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Old May 23rd 05, 05:51 PM
Jon Gauthier
 
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Default Marine VHF whip performance on ham 2m ham bands?

I haven't fired up EZNEC yet, but I was wondering how a standard 3dBi
marine whip would perform on the 2m ham bands. Since the marine
frequencies are 156.050-157.425 MHz, what could I expect at 144-148 MHz?

If it won't cut it, then does anyone have any recommendations for a
dual-band antenna (commercial or home-built)?

Jon
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Old May 23rd 05, 11:19 PM
David Ryeburn
 
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In article ,
Jon Gauthier wrote:

I haven't fired up EZNEC yet, but I was wondering how a standard 3dBi
marine whip would perform on the 2m ham bands. Since the marine
frequencies are 156.050-157.425 MHz, what could I expect at 144-148 MHz?

If it won't cut it, then does anyone have any recommendations for a
dual-band antenna (commercial or home-built)?


You don't want to cut it. You want to lengthen it about 7% ;-).

David, ex-W8EZE

--
David Ryeburn

To send e-mail, use "ca" instead of "caz".
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Old May 24th 05, 01:24 AM
The Real Roger Conroy
 
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yup, Dave is right

You might want to buy/make a small 2m antenna tuner to match it up a bit if
you seek a near perfect 1:1 match.

"David Ryeburn" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Jon Gauthier wrote:

I haven't fired up EZNEC yet, but I was wondering how a standard 3dBi
marine whip would perform on the 2m ham bands. Since the marine
frequencies are 156.050-157.425 MHz, what could I expect at 144-148 MHz?

If it won't cut it, then does anyone have any recommendations for a
dual-band antenna (commercial or home-built)?


You don't want to cut it. You want to lengthen it about 7% ;-).

David, ex-W8EZE

--
David Ryeburn

To send e-mail, use "ca" instead of "caz".



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Old May 25th 05, 03:27 AM
Korbin Dallas
 
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On Mon, 23 May 2005 11:51:01 -0400, Jon Gauthier wrote:

I haven't fired up EZNEC yet, but I was wondering how a standard 3dBi
marine whip would perform on the 2m ham bands. Since the marine
frequencies are 156.050-157.425 MHz, what could I expect at 144-148 MHz?

If it won't cut it, then does anyone have any recommendations for a
dual-band antenna (commercial or home-built)?

Jon


Low antenna efficiency coupled with a transmission line mismatch made for
poor performance from these antennas.

At one time I have seen available 2 m / 70 cm dual band
antennas in a Marine mount but I have not been able to locate one
recently.

--
Korbin Dallas
The name was changed to protect the guilty.

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Old May 25th 05, 03:43 AM
Ed
 
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Default


I haven't fired up EZNEC yet, but I was wondering how a standard 3dBi
marine whip would perform on the 2m ham bands. Since the marine
frequencies are 156.050-157.425 MHz, what could I expect at 144-148

MHz?

If it won't cut it, then does anyone have any recommendations for a
dual-band antenna (commercial or home-built)?

Jon



Jon,

I would expect the marine antenna to perform poorly, due to high SWR.
However, I am not sure of your second question. Are you looking for a
2M/440 antenna for a boat, or for automobile mount? A number of vendors
(Larson, Antenex, Comet?, etc.) sell dual band mobile antennas for those
two ham bands. For a boat, I don't know of any dualband stuff, but those
same vendors sell a base loaded half wave antenna for single ham bands
that doesn't require any ground plane. Good Luck.


Ed K7AAT


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Old May 25th 05, 03:49 AM
John Smith
 
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A half-wave fed with a gamma would need no groundplane... you could build
one better than any you could purchase...

Warmest regards,
John

"Ed" wrote in message
. 92.175...

I haven't fired up EZNEC yet, but I was wondering how a standard 3dBi
marine whip would perform on the 2m ham bands. Since the marine
frequencies are 156.050-157.425 MHz, what could I expect at 144-148

MHz?

If it won't cut it, then does anyone have any recommendations for a
dual-band antenna (commercial or home-built)?

Jon



Jon,

I would expect the marine antenna to perform poorly, due to high SWR.
However, I am not sure of your second question. Are you looking for a
2M/440 antenna for a boat, or for automobile mount? A number of vendors
(Larson, Antenex, Comet?, etc.) sell dual band mobile antennas for those
two ham bands. For a boat, I don't know of any dualband stuff, but those
same vendors sell a base loaded half wave antenna for single ham bands
that doesn't require any ground plane. Good Luck.


Ed K7AAT



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Old May 25th 05, 05:49 PM
Jon Gauthier
 
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John Smith wrote:
A half-wave fed with a gamma would need no groundplane... you could build
one better than any you could purchase...

