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#1
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Hi,
I'm thinkinig to make an antenna for the marine band (156mhz) and hooked to my vx-7r portable. 1. How could I make it to a reasonable carrying size (perhaps less than 12 inches)? 2. Is it possible to use the steel wire and put the heat shrink tube outside? 3. Is the wire solder to the SMA core and no ground need? Thanks, Muskie |
#2
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On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 17:23:34 +0800, muskie wrote:
Hi, I'm thinking to make an antenna for the marine band (156mhz) and hooked to my vx-7r portable. 1. How could I make it to a reasonable carrying size (perhaps less than 12 inches)? 2. Is it possible to use the steel wire and put the heat shrink tube outside? 3. Is the wire solder to the SMA core and no ground need? Thanks, Muskie Cool radio! How do you like it? Have you used it to work any ham radio satellites, or copy any weather satellite pictures? How is for cross talk? What do you think of the HF receiver? Have you copied any weather charts off of HF with it? Since your vx-7r is not type certified as a commercial maritime radio, you need not worry about constructing an antenna suitable for transmitting. Almost any antenna from a paper clip to the helically loaded rubber whip that came with your vx-7r will receive just fine on the commercial maritime frequencies around 156.8 MHz. If you put the antenna that came with your radio on an antenna analyzer I suspect you would see very little difference between the 146 MHz amateur 2M FM band, going up to 156.8 MHz for the maritime band or going down to 137.5 MHz for the polar orbiting weather satellite band. Yaesu lists marine band coverage as a feature. How bad can it be? What do you want to achieve by changing your existing rubber whip? gblair (I) _at_ (really) sympatico (hate) _dot_ (spam) ca (email) _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ UNMATCHED WEATHERPROOFING The VX-7R case, keypad, speaker, and connectors are carefully sealed to protect the internal circuitry against water damage. And the optional CMP460A Speaker/Mic, like the transceiver itself, is rated for 30 minutes of submersion at a depth of up to three feet! THE BEST VERSATILITY EVER 50/144/430 MHz: 5w Power Utilizing a reliable FET power amplifier circuit, the VX-7R provides a full 5 Watts of power output on the 50, 144, and 430 MHz Amateur bands, with bonus coverage of the 222 MHz band at 300 mW (USA version Only) of power output. And for 6-meter AM enthusiasts, you also get 1 Watt of carrier power on the 50 MHz band! Four power levels may be selected, for optimum battery life. Dual Receive: V-V/U-U/V-U/GEN-HAM The VX-7R is capable of four modes of Dual Receive, including simultaneous reception on (1) two VHF frequencies; (2) two UHF frequencies; (3) one VHF and one UHF frequency; or (4) one "General Coverage" frequency and one "Ham" frequency. And when a call is received on the "Main" band, you can set up the VX-7R to reduce the audio level on the "Sub" band, if you like! Wide Frequency Coverage With continuous AM/FM reception coverage of 500 kHz to 999 MHz (cellular frequencies are blocked and non-restorable), the VX- 7R is ideal for monitoring HF shortwave broadcasts, the AM and FM Broadcast bands, plus a wide variety of Marine, Public Safety, and Government bands. And special memory banks for the Weather, Marine, and Shortwave bands make station selection effortless! _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ |
#3
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I had a VX7-r, I was not impressed with it's receive capabilities on HF.
Since it is SUPPOSED to be a VHF/UHF rig I wasn't too surprized....... "Spam Fighter" wrote in message news ![]() On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 17:23:34 +0800, muskie wrote: Cool radio! How do you like it? Have you used it to work any ham radio satellites, or copy any weather satellite pictures? How is for cross talk? What do you think of the HF receiver? Have you copied any weather charts off of HF with it? |
#4
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Muskie
The answer to this is a simple one. Simply make a Slim Jim antenna using 300 Ohm feeder. Design it for 145MHz and then cut a 1" strip if metal from a drinks can and wrap it around the antenna just above the coax feed point. By sliding the metal strip up or down the antenna the resonant point will move by 10 - 20MHz. I have used this design many times, you can mark the correct point for marine band and for 2M the move the metal tuning thingy depending on where you wish to Tx. The dimensions are not critical, I have built several of these antennas for use on the marine band (ie too small for use on 2m) but by sliding the tuning strip down the antenna it works great on 2m. The antenna can be rolled up and put in your pocket when not in use and hung from a tree any other suitable support when required. OK, it's going to be bigger than 12" but so is a 1/4W antenna at this frequency. Jon G2FHF "muskie" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm thinkinig to make an antenna for the marine band (156mhz) and hooked to my vx-7r portable. 1. How could I make it to a reasonable carrying size (perhaps less than 12 inches)? 2. Is it possible to use the steel wire and put the heat shrink tube outside? 3. Is the wire solder to the SMA core and no ground need? Thanks, Muskie |
#5
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On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 17:23:34 +0800, "muskie"
wrote: Hi, I'm thinkinig to make an antenna for the marine band (156mhz) and hooked to my vx-7r portable. 1. How could I make it to a reasonable carrying size (perhaps less than 12 inches)? 2. Is it possible to use the steel wire and put the heat shrink tube outside? 3. Is the wire solder to the SMA core and no ground need? Thanks, Muskie You can make a coaxial antenna using coax cable. Take RG-58 for example. Cut off the outside jacket about 20 inches from the end. Make a small hole in the shield brade and pull out the center insulator and conductor. Cut both the center conductor and braid to about 18 inches in length. Then tape the braid to the side of the coax cable. Make some sort of hook on the top of the center conductor and hook it, or maybe tape it, to a high place. The antenna will be effectively a vertical dipole. They work great. |
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