Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I like tinkering in my garage. I have a plan for a small "ground
radial" scanner antenna plan from an old Radio Shack book. I have thought about changin the plan using aluminum elements. Any thought of if I could make some "pocket money" selling them on ebay or something? I am not looking to get rich just get some pocket money enjoying what I do. We have just had our second child and money is hard to come by! |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Any thought of if I could make some "pocket money" selling them on ebay or something? I am not looking to get rich just get some pocket money enjoying what I do. We have just had our second child and money is hard to come by! Sure you can, step one would be to have a small webpage, there are several like geocities,tripod.com etc which offer free webpage templates and hosting. There you could put up either the designs or some photographs of the end-product.You can then research on how to become an ebay store and then put a few up for grabs. Even the big antenna makers like antennawarehouse.com work like this...they do have a direct webpage from where you can buy stuff directly or you can buy via their store on ebay... -Nick P.S.:and if you can take custom orders,that should enhance your sales too. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Go for it! But rather than try to compete with the big guys, on mass
produced, inexpensive antennas, like Radio Shack sells, build a more unique, quality product! For example, the Grove Scanner Beam, is an excellent design, moderately priced, but not very sturdy, in severe weather extremes. http://www.grove-ent.com/BEAMII.html On the other hand, the Create Log Periodic's, are also an excellent design, very study, even in the worst of storms, but way over priced! http://www.grove-ent.com/ANT16.html http://www.grove-ent.com/ANT17.html Build something similar, but in-between the two, quality, and price wise, and you will have yourself a winner! I would also offer the option of stainless steel construction, as well as aluminum, for those who desire it. As Nick suggested, offer custom designs, especially ones tuned to a specific band, or requirement, such as Military Air, GMRS, MURS, Marine, WiFi,FM Stereo, HD TV, etc. Use Google, search the web for "antenna design", and you will find a wealth of information, as well as some free software, to help you! Good luck! Bill Crocker wrote in message ups.com... I like tinkering in my garage. I have a plan for a small "ground radial" scanner antenna plan from an old Radio Shack book. I have thought about changin the plan using aluminum elements. Any thought of if I could make some "pocket money" selling them on ebay or something? I am not looking to get rich just get some pocket money enjoying what I do. We have just had our second child and money is hard to come by! |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Bill Crocker wrote: Go for it! But rather than try to compete with the big guys, on mass produced, inexpensive antennas, like Radio Shack sells, build a more unique, quality product! For example, the Grove Scanner Beam, is an excellent design, moderately priced, but not very sturdy, in severe weather extremes. http://www.grove-ent.com/BEAMII.html On the other hand, the Create Log Periodic's, are also an excellent design, very study, even in the worst of storms, but way over priced! http://www.grove-ent.com/ANT16.html http://www.grove-ent.com/ANT17.html Build something similar, but in-between the two, quality, and price wise, and you will have yourself a winner! I would also offer the option of stainless steel construction, as well as aluminum, for those who desire it. As Nick suggested, offer custom designs, especially ones tuned to a specific band, or requirement, such as Military Air, GMRS, MURS, Marine, WiFi,FM Stereo, HD TV, etc. Use Google, search the web for "antenna design", and you will find a wealth of information, as well as some free software, to help you! Good luck! Bill Crocker Thanks for you postive words. I am by no means an expert, but have been studying alot about them. As far as single band goes, what band do you guys use the most? What would you like to have, something portable? something with very high gain? I can build high gain yagi's too but they are only good generally in one direction unless you have a rotor. I really appreciate your guy's advice. Several other groups including some of those in the ham group told me it would not work. I started getting interested in all this by wanting to build my own ham antenna. wrote in message ups.com... I like tinkering in my garage. I have a plan for a small "ground radial" scanner antenna plan from an old Radio Shack book. I have thought about changin the plan using aluminum elements. Any thought of if I could make some "pocket money" selling them on ebay or something? I am not looking to get rich just get some pocket money enjoying what I do. We have just had our second child and money is hard to come by! |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I would start with a base antenna, for aircraft. 108~138MHz. Most anything
