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#1
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Hello All:
I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave |
#2
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![]() Dave wrote: Hello All: I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave Corrections welcmed from anyone, but here is what has always been my understanding, Dave: SW is amplitude modulation. Noise (and it will be most noticeable with a longwire) is inherent. Anything that will amplify the signals more, will equally amplify the noise you are getting with those signals. Net improvement - nothing. That said, many posters here like "tunable loop" antennas, very good for cancelling out noise coming from *other directions* than the one you are zeroed into with the loop. Look for good links - you can make your own fairly easily. Others will have links at their fingertips, but a Google search for "AM loop antenna" is a good start. The trade-off again: The most distant and faint signals you can receive with your longwire will probably disappear with the loop - but the signals you still receive will likely be much quieter. Also, you have to turn the loop for maximum effectiveness on different signals. Bottom line: Maximum signal gathering ability, including "barely theres", and the noise be damned? Stick with the longwire. (Probably) less signals overall, but quieter reception? Try a loop. Hope this helped. I use a longwire, myself. Tony |
#3
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![]() "Dave" wrote in message ... Hello All: I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave Try grounding the antenna at the far end through a 100 ohm resistor (play around with the resistance but stay between 10 and 1000 ohms). That may reduce noise but will make the antenna directional off the far end. |
#4
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On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 21:34:55 -0400, Tony Meloche
wrote: Dave wrote: Hello All: I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave Corrections welcmed from anyone, but here is what has always been my understanding, Dave: SW is amplitude modulation. Noise (and it will be most noticeable with a longwire) is inherent. Anything that will amplify the signals more, will equally amplify the noise you are getting with those signals. Net improvement - nothing. That said, many posters here like "tunable loop" antennas, very good for cancelling out noise coming from *other directions* than the one you are zeroed into with the loop. Look for good links - you can make your own fairly easily. Others will have links at their fingertips, but a Google search for "AM loop antenna" is a good start. The trade-off again: The most distant and faint signals you can receive with your longwire will probably disappear with the loop - but the signals you still receive will likely be much quieter. Also, you have to turn the loop for maximum effectiveness on different signals. Bottom line: Maximum signal gathering ability, including "barely theres", and the noise be damned? Stick with the longwire. (Probably) less signals overall, but quieter reception? Try a loop. Hope this helped. I use a longwire, myself. Tony Good advice. Not mentioned are type of feedline, grounding, matching transformer. I've found that a good ground, coax feedline (using 75 ohm RG-6 as it's cheaper than RG-8 variants and easier to work with) and an ICE-182A (DC isolated transformer) provides some relief from household appliances & the neighbors dimmers (a device that is outlawed in my home as are flourescent lights - real noise generators). Not much you can do to boost the signal only, just do what you can to reduce the noise floor. That may mean ferrite chokes on power cords for computers & televisions, vcr's etc and perhaps giving up on the motion sensitive outdoor lights. Also, running the antenna perpendicular to power lines can provide some relief - if that is possible given your property. Howard - an inverted L and an Alpha Delta Sloper and proud holder of WAN (Worked All Noise) Certificate |
#5
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You could make yourself a di-pole. They have an inherent "noise-cancelling"
property about them. Any noise received in one half of the di-pole is picked up by the other half as "equal and opposite" (180 degrees out-of-phase) and cancels out the other, to some degree. Depends on several other variables how well this effect works. (Pretty much why double-coil pickups in electric guitars are inherently quieter than single-coil). Mark. "Dave" wrote in message ... Hello All: I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave |
#6
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![]() Mark wrote: You could make yourself a di-pole. They have an inherent "noise-cancelling" property about them. Any noise received in one half of the di-pole is picked up by the other half as "equal and opposite" (180 degrees out-of-phase) and cancels out the other, to some degree. Depends on several other variables how well this effect works. (Pretty much why double-coil pickups in electric guitars are inherently quieter than single-coil). Dipoles are best on only one small portion of a band. Not really all that good for general all-round shortwave listening, though he could use it with the tuner. dxAce Mark. "Dave" wrote in message ... Hello All: I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave |
#7
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= = = (Dave) wrote in message
= = = m... Hello All: I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave DAVID, First - Buy the following items: * One Hundred Feet (100 Ft) of Coax Cable * Eight Foot (8 Ft) Ground Rod * A so called Magnetic Long Wire Balun (MLB) - Palomar "MLB" Magnetic Longwire Balun @ $50 http://www.palomar-engineers.com/MLB-1/mlb-1.html - RF Systems Magnetic Longwire Balun (MLB) @ $60 http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/antsup/1484.html - WinRadio Long Wire Adapter @ $40 http://www.winradio.com/home/lwa.htm http://www.grove-ent.com/WR0130.html - The ICE 180 / ICE 182 @ $40 {My Choice} Broadband Impedance Matching Units intended for use with HF Lowband, Low-Noise Receiving Antennas. ICE= http://tinyurl.com/38unr http://www.arraysolutions.com/Produc...html#Beverage% 20Matching - - Model 180A Shortwave Band Coverage: 1.5 - 30 MHz - - Model 182A Medium & Shortwave Bands Coverage: 0.1 - 30 MHz - Par Electronics EF-SWL (Use the MLB Only) http://www.parelectronics.com/swl_end.htm Second - Run the Coax from your Radio Shack 'location' along the path of your current Long Wire Antenna. Account for any up-leads and down-leads of the Coax Run. The Far-End of the Coax Cable is the new starting point of your Antenna Element. Install a Ground Rod in the ground 'under' the "Junction Point" of the Far-End of the Coax and your Antenna Element. NOTE: You give-up 50-100Ft of Wire Antenna Element for a Coax Cable Feed-in-Line with a MLB Coupler to create a "Low Noise" Antenna. Third - WHY? - Read these Messages posted to the Shortwave Listeners (SWL) Antenna eGroup on YAHOO ! * Improving the 'basic' Long Wire Antenna with a Coax Lead-in-Line http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/1024 * Basic Antenna ? -and- Better Antenna ? http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/1135 * Checking for "RF" Noise http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/707 * IMPROVING on the Classic simple "Random" Wire Antenna http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/466 * An OutSide Ground for Better Safety and more . . . http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/206 * Understanding the Random Wire Antenna . . . and Building a Better One ! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/200 * The "Low Noise" SWL Antenna http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...enna/message/2 .. .. REMEMBER: "The AM/MW and Shortwave Antenna is 55.5% . . . of the Radio/Receiver and Antenna/Ground Reception Equation" http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/288 A Shortwave Antenna is "Equally" Important for Good Reception [.] .. .. iane ~ RHF .. Some Say: On A Clear Day You Can See Forever. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/502 I BELIEVE: On A Clear Night . . . You Can Hear Forever and Beyond - The Beyond ! .. .. |
#8
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![]() "RHF" wrote First - Buy the following items: * One Hundred Feet (100 Ft) of Coax Cable * Eight Foot (8 Ft) Ground Rod * A so called Magnetic Long Wire Balun (MLB) - Palomar "MLB" Magnetic Longwire Balun @ $50 http://www.palomar-engineers.com/MLB-1/mlb-1.html - RF Systems Magnetic Longwire Balun (MLB) @ $60 http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/antsup/1484.html - WinRadio Long Wire Adapter @ $40 http://www.winradio.com/home/lwa.htm http://www.grove-ent.com/WR0130.html - The ICE 180 / ICE 182 @ $40 {My Choice} Broadband Impedance Matching Units intended for use with HF Lowband, Low-Noise Receiving Antennas. ICE= http://tinyurl.com/38unr http://www.arraysolutions.com/Produc...html#Beverage% 20Matching - - Model 180A Shortwave Band Coverage: 1.5 - 30 MHz - - Model 182A Medium & Shortwave Bands Coverage: 0.1 - 30 MHz - Par Electronics EF-SWL (Use the MLB Only) http://www.parelectronics.com/swl_end.htm Hi RHF. This confuses me a bit, since the PAR EF-SWL has a 9:1 transformer built in. If one gets the PAR do they connect the built in transformer to the MLB you suggest, then run the coax to the receiver? |
#9
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RHF:
What a helpful reply. Thanks for taking the time and effort to post all of that good information. I am trying to figure out what antenna well best suit my needs and that will go a long way toward helping me make up my mind. ![]() "RHF" wrote in message om... = = = (Dave) wrote in message = = = m... Hello All: I have an Icom R71A, that I am using with a 300' (plus or minus 10-20'). I have the antenna coming straight into the house, hooked to a tentec antenna tuner and then to the receiver. Both the receiver and the tuner are grounded. I would like to get some ideas on how to reduce some of the static and to boost the signal on some of the weaker stations. All suggestions would be gratefull. Dave DAVID, First - Buy the following items: * One Hundred Feet (100 Ft) of Coax Cable * Eight Foot (8 Ft) Ground Rod * A so called Magnetic Long Wire Balun (MLB) - Palomar "MLB" Magnetic Longwire Balun @ $50 http://www.palomar-engineers.com/MLB-1/mlb-1.html - RF Systems Magnetic Longwire Balun (MLB) @ $60 http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/antsup/1484.html - WinRadio Long Wire Adapter @ $40 http://www.winradio.com/home/lwa.htm http://www.grove-ent.com/WR0130.html - The ICE 180 / ICE 182 @ $40 {My Choice} Broadband Impedance Matching Units intended for use with HF Lowband, Low-Noise Receiving Antennas. ICE= http://tinyurl.com/38unr http://www.arraysolutions.com/Produc...html#Beverage% 20Matching - - Model 180A Shortwave Band Coverage: 1.5 - 30 MHz - - Model 182A Medium & Shortwave Bands Coverage: 0.1 - 30 MHz - Par Electronics EF-SWL (Use the MLB Only) http://www.parelectronics.com/swl_end.htm Second - Run the Coax from your Radio Shack 'location' along the path of your current Long Wire Antenna. Account for any up-leads and down-leads of the Coax Run. The Far-End of the Coax Cable is the new starting point of your Antenna Element. Install a Ground Rod in the ground 'under' the "Junction Point" of the Far-End of the Coax and your Antenna Element. NOTE: You give-up 50-100Ft of Wire Antenna Element for a Coax Cable Feed-in-Line with a MLB Coupler to create a "Low Noise" Antenna. Third - WHY? - Read these Messages posted to the Shortwave Listeners (SWL) Antenna eGroup on YAHOO ! * Improving the 'basic' Long Wire Antenna with a Coax Lead-in-Line http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/1024 * Basic Antenna ? -and- Better Antenna ? http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/1135 * Checking for "RF" Noise http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/707 * IMPROVING on the Classic simple "Random" Wire Antenna http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/466 * An OutSide Ground for Better Safety and more . . . http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/206 * Understanding the Random Wire Antenna . . . and Building a Better One ! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/200 * The "Low Noise" SWL Antenna http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...enna/message/2 . . REMEMBER: "The AM/MW and Shortwave Antenna is 55.5% . . . of the Radio/Receiver and Antenna/Ground Reception Equation" http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/288 A Shortwave Antenna is "Equally" Important for Good Reception [.] . . iane ~ RHF . Some Say: On A Clear Day You Can See Forever. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...na/message/502 I BELIEVE: On A Clear Night . . . You Can Hear Forever and Beyond - The Beyond ! . . |
#10
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= = = "Sanjaya" wrote in message
= = = link.net... "RHF" wrote First - Buy the following items: * One Hundred Feet (100 Ft) of Coax Cable * Eight Foot (8 Ft) Ground Rod * A so called Magnetic Long Wire Balun (MLB) - Palomar "MLB" Magnetic Longwire Balun @ $50 http://www.palomar-engineers.com/MLB-1/mlb-1.html - RF Systems Magnetic Longwire Balun (MLB) @ $60 http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/antsup/1484.html - WinRadio Long Wire Adapter @ $40 http://www.winradio.com/home/lwa.htm http://www.grove-ent.com/WR0130.html - The ICE 180 / ICE 182 @ $40 {My Choice} Broadband Impedance Matching Units intended for use with HF Lowband, Low-Noise Receiving Antennas. ICE= http://tinyurl.com/38unr http://www.arraysolutions.com/Produc...html#Beverage% 20Matching - - Model 180A Shortwave Band Coverage: 1.5 - 30 MHz - - Model 182A Medium & Shortwave Bands Coverage: 0.1 - 30 MHz - Par Electronics EF-SWL (Use the MLB Only) @ $60 http://www.parelectronics.com/swl_end.htm http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/sw_ant/2205.html .. .. Hi RHF. This confuses me a bit, since the PAR EF-SWL has a 9:1 transformer built in. If one gets the PAR do they connect the built in transformer to the MLB you suggest, then run the coax to the receiver? SANJAYA, The Answer lays in Availability and Cost: PAR Electronics EF-SWL (Use the MLB Only) @ $60 http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/sw_ant/2205.html - The ICE 180 / ICE 182 @ $40 {My Choice} - WinRadio Long Wire Adapter @ $40 (BNC Connector) - Palomar "MLB" Magnetic Longwire Balun @ $50 {Easiest to use) Buy the PAR and swap-out the Wire Antenna Elements for the 200-300 Ft Longwire. Save the PAR's 45 feet of genuine #14 black polyethylene coated Flex-Weave wire for a future antenna. About "Flex-Weave" Antenna Wi http://www.davisrf.com/ham1/flexweve.htm Also there is the "Universal Magnetic Balun" (UMB) a Receiving (Only) Antenna Balun with a 9:1 impedance ratio by Wellbrook, UK. UMB= http://www.wellbrook.uk.com/UMB.html LONGWIRE&UMB= http://www.wellbrook.uk.com/longwire.html Do-It-Yourself Antenna Balun Kits by ByteMark http://www.bytemark.com/products/kit_bal1.htm iane ~ RHF .. .. |
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