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-   -   VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction? (https://www.radiobanter.com/antenna/139717-vhf-fm-radio-antenna-construction.html)

Nigel Molesworth December 28th 08 07:56 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
A little OT for this group, but I figure you guys are the experts!

I've got a boat, it has an VHF FM Car Radio with a car aerial. The first
problem is that there is no ground plane, the boat is GRP. It is also lying
horizontally, it is too long to be vertical.

I want to replace the aerial something a bit more suitable. Modern cars seem
to have much shorter aerials, so is there a coil involved?

Any suggestions on making or buying a replacement?

BTW, the radio has a DIN antenna socket, so 150 Ohms I think?

--
Nigel M
G1NDM (a long time ago)


Dave[_18_] December 28th 08 07:59 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
Nigel Molesworth wrote:
A little OT for this group, but I figure you guys are the experts!

I've got a boat, it has an VHF FM Car Radio with a car aerial. The first
problem is that there is no ground plane, the boat is GRP. It is also lying
horizontally, it is too long to be vertical.

I want to replace the aerial something a bit more suitable. Modern cars seem
to have much shorter aerials, so is there a coil involved?

Any suggestions on making or buying a replacement?

BTW, the radio has a DIN antenna socket, so 150 Ohms I think?

Modern cars use active antennas.

PhattyMo[_2_] December 28th 08 08:10 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
Nigel Molesworth wrote:
A little OT for this group, but I figure you guys are the experts!

I've got a boat, it has an VHF FM Car Radio with a car aerial. The first
problem is that there is no ground plane, the boat is GRP. It is also lying
horizontally, it is too long to be vertical.

I want to replace the aerial something a bit more suitable. Modern cars seem
to have much shorter aerials, so is there a coil involved?

Any suggestions on making or buying a replacement?

BTW, the radio has a DIN antenna socket, so 150 Ohms I think?


IME,Most car radios are sensitive and selective enough to pull in local
stations with only a short wire hanging out of the antenna socket. I've
routinely checked them out on the bench,and just stuffed a piece of
hookup wire in the antenna jack,works fine.
Maybe you could just run a wire up some vertical-surface of the boat?

There *IS* a ground plane-The water. When the boat is in the water,the
water itself is the ground plane.

Nigel Molesworth December 28th 08 10:23 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
On Sun, 28 Dec 2008 12:10:57 -0800, PhattyMo wrote:

Maybe you could just run a wire up some vertical-surface of the boat?


What about 1/4 wavelengths, and all that stuff?


Dave Oldridge December 29th 08 12:19 AM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
Nigel Molesworth wrote in
:

On Sun, 28 Dec 2008 12:10:57 -0800, PhattyMo wrote:

Maybe you could just run a wire up some vertical-surface of the boat?


What about 1/4 wavelengths, and all that stuff?


Powerboat or sail? I recommend a quarter wave for sail, but 5/8 should
work on most powerboats. If you can mount atop a metal mast 1/4 wave
should easily do the job. I get really good broadcast FM reception on my
FT897D from my dual band mobile antenna out on the back deck. For receive-
only with good broadcast signals, impedance matching is not that much of a
concern. If you're trying to DX, that's another story, involving yagis.




--
Dave Oldridge+
ICQ 454777283


[email protected] December 29th 08 01:17 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
Nigel,
How long is this antenna?
- 'Doc

Richard Harrison December 29th 08 02:29 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
Nigel M, former G1NDM wrote:
"Any suggestions on making or buying a replacement?"

I`ve installed coaxial antennas at VHF which worked well on boats. They
consist of a quarter-wave rod insulated and mounted on a quarter-wave
cylindrical skirt which surrounds the coax feedline. The match is good.
There are no radials to poke eyes. The assembly makes a half-wave
vertical antenna.

At 100 MHz, the wavelength is about 3 meters so the overall length of an
FM broafcast antenna should be about 1.5 meters. You likely can find
such an antenna for sale ready made. If not, it is not difficult to make
your own. The folded dipole made from TV twinlead also works well but
presents a 300-ohm impedance and may not work as well with your DIN
connector. It also requires suspension. The coaxial antenna usually is
equipped with a small mounting pipe surrounding the coax.

Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI


Rollie December 29th 08 04:51 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
Shakesphere makes good antennas for marine use. Just google (Shakesphere
Antenna) and that should get you to a link to their site. Rollie KD0FGX


"Nigel Molesworth" wrote in message
...
A little OT for this group, but I figure you guys are the experts!

I've got a boat, it has an VHF FM Car Radio with a car aerial. The first
problem is that there is no ground plane, the boat is GRP. It is also
lying
horizontally, it is too long to be vertical.

I want to replace the aerial something a bit more suitable. Modern cars
seem
to have much shorter aerials, so is there a coil involved?

Any suggestions on making or buying a replacement?

BTW, the radio has a DIN antenna socket, so 150 Ohms I think?

--
Nigel M
G1NDM (a long time ago)




Nigel Molesworth December 31st 08 12:31 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
On Mon, 29 Dec 2008 08:29:15 -0600, (Richard
Harrison) wrote:

At 100 MHz, the wavelength is about 3 meters so the overall length of an
FM broafcast antenna should be about 1.5 meters.


I've got about half of this, maximum. What can I do?


Nigel Molesworth December 31st 08 01:30 PM

VHF FM Radio Antenna Construction?
 
On Mon, 29 Dec 2008 10:51:19 -0600, "Rollie" wrote:

Shakesphere makes good antennas for marine use.


In my experience, add the word "marine" and charge double the price.

I need to mount this antenna inside, so it does not have to be robust.



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