Warmest regards,
John

"Ed" wrote in message
. 92.175...

I haven't fired up EZNEC yet, but I was wondering how a standard 3dBi
marine whip would perform on the 2m ham bands. Since the marine
frequencies are 156.050-157.425 MHz, what could I expect at 144-148


MHz?

If it won't cut it, then does anyone have any recommendations for a
dual-band antenna (commercial or home-built)?

Jon



Jon,

I would expect the marine antenna to perform poorly, due to high SWR.
However, I am not sure of your second question. Are you looking for a
2M/440 antenna for a boat, or for automobile mount? A number of vendors
(Larson, Antenex, Comet?, etc.) sell dual band mobile antennas for those
two ham bands. For a boat, I don't know of any dualband stuff, but those
same vendors sell a base loaded half wave antenna for single ham bands
that doesn't require any ground plane. Good Luck.


Ed K7AAT





John/Ed,

It's for a sailboat (all this has been hashed over in
rec.boats.electronics - I mistakenly cross-posted to rec.radio.antenna,
rather than rec.radio.amateur.antenna, so you guys missed the thread
there). The general consensus is it would be easier to use two antennas,
but I'd have to enlarge the holes in the compression post under the mast
and the mast itself in order to run another cable. If I could find a
pair of diplexers, then at least both radio/antenna combos could share
the same feedline up the mast...

Anyone know of a 2m/70cm diplexer with tight enough filter slope to put
the marine band on the same side as the 70cm, or one specific to 2m/marine?

Jon KB1HTW
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Old May 26th 05, 04:59 AM
Ed
 
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It's for a sailboat (all this has been hashed over in
rec.boats.electronics - I mistakenly cross-posted to
rec.radio.antenna, rather than rec.radio.amateur.antenna, so you guys
missed the thread there). The general consensus is it would be easier
to use two antennas, but I'd have to enlarge the holes in the
compression post under the mast and the mast itself in order to run
another cable. If I could find a pair of diplexers, then at least both
radio/antenna combos could share the same feedline up the mast...

Anyone know of a 2m/70cm diplexer with tight enough filter slope to
put the marine band on the same side as the 70cm, or one specific to
2m/marine?

Jon KB1HTW




John, I know that some duplexer manufacturer such as Tx/Rx (
http://www.txrx.com ) make a pretty small repeater duplexer for VHF that
would handle the split between amateur and marine band.... if you were to
separate the cavities and use them in your manner... but not sure if they
would still be frequency broad enough, or small enough if space is really
cramped in the cabin. Something to research, anyway.

QUESTION, though. What size or type of cable is currently run up in
the mast?

Ed


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Old May 26th 05, 08:15 PM
Jon Gauthier
 
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Ed wrote:


It's for a sailboat (all this has been hashed over in
rec.boats.electronics - I mistakenly cross-posted to
rec.radio.antenna, rather than rec.radio.amateur.antenna, so you guys
missed the thread there). The general consensus is it would be easier
to use two antennas, but I'd have to enlarge the holes in the
compression post under the mast and the mast itself in order to run
another cable. If I could find a pair of diplexers, then at least both
radio/antenna combos could share the same feedline up the mast...

Anyone know of a 2m/70cm diplexer with tight enough filter slope to
put the marine band on the same side as the 70cm, or one specific to
2m/marine?

Jon KB1HTW





John, I know that some duplexer manufacturer such as Tx/Rx (
http://www.txrx.com ) make a pretty small repeater duplexer for VHF that
would handle the split between amateur and marine band.... if you were to
separate the cavities and use them in your manner... but not sure if they
would still be frequency broad enough, or small enough if space is really
cramped in the cabin. Something to research, anyway.

QUESTION, though. What size or type of cable is currently run up in
the mast?

Ed


Ed,

It's marine-grade RG-8x. The antenna is at the top of the mast, 36 ft
above the cabin top.
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Old May 27th 05, 08:08 PM
Ed
 
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It's marine-grade RG-8x. The antenna is at the top of the mast, 36 ft
above the cabin top.



My thought, in asking this questions, was replacing the current coax
with two of smaller diameter, since you said the current hole in the mast
was too small to add one. Commerically, we often use a RG-58 type coax
that has a white Teflon jacket, commonly referred to as Motorola White
Teflon coax. It is considerably smaller than RG-8X and I would hazzard to
say you might be able to pull a pair of them up, using the original RG-8X
as a pull line. You will need to obtain connectors with the proper size
ferrule for it as it is smaller than RG-58. Good Luck.

Ed K7AAT

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