available is very expensive, commercial grade, products. They treat the aircraft band like it's a black art, or something...and in fact, it's very simple. I'd make it out of stainless steel, heavy enough to stand the worst of storms. Start with an omni-directional, because you never know where the airplanes are. Then possibly offer a directional high-gain yagi (beam) design, for those wishing to pull in distant airports. If they're targeting only one specific airport, they wouldn't even need a rotor. It's unfortunate the amateur radio people are discouraging you. That's what the hobby used to be all about...home brew. Not just antennas, but radios too! Bill Crocker wrote in message oups.com... Thanks for you postive words. I am by no means an expert, but have been studying alot about them. As far as single band goes, what band do you guys use the most? What would you like to have, something portable? something with very high gain? I can build high gain yagi's too but they are only good generally in one direction unless you have a rotor. I really appreciate your guy's advice. Several other groups including some of those in the ham group told me it would not work. I started getting interested in all this by wanting to build my own ham antenna. |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Bill Crocker wrote: I would start with a base antenna, for aircraft. 108~138MHz. Most anything available is very expensive, commercial grade, products. They treat the aircraft band like it's a black art, or something...and in fact, it's very simple. I'd make it out of stainless steel, heavy enough to stand the worst of storms. Start with an omni-directional, because you never know where the airplanes are. Then possibly offer a directional high-gain yagi (beam) design, for those wishing to pull in distant airports. If they're targeting only one specific airport, they wouldn't even need a rotor. It's unfortunate the amateur radio people are discouraging you. That's what the hobby used to be all about...home brew. Not just antennas, but radios too! Bill Crocker wrote in message oups.com... Thanks for you postive words. I am by no means an expert, but have been studying alot about them. As far as single band goes, what band do you guys use the most? What would you like to have, something portable? something with very high gain? I can build high gain yagi's too but they are only good generally in one direction unless you have a rotor. I really appreciate your guy's advice. Several other groups including some of those in the ham group told me it would not work. I started getting interested in all this by wanting to build my own ham antenna. So maybe build a ground plane cut for the center of the aircraft band? I could build an antenna strong enough to stop a tank if I wanted to. The problem become weight and shipping the thing. Do you know of some examples of antennas out there? Would someone want one tuned to the tower frequency only? |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
what about copy right law,s
wrote in message oups.com... Bill Crocker wrote: Go for it! But rather than try to compete with the big guys, on mass produced, inexpensive antennas, like Radio Shack sells, build a more unique, quality product! For example, the Grove Scanner Beam, is an excellent design, moderately priced, but not very sturdy, in severe weather extremes. http://www.grove-ent.com/BEAMII.html On the other hand, the Create Log Periodic's, are also an excellent design, very study, even in the worst of storms, but way over priced! http://www.grove-ent.com/ANT16.html http://www.grove-ent.com/ANT17.html Build something similar, but in-between the two, quality, and price wise, and you will have yourself a winner! I would also offer the option of stainless steel construction, as well as aluminum, for those who desire it. As Nick suggested, offer custom designs, especially ones tuned to a specific band, or requirement, such as Military Air, GMRS, MURS, Marine, WiFi,FM Stereo, HD TV, etc. Use Google, search the web for "antenna design", and you will find a wealth of information, as well as some free software, to help you! Good luck! Bill Crocker Thanks for you postive words. I am by no means an expert, but have been studying alot about them. As far as single band goes, what band do you guys use the most? What would you like to have, something portable? something with very high gain? I can build high gain yagi's too but they are only good generally in one direction unless you have a rotor. I really appreciate your guy's advice. Several other groups including some of those in the ham group told me it would not work. I started getting interested in all this by wanting to build my own ham antenna. wrote in message ups.com... I like tinkering in my garage. I have a plan for a small "ground radial" scanner antenna plan from an old Radio Shack book. I have thought about changin the plan using aluminum elements. Any thought of if I could make some "pocket money" selling them on ebay or something? I am not looking to get rich just get some pocket money enjoying what I do. We have just had our second child and money is hard to come by! |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I dont mean copying them, I mean seeing how well or how flimsy they are
constructed, like thin or thick metal, etc. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Inverted ground plane antenna: compared with normal GP and low dipole. | Antenna | |||
Making 2.4GHz antenna more directional | Antenna | |||
Newbie, UHF antenna for TV questions | Antenna | |||
Poor quality low + High TV channels? How much dB in Preamp? | Antenna | |||
QST Article: An Easy to Build, Dual-Band Collinear Antenna | Antenna |