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On Sep 24, 10:37*am, Richard Clark wrote:
On Wed, 23 Sep 2009 11:45:31 -0700 (PDT), KD7HB wrote: So, try running a wire from the phone base unit to the outside of your house. Experiment with length and placement to see if you get improved distance. *My electronic bell runs in the 300 MHz range, but may well work for your unit, as well. Any wire that is excited at a wavelength where the wire is significantly longer than one wavelength, then this wire stands the high chance of turning into an end fire antenna. *This means if that wire goes up, so will the signal - straight up (with any number of very minor lobes in all other directions). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC Hi, Richard. I learned of this trick many years ago, 1960's time frame. Portland drilled a second tunnel through a ridge on West Burnside street, making it two lanes each direction. Drivers began complaining that their radio reception always went out when they entered the tunnel. Duh!!! Everyone said nothing could be done, This was the way radio worked. One engineer said he could fix it. They mounted insulators in the tunnel ceiling, and strung a wire the full length of the tunnel. On the East side, they ran the wire up somewhere on the hillside. I never was able to determine just where it went. The antenna picked up the local am/fm signals and radiated them in the tunnel. Drivers could continue to listen to the radio when they went into the tunnel. Volume was reduced sometimes, but reception continued. I wonder if hf and vhf ham radio operation is possible in the tunnel? I see the same wire trick in other tunnels. The I-90 tunnels East of Seattle have the wire. Paul, KD7HB |
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