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-   -   Mobile 2m antenna (https://www.radiobanter.com/antenna/1280-mobile-2m-antenna.html)

Greg Doughty February 21st 04 12:07 AM

Mobile 2m antenna
 
I am going to a hamfest this weekend (Frostfest in Richmond, Va.) and would
like to get all the parts to assemble my mobile antenna. Okay, after reading
many many threads on newsgroups and eham, I have still a couple of questions. I
have a 2000 Dodge Caravan (I posted before and had many good responses!) and
now my wife has said I can drill. Well, I will only be using the ic 2100 on
road trips and the like. I have an ht for all other things. On road trips we
use a "snail" on the luggage rack. Kind of hard to get the antenna there now.
My only option is an adjustable angle mount on the hood, rear gate, or mounting
the antenna to the frame under the front or rear bumper? My wife doesn't mind
a 5/8 wave on the bumpers as long as it can be removed. Are there any mounts
for the bumper? It is a plastic bumper and the metal frame is recessed about
6-10 inches up under the bumper. I guess a mag mount will work but just not as
well as a mount that is drilled. Will the clamp mount work on the hood?

Thanks
73
Greg


Phil February 21st 04 01:05 AM

Try the Comet 400 series mount. It's a bit pricy but is strong and very
adjustable. I use a pair of them on my van's hatch and can play mix and
match. With the 3/8 x 24 mount, you can use hamsticks as well as vhf
antennas. Time to sneak a '706 into the van? When you don't want antennas
just cover the mounts with tubing caps (make it a tight fit) and you are all
set until the next trip.

Phil, KB2HQ

"Greg Doughty" wrote in message
...
I am going to a hamfest this weekend (Frostfest in Richmond, Va.) and

would
like to get all the parts to assemble my mobile antenna. Okay, after

reading
many many threads on newsgroups and eham, I have still a couple of

questions. I
have a 2000 Dodge Caravan (I posted before and had many good responses!)

and
now my wife has said I can drill. Well, I will only be using the ic 2100

on
road trips and the like. I have an ht for all other things. On road

trips we
use a "snail" on the luggage rack. Kind of hard to get the antenna there

now.
My only option is an adjustable angle mount on the hood, rear gate, or

mounting
the antenna to the frame under the front or rear bumper? My wife doesn't

mind
a 5/8 wave on the bumpers as long as it can be removed. Are there any

mounts
for the bumper? It is a plastic bumper and the metal frame is recessed

about
6-10 inches up under the bumper. I guess a mag mount will work but just

not as
well as a mount that is drilled. Will the clamp mount work on the hood?

Thanks
73
Greg




Richard Clark February 21st 04 05:59 PM

On Sat, 21 Feb 2004 08:08:23 -0800, Bill Turner
wrote:

On 21 Feb 2004 00:07:50 GMT, ojunk (Greg Doughty)
wrote:

My only option is an adjustable angle mount on the hood, rear gate, or mounting
the antenna to the frame under the front or rear bumper?


_________________________________________________ ________

Why not a mag mount on the roof? It will work better than any of the
above. You won't have to drill any holes if you route the coax through
the door jamb. I've done that on many vehicles with no problems at all.
You'd think the coax would get squashed when the door closes, but it
doesn't; at least not enough to matter.


Actually, many of the complaints made to this board often reveal that
both the "thru-the-glass" and magmount are inferior to sheet metal
mounted antennas. Both style certainly work, and well enough for
most, but for those at the edges, they find much better performance
from good solid metallic connections.


On 2 meters, when you put an antenna down low, like on the bumper, two
things happen, both bad: It becomes very directional due to the
blocking effect of the car body, and it's ground wave coverage drops
dramatically. Higher is better.


Higher is always better, but I would dispute that the car body somehow
"shields" an antenna (unless the antenna is butt up against the cab,
say). More often than not, the favored direction (the major lobe) is
found aligned in the direction of the most metal. That is, with a
bumper mount or fender mount, the best propagation is corner to corner
across the car NOT away from the car. In other words, the sheet metal
of the body supports and favors lobe development (instead of the metal
acting as reflector). I've noted this documented by QST since the
'60s.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC

Greg Doughty February 21st 04 07:15 PM

Thanks so much. All great ideas. I once again may go with the mag mount.

Thanks
73
Greg


February 21st 04 07:22 PM

You want that 2m antenna as high as possible. I think somebody makes a
luggage rack mount; or, you can make one yourself out of a 3 inch piece of
angle iron, and a U bolt. Wish I had a luggage rack. I had a 5/8 2m antenna
on a mag mount once, blew off on the Delaware Memorial Bridge.

Tam/WB2TT
"Greg Doughty" wrote in message
...
I am going to a hamfest this weekend (Frostfest in Richmond, Va.) and

would
like to get all the parts to assemble my mobile antenna. Okay, after

reading
many many threads on newsgroups and eham, I have still a couple of

questions. I
have a 2000 Dodge Caravan (I posted before and had many good responses!)

and
now my wife has said I can drill. Well, I will only be using the ic 2100

on
road trips and the like. I have an ht for all other things. On road

trips we
use a "snail" on the luggage rack. Kind of hard to get the antenna there

now.
My only option is an adjustable angle mount on the hood, rear gate, or

mounting
the antenna to the frame under the front or rear bumper? My wife doesn't

mind
a 5/8 wave on the bumpers as long as it can be removed. Are there any

mounts
for the bumper? It is a plastic bumper and the metal frame is recessed

about
6-10 inches up under the bumper. I guess a mag mount will work but just

not as
well as a mount that is drilled. Will the clamp mount work on the hood?

Thanks
73
Greg




Ralph Mowery February 21st 04 09:14 PM

Higher is always better, but I would dispute that the car body somehow
"shields" an antenna (unless the antenna is butt up against the cab,
say). More often than not, the favored direction (the major lobe) is
found aligned in the direction of the most metal. That is, with a
bumper mount or fender mount, the best propagation is corner to corner
across the car NOT away from the car. In other words, the sheet metal
of the body supports and favors lobe development (instead of the metal
acting as reflector). I've noted this documented by QST since the
'60s.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


I won't get into the method but it has a lot to do with the frequency and if
the antenna is a full 1/4 wave, 5/8 , or longer co-linear antenna as to what
the patern is. The patern can be over the longest metal path for a 10 meter
whip or it can be "blocked' and go in the opposit direction for an antenna
mounted on one side of the trunk of a car for a co-linear 440 mhz antenna.
This is from the antenna makers diagrams and polar plots. I have observed
by leaving a car in one spot and changing from a 1/4 wave, 5/8 wave and a 6
foot long colinear 2 meter antennas on the same mount that each can have a
diffrant patern , especially where working repeaters and the repeater
antennas are at differant heights. For the areas I am in , I would rather
have a 1/4 wave in the center of the roof , but have settled for a 38 inch
long colinear type dual band antenna on one side of the trunk of my car and
not worried about it.




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