Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old June 30th 04, 12:17 AM
David.Shrader
 
Posts: n/a
Default

DJboutit wrote:
I have a Fisher FM 2110 tuner Radio Shack antenna 20ft to 25ft high. What
can I do to improver the recption that does not cost $$ I live in Houston Tx
and want to get stations atleast 100 to 150 miles away.


At 20 feet high your antenna can effectively see the horizon at about 6
miles from your house. So, to receive a FM station 150 miles away the FM
station needs to have it's antenna at an elevation of somewhere around 2
miles high. That is simply not feasible!!

At 100 miles the radio station needs an antenna about 1 mile high. Still
not feasible!

Basically, you should be able to receive a FM signal from a very well
equipped FM station out to 50 to 60 miles from their transmitting
antenna. Even at 60 miles the broadcast antenna needs to be around 2000
feet high.

  #2   Report Post  
Old June 30th 04, 03:58 AM
Bob Bob
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Err isnt FM broadcast between 88-108MHz? There is some "bend" to those
frequencies.

The simple answer to the problem is;
- more antenna height
- low cable loss (preamp?)
- low noise figure (good preamp)
- directive/gain antenna

Each of these requires $$ and it is a case of how *much* better it needs
to be. I'd initially suggest a low noise preamp as having best bang for
the buck. You can certainly buy them but it may be worthwhile looking a
a low noise design from a handful of components (say $5-10) I built one
up once from (I think) an MRF901. Worked well for TV and FM radio.

And maybe go to 30ft on the mast. Local obstructions might be a problem
too. ie make sure that your 20ft pole isnt right next to a 18ft house....

Antenna gain is a tricky one because most designs arent quite wide
enough to cover the entire band with good gain. LPDA's and helixes might
do the job though. Depends though on what you want to spend or make.

I should also point out that if you have any strong local FM stations
preamps may get overloaded and not perform well at all.This is the price
you pay for putting a wideband amp at the RX front end.

Hope this helps

Cheers BOb VK2YQA



bcnuup does it better




David.Shrader wrote:
DJboutit wrote:

I have a Fisher FM 2110 tuner Radio Shack antenna 20ft to 25ft high.
What
can I do to improver the recption that does not cost $$ I live in
Houston Tx
and want to get stations atleast 100 to 150 miles away.


At 20 feet high your antenna can effectively see the horizon at about 6
miles from your house. So, to receive a FM station 150 miles away the FM
station needs to have it's antenna at an elevation of somewhere around 2
miles high. That is simply not feasible!!

At 100 miles the radio station needs an antenna about 1 mile high. Still
not feasible!

Basically, you should be able to receive a FM signal from a very well
equipped FM station out to 50 to 60 miles from their transmitting
antenna. Even at 60 miles the broadcast antenna needs to be around 2000
feet high.

  #3   Report Post  
Old June 30th 04, 03:58 AM
Bob Bob
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Err isnt FM broadcast between 88-108MHz? There is some "bend" to those
frequencies.

The simple answer to the problem is;
- more antenna height
- low cable loss (preamp?)
- low noise figure (good preamp)
- directive/gain antenna

Each of these requires $$ and it is a case of how *much* better it needs
to be. I'd initially suggest a low noise preamp as having best bang for
the buck. You can certainly buy them but it may be worthwhile looking a
a low noise design from a handful of components (say $5-10) I built one
up once from (I think) an MRF901. Worked well for TV and FM radio.

And maybe go to 30ft on the mast. Local obstructions might be a problem
too. ie make sure that your 20ft pole isnt right next to a 18ft house....

Antenna gain is a tricky one because most designs arent quite wide
enough to cover the entire band with good gain. LPDA's and helixes might
do the job though. Depends though on what you want to spend or make.

I should also point out that if you have any strong local FM stations
preamps may get overloaded and not perform well at all.This is the price
you pay for putting a wideband amp at the RX front end.

Hope this helps

Cheers BOb VK2YQA



bcnuup does it better




David.Shrader wrote:
DJboutit wrote:

I have a Fisher FM 2110 tuner Radio Shack antenna 20ft to 25ft high.
What
can I do to improver the recption that does not cost $$ I live in
Houston Tx
and want to get stations atleast 100 to 150 miles away.


At 20 feet high your antenna can effectively see the horizon at about 6
miles from your house. So, to receive a FM station 150 miles away the FM
station needs to have it's antenna at an elevation of somewhere around 2
miles high. That is simply not feasible!!

At 100 miles the radio station needs an antenna about 1 mile high. Still
not feasible!

Basically, you should be able to receive a FM signal from a very well
equipped FM station out to 50 to 60 miles from their transmitting
antenna. Even at 60 miles the broadcast antenna needs to be around 2000
feet high.

Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:29 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017