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Hi Iain
Without going into a lot of transmission line theory.... grin For the purposes of this post, coax is the same as "screened cable". I'd suggest you use coax though (RG58 will do) as its impedance doesnt vary along its length and it is a known value... unlike plain screened cable. When you setup a radio in a car the antenna attachment on the radio end is normally a coaxial connector. The centre conductor goes into the "live" part of the box and the screen goes to the metal chassis of the radio itself. At the antenna end the centre coax conductor connects to the whip itself and the screen is connected to the car body at the point where the whip starts. The whip is of course insulated from the car body. In a correctly installed and tuned installation (usually the whip length) the coax doesnt pickup any noise. You dont need to connect the radio end screen to the car body. In your case you might be able to use a nearby metal screw on the radio. The last alternative maybe to use the negative power line where it enters the radio. The idea is to get the screen connection as close to the receiver input ground as possible. The more exposed centre conductor there is at the radio end the less efficient the system is. Given the frequency you have mentioned a "good" whip length will be around 570mm. There are of course a number of unknowns in setting up this system so dont try playing with the whip length too much. Cheers Bob VK2YQA zentace wrote: Gidday Bob Thanks very much for replying to my questions. I take it then, that if you connect a screened cable between the aerial and the receiver, the length of the cable itself does not act as an aerial because the screening prevents this? So if the aerial is only one "core" where do I connect the screen? I know I could connect it at the aerial end to the car body (earth) but what about at the receiver end? Does it have to connect at all at that end as long as the screen is connected to the car body? By the way, the car itself will be stationary and switched off so hopefully I won't have the problem of interference from the car electrics. Also the transmitter is apparently fixed frequency 100-125MHz and the receiver switched to this. I'll experiment and see! Let me know if you have any thoughts about the screen. Thanks again Iain (Scotland) |
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