beaver wrote in message ...
Steve wrote:
"MRe" wrote in message et.nl...
"Steve" schreef in bericht
.com...
I've heard good things about this antenna and recently acquired one.
The performance of this antenna is terrible. In fact, it's so bad that
for the past few days I've been scratching my head, wondering what I
could possibly be doing wrong. It's a very simple setup...so simple
that I can't think of anything I *could* be doing wrong. Just hang it
where did you hang it?
and attach it to your receiver
Which reciever? How attached?
and you should be good to go. Yet the
reception I get with this antenna is vastly inferior to what I get
with my whip alone.
Is there something not mentioned in the instructions that I should
know? Please tell me I'm doing something wrong...I don't see how this
antenna could perform so badly and yet get such good reviews.
It is not possible to give an answer on this question.
Please give (much) more details of your setup.
MRe
I hung the antenna outside, using the provided nylon cords, on my
balcony. It's attached to the external antenna jack of a portable
receiver (Sony ICF-SW77). I had to use an adaptor so that it would fit
the small antenna jack on my Sony, but it's the same adaptor I've used
with other antennas, which seem to work okay.
Steve
I've had the same problem with the Sony sw77 with an antenna that works
with other radios. I solved the problem by wiring the connector with
the tip only. Try an experiment by not inserting connector all the way
into radio or trying moving it in and out in diffent locations of radio
plug to see if it improves things. If it does then you'll have to wire
the connector using tip only and don't wire the sleeve.
Thanks for the tip. I tried it and was pretty surprised when the
signal strength shot up when I had the plug pulled halfway out of the
jack! There must be something wrong with the connector, as dxAce
suggested several posts back.
After getting the mini-windom to work, I fooled around with it a bit.
I got the mini because I live in an apartment building in Brooklyn and
there's a lot of interference here. The mini-windom is supposed to be
a relatively 'quiet' antenna, and I suppose it is. It's performance is
better than most of my improvised wire antennas. But, at least if my
experience over the past couple of nights is any indication, it's no
match at all for the used AOR LA350 active loop I picked up some time
ago. (I recommend the LA350 highly for apartment dwellers. It's very
good at nulling interference--maybe not as good as the (very
expensive) Wellbrook loops, which I've not experimented with, but very
good.)
Thanks to everyone who offered me suggestions. I appreciate the help!
Steve
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