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#1
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Hi all Any of you guys experimented building a "FM tap" for the mobile ?
I want to use a Fender mounted CB antenna for the car's AM/FM radio also A center loaded mobile antenna directly threads on to my Blazers AM/FM+ RG-58 hardware ( just added PL259 plus devise a safe way of shunting the RF on transmit. 1.7:1 SWR confirmed Now I need to make a tap perhaps: 68pf + 10K resistor to 2 detector diodes back to back + 10:1 for 50mv shunt ? -Joe (NOSPAM in effect) |
#2
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Some time ago I obtained a roll of 6 mil thick 10 inch wide aluminum sheet
at a bargain. I intended to use it for an antenna in my attic. I would use plastic clothes hangers as supports stapled to the rafters. When I mentioned I was finally going to get it installed, a friend told me that the sheet won't make a good antenna. There is plenty of room for a bent dipole so I ask why he thought it wouldn't work. His answer was that the thin edges would have a corona discharge and might set fire to the house. I considered it nonsense, but I wonder -- Running only 100 Watts. Is there any reason that a thin sheet of the proper length would be unsuitable as an antenna for "indoor" use? Thanks for you insightful comments. K7DUP |
#3
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On Tue, 13 Jan 2004 22:42:36 GMT, "Roger Gt"
wrote: thin edges would have a corona discharge and might set fire to the house. I considered it nonsense, but I wonder -- Running only 100 Watts. Hi Roger, Same thing "might" happen with wire too (it is just as thin and pointy at the edges and the ends). That is why you use standoff insulators. "Only 100W" has nothing to do with it, except making it happen faster. Why, where, or when is strictly a matter of Geometry and wavelength. Aside from being a thick wire (at least in one dimension); there is nothing novel that couldn't be accomplished with simple wire. You may enjoy wider bandwidth at a shorter dimension. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#4
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No to your question, but why? Wire would work every bit as well..
"Roger Gt" wrote in message om... Some time ago I obtained a roll of 6 mil thick 10 inch wide aluminum sheet at a bargain. I intended to use it for an antenna in my attic. I would use plastic clothes hangers as supports stapled to the rafters. When I mentioned I was finally going to get it installed, a friend told me that the sheet won't make a good antenna. There is plenty of room for a bent dipole so I ask why he thought it wouldn't work. His answer was that the thin edges would have a corona discharge and might set fire to the house. I considered it nonsense, but I wonder -- Running only 100 Watts. Is there any reason that a thin sheet of the proper length would be unsuitable as an antenna for "indoor" use? Thanks for you insightful comments. K7DUP |
#5
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Some time ago I obtained a roll of 6 mil thick 10 inch wide aluminum sheet
at a bargain. I intended to use it for an antenna in my attic. Hi, it might be interesting to make a magnetic loop from the sheet. It should behave like a 5 inch dia aluminum tube according to theory, so good efficiency can be expected. 73 Ivan OK1SIP |
#6
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Install it with end insulators, for some applications a small piece of
dowel with the aluminum wrapped on it will make a suitable insulator. Then tie off the dowel in the attic with 30 pound monofiliment fishing line. The 10 inch width will give a wider resonance than a wire, assuming you will be using it at 20 meters or lower wavelengths. For an attic installation use nuts/bolts/washers to fasten the transmission line to the antenna. Soldering to Aluminum requires much more than simple solder. Deacon Dave, W1MCE Roger Gt wrote: Some time ago I obtained a roll of 6 mil thick 10 inch wide aluminum sheet at a bargain. I intended to use it for an antenna in my attic. I would use plastic clothes hangers as supports stapled to the rafters. When I mentioned I was finally going to get it installed, a friend told me that the sheet won't make a good antenna. There is plenty of room for a bent dipole so I ask why he thought it wouldn't work. His answer was that the thin edges would have a corona discharge and might set fire to the house. I considered it nonsense, but I wonder -- Running only 100 Watts. Is there any reason that a thin sheet of the proper length would be unsuitable as an antenna for "indoor" use? Thanks for you insightful comments. K7DUP |
#7
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Roger wrote:
"---Running only 100 Watts?" At resonance, you should have 85 volts at the dipole drivepoint. If there were no radiation from the antenna, voltage at its tips would rise to 170 volts from the Ferranti effect, that is the voltage doubling from collapse of the magnetic field caused by current interruption at the conductor`s end. It`s possible to build a Tesla coil with inductive loading of an antenna, but if you don`t do that, there`s not much chance of generating enough voltage to make a corona with 100 watts. At a kilowatt you only have 3.16 X the volts at 100 watts. It takes several thousand volts to generate a corona at normal atmospheric pressure. Install a fire detector and be comfortable. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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