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-   -   Glass mount antenna speaker interference (https://www.radiobanter.com/antenna/1957-re-glass-mount-antenna-speaker-interference.html)

Keith Bozek June 23rd 04 08:18 PM

Glass mount antenna speaker interference
 
I installed a glass mount for day to day since the terrain is flat and
repeater coverage drops off so efficiency is not an issue. I also
wanted to get the car in a nd out of the garage and the antenna is a
dual band antenna.

For better performance, I used a half wave.

Still getting the thing off of the glass and moving it is the current
concern.

Keith

nick smith June 23rd 04 09:07 PM

dual band antenna.

For better performance, I used a half wave.

Still getting the thing off of the glass and moving it is the current
concern.

( if you'll pardon the pun - ho ho ho )


Keith




H. Adam Stevens, NQ5H June 23rd 04 09:21 PM

removing a glass mount antenna is easy
razor blade
it's drilling a hole in the roof of your car that's hard

I did it, and I'm proud to admit it
think of it as marrying the vehicle, unless you sell it to another ham
at 90,000 miles my Durango sports a 200 watt Kenwood (NO TUNER!!)
and still has the original brakes (I don't stop much)

plus a Kenwood 742 on 144, 222 and 440
with a Comet tri-bander amid the roof, a Tarheel and 103" whip on the right
hip for low HF
(with a toroidal transformer that gives 50 ohms resistive on 20, baby)
and a Hi-Q that tops at 6 meters on the left hip
I also have a humongous Hi-Q for 160-80 when needed
what fun
73
H.
NQ5H


"nick smith" wrote in message
...
dual band antenna.

For better performance, I used a half wave.

Still getting the thing off of the glass and moving it is the current
concern.

( if you'll pardon the pun - ho ho ho )


Keith






Gary S. June 24th 04 12:03 AM

On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 15:21:34 -0500, "H. Adam Stevens, NQ5H"
wrote:

removing a glass mount antenna is easy
razor blade
it's drilling a hole in the roof of your car that's hard

I did it, and I'm proud to admit it
think of it as marrying the vehicle, unless you sell it to another ham
at 90,000 miles my Durango sports a 200 watt Kenwood (NO TUNER!!)
and still has the original brakes (I don't stop much)

Some use the NMO mount through a drilled hole.

This allows an easy switch to a cell antenna, and you turn a negative
(ham antenna installed through a hole) into a positive (cell phone
ready).

Happy trails,
Gary (net.yogi.bear)
------------------------------------------------
at the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence

Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA
Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom

Hal Rosser June 24th 04 06:22 AM

How about if you turn the car radio off. You ought to have the car radio off
when transmitting, anyway.

"Keith Bozek" wrote in message
om...
I recently installed a RS glass mount antenna on my '96 dodge
Intrepid. The area I chose was near the bottom of the rear window.

I get terrible feedback into my car radio. It is either coming in via
the speaker or the cars antenna.

Any way to eliminate interference without removing antenna or if I
have to remove it will any of the reinstall kits work with the R/S
model?

I was looking at the double-sided tape and that seems to me that it
might work ok?

Keith, N3HGN



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