replace the felt with either a large balloon or a large prophylactic as it is thinner and the capacitance would then return to almost where it should be. Positive comments only! However, if you have committed yourself to using a magnetic mount, I would suggest using ultra thin vinyl sheeting, this should give you enough grip to keep it on the vehicle. Nevertheless, anything that you use is going to require that you retune the antenna, a longer whip may be also be required because of the decreased capacitance. 73, Dloyd Try some 3mil Teflon, Teflon has a very high capacitive coefficent. Jimmie |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 3, 5:54 pm, "John Doe" wrote:
If you can't contribute anything positive to this question, then stay out of it, with your trash! I have a 10m base loaded mag mount antenna, that I had to put a piece of felt over the magnet as not to scratch a new vehicle. When I did this I apparently changed the capacitance between the mag mount and the roof of the vehicle. Someone suggested that I might want to replace the felt with either a large balloon or a large prophylactic as it is thinner and the capacitance would then return to almost where it should be. Positive comments only! Lose the magmount and drill a hole in your roof. When you sale your truck put a rbber plug in it made for that pupose. Has 0 effect on your resale value. |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
JIMMIE wrote:
Try some 3mil Teflon, Teflon has a very high capacitive coefficent. I'm afraid you're misinformed. The dielectric constant of PTFE Teflon is 2.1, or just about twice that of air. Quite a few plastics are higher (e.g. Mylar at 3.2 and PVC around 3.5), and many materials, such as those used for capacitors, have dielectric constants that are a lot higher (e.g., barium titanate at 1500 - 2000). Of course, a lot of the latter aren't physically suited for this application. A long time ago, I had trouble with microstrip line dispersion in a high speed delay line compensation network design. So I chose Teflon for the substrate material because of its *low* dielectric constant. The previous design was on an alumina substrate having a dielectric constant of about 10. The capacitance of two parallel plates is directly proportional to the dielectric constant and the plate surface area, and inversely proportional to the plate spacing. So putting 0.1 inch of Teflon between the plates gives you the same capacitance as putting the plates 0.05 inch apart with air between. This isn't to say that Teflon might not be a good choice. It's a very low loss material, and chemically very inert. It's soft so won't scratch, but it's slippery which might be a disadvantage. It's also subject to cold flow, but there probably won't be enough pressure for that to be a problem. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Try some 3mil Teflon, Teflon has a very high capacitive coefficent. But seems like teflon - being so slippery - would contribute to the antenna slipping off to roof.?? |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Dloyd Lavies wrote: On Nov 3, 5:54 pm, "John Doe" wrote: lowering the value of the vehicle, I've sold and traded-in multiple vehicles with holes punched in them, and not once has anyone ever said a word about the holes. When I trade it in, I just put in a rubber plug and no one notices. don't mean to go off topic, but I bought a new hyundai in 2000, and it came from the manufacturer with a hole in the roof! Roof antennas seem to be popular for cell phones and GSP. It had one of those plastic plugs, and it looked perfectly normal. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFHLULgQuDJiZ/QrH0RAm1WAJ9KWNU5YGOxGvq894zrLAjPMlDecgCguzfE NkkyCuyT/exew4JGV7grCmM= =tDsG -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Antenna Simulation Parameters and Folded Dipole Antenna Question... | Antenna | |||
Question is 'it' a Longwire {Random Wire} Antenna -or- Inverted "L" Antenna ? | Shortwave | |||
Antenna Question | CB | |||
antenna question | Shortwave | |||
APS-13 Antenna question | Antenna |