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Hello,
Have a Scantenna antenna (receive only) in attic. It came with 75 ohm RG 6 coax, so presumably the output has a 75 ohm impedance. How this varies with freq. I have no idea. Have a new scanner that says to use 50 ohm coax. From old posts, the consensus seems to be that it doesn't matter if you use 50 or 75 ohm coax for a run that I have of about 50 feet. Do you folks agree with this ? From a somewhat more rigorous and theoretical view, should the coax, even it hardly matters, be matched to the antenna output impedance, or the input impedance of the scanner ? Why ? (again, receive only) Any thoughts on this would be most appreciated. Thanks, Bob |
#2
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On 2 mar, 20:36, "Robert11" wrote:
Hello, Have a Scantenna antenna (receive only) in attic. It came with 75 ohm RG 6 coax, so presumably the output has a 75 ohm impedance. How this varies with freq. I have no idea. Have a new scanner that says to use 50 ohm coax. From old posts, the consensus seems to be that it doesn't matter if you use 50 or 75 ohm coax for a run that I have of about 50 feet. Do you folks agree with this ? From a somewhat more rigorous and theoretical view, should the coax, even it hardly matters, be matched to the antenna output impedance, or the input impedance of the scanner ? Why ? (again, receive only) Any thoughts on this would be most appreciated. Thanks, Bob Hello Bob, For reception with a scanner, using 75 Ohm instead of 50 Ohm cable will not make a big difference. Your Scantenna will also not have a 50 Ohms output impedance all over the band. It will be higher, lower and/or reactive, depending on the frequency. Your scanner will also not present 50 Ohms to the antenna all over the tuning range. It is even unlikely that your scanner will have maximum sensitivity when driven from 50 Ohms all over the tuning range. There will be frequency ranges where maximum sensitivity (input power, not voltage) will be reached with other then 50 Ohm output impedance of the source. When you should do rigorous measurements with your setup (that is with RG6) with respect to a 50 Ohm setup, there will be frequency ranges where your setup will give best sensitivity and where the 50 Ohms setup will give best sensitivity. So Bob, don't worry when using RG6 75 Ohms coaxial cable. Best regards, Wim PA3DJS' www.tetech.nl (Dutch). |
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