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#1
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My backyard is limited in length. The lot is 86 feet long. My question is,
how long a wire should I use to have a good shortwave antenna that will fit in my yard. I know optimum is around 100 feet but I can't accommodate that length. If it passes over the house does it matter how much space there is between the wire and the roof of the house? Pierre |
#2
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![]() See http://www.anarc.org/naswa/badx/ante...e_antenna.html Height is much more important than length. I generally don't bother with a horizontal run of more than 30 feet or so. For faint signal reception, a moderate length antenna away from houses and power lines is better than a bigger antenna near noise sources. Peter wrote: My backyard is limited in length. The lot is 86 feet long. My question is, how long a wire should I use to have a good shortwave antenna that will fit in my yard. I know optimum is around 100 feet but I can't accommodate that length. If it passes over the house does it matter how much space there is between the wire and the roof of the house? -jpd |
#3
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My question is,
how long a wire should I use to have a good shortwave antenna that will fit in my yard. Two things. Firstly, depending on the radio you're using, you may not want even 86 feet of wire, since it may cause overload on stronger signals. With a portable, 50 feet might be too much. Secondly, ANY amount of wire that is up as high as you can get it but away from powerlines (for safety AND noise/interference reasons) will be a good antenna. 86 feet is a lot to work with, so consider yourself lucky, see how high you can get it up there, and have fun experimenting with antennas! :-) Linus |
#4
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![]() GrtPmpkin32 schrieb: Secondly, ANY amount of wire that is up as high as you can get it but away from powerlines (for safety AND noise/interference reasons) will be a good antenna. ....and sometimes a good lightning arrestor. So have a look on lightning protection. |
#5
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Two antenna is a good bet;
One ~30 feet for strong stations, - Then the Longer one for faint, distant ones.. Dan My backyard is limited in length. The lot is 86 feet long. My question is, how long a wire should I use to have a good shortwave antenna that will fit in my yard. I know optimum is around 100 feet but I can't accommodate that length. If it passes over the house does it matter how much space there is between the wire and the roof of the house? Pierre |
#6
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![]() Peter wrote: My backyard is limited in length. The lot is 86 feet long. My question is, how long a wire should I use to have a good shortwave antenna that will fit in my yard. I know optimum is around 100 feet but I can't accommodate that length. If it passes over the house does it matter how much space there is between the wire and the roof of the house? Pierre Can you bend it so you can get more length if you need it. Hieght matters but mine works well at about 17 feet about the ground. Have a look under antennas at the AMANDX site below. Some of the info could be usefull -- 73 and Best of DX Shawn Axelrod Visit the AMANDX DX site with info for the new or experienced listener: http://www.angelfire.com/mb/amandx/index.html REMEMBER ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN HEAR FOREVER |
#7
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I can bend it a bit. I am using the Drake R8B radio.
Is 12 inches above the roof of the house enough to be away from interference? Pierre "The Axelrods" wrote in message ... Peter wrote: My backyard is limited in length. The lot is 86 feet long. My question is, how long a wire should I use to have a good shortwave antenna that will fit in my yard. I know optimum is around 100 feet but I can't accommodate that length. If it passes over the house does it matter how much space there is between the wire and the roof of the house? Pierre Can you bend it so you can get more length if you need it. Hieght matters but mine works well at about 17 feet about the ground. Have a look under antennas at the AMANDX site below. Some of the info could be usefull -- 73 and Best of DX Shawn Axelrod Visit the AMANDX DX site with info for the new or experienced listener: http://www.angelfire.com/mb/amandx/index.html REMEMBER ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN HEAR FOREVER |
#8
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Peter wrote:
I can bend it a bit. I am using the Drake R8B radio. Is 12 inches above the roof of the house enough to be away from interference? Probably not. Unless your house is unusually free of electrical/electronic gadgets, above the house is bad. |
#9
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-=jd=- wrote:
On Fri 14 May 2004 06:43:47p, "Peter" wrote in message news ![]() I can bend it a bit. I am using the Drake R8B radio. Is 12 inches above the roof of the house enough to be away from interference? Reading that, it seems there's a joke in there dying to get out... Only when the firemen come for the lightning scorched corpse. mike |
#10
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![]() -=jd=- wrote: On Fri 14 May 2004 06:43:47p, "Peter" wrote in message news ![]() I can bend it a bit. I am using the Drake R8B radio. Is 12 inches above the roof of the house enough to be away from interference? Reading that, it seems there's a joke in there dying to get out... In any event, if I were you, I'd string as long of a wire as I could as high as I could and see what happens. You have to start somewhere. If you can only fit 50 feet of wire 8 feet off the ground, then that's all you can do. String it up in a temporary fashion (if you want) and see what you get. "Looks" don't necessarily indicate performance. If it seems to work ok, then go back and make your mounts more permanent and pretty. Then start looking around at the amandx and hardcore-dx sites and see if you get any ideas to either improve it, or perhaps just some ideas to experiment with. There's no shortage of antenna info on the web for you to try, but it seems to me that after you get the initial wire up, there aren't too many more improvements to be made before you start entering the realm of diminishing returns. Once you get past installing a good ground and perhaps a matching transformer for a coax feed, it's as if you are a drag racer looking for that extra 100th of a second. My general take on it is that if I had a similarly shaped lot and a similar antenna and radio, we could try the same thing and get two different sets of results (large or small). The main point is you won't know what your specific situation can do until you try something. Sally forth and boldly string your wire antenna and then come back and tell everyone how it seems to work. -=jd=- A good post from jd, and I agree with every word of it. I would add one thing (which is basically a compression of his post, with my own slant): Antennas are 50% science, 25% "what-the-hell-let's-give-it-a-shot", and 25% sheer luck. Tony |
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