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#1
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Hello:
Don't have a good feeling for the significance of this: For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? Specifics would be 100 feet of RG 58 at 30 MHz Or is it worth the extra $ to go to a less lossy coax (application would always be for receive only) BTW: R/S Coax a decent quality ? Thanks, B. |
#2
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![]() "Robert11" wrote in message . .. Hello: Don't have a good feeling for the significance of this: For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? Specifics would be 100 feet of RG 58 at 30 MHz Or is it worth the extra $ to go to a less lossy coax (application would always be for receive only) BTW: R/S Coax a decent quality ? Thanks, B. The answer is, maybe. If the signal level of the stations you wish to hear are strong, then -2.5db will not mean anything as receivers have a lot of gain, but if the signals are weak then -2.5db can mean the difference between hearing or not hearing a signal. Be aware that the loss figures for coax are for a matched system, that is 50 ohms in/out. If the load is not 50 ohms, then the loss of the cable will be higher and the worse the miss match the higher the excess loss will be. It can be allot. I've seen for severe miss match excess loss of up to 20db. As for R/S coax is not known for being of high quality nor is it consistent in its quality. -- John Passaneau, W3JXP Penn State University |
#3
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Robert/Bob
In a receive application it is only important that the signal you want to hear exceeds the level of total system noise by a desired amount. In your case atmospheric noise is likely to be far above that of whatever the receiver front end contributes. Having said that my HF/6m TXCVR has a preamp that can be used on 10M with a slight useful effect. I'd suspect that this is a design problem as the same model w/out 6m doesnt have it. My answer is no, the 2.5dB can be ignored. You may want to consider though how you should site/feed the antenna to obtain a good s/n ratio from the desired signals. I personally wouldnt touch RS coax but I have no evidence to back up my thought that it is technically inferior. Just that they tend to buy things cheap and there is a lot of rubbishy coax around. I might go to the "Wireman" or direct to a well known manufacturers (Belden S&H etc) retailer. Cheers Bob VK2YQA Robert11 wrote: For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? BTW: R/S Coax a decent quality ? |
#4
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On Mon, 23 Jan 2006 08:32:40 -0500, "Robert11"
wrote: Hello: Don't have a good feeling for the significance of this: For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? Specifics would be 100 feet of RG 58 at 30 MHz Or is it worth the extra $ to go to a less lossy coax (application would always be for receive only) BTW: R/S Coax a decent quality ? The last time I bought Radio Shack coax cable, the shield was so thinly populated with wire, it was almost nonexistant. You might try some of your local computer stores that deal with networking installations. They frequently carry good quality coax with brand names like Beldon. (One of my local computer stores has Beldon RG-58U at 22 cents a foot.) Good mail order places for coax would include Davis RF, The Wireman, RadioWorks, Amateur Electronic Supply, HRO, etc... bob k5qwg Thanks, B. |
#5
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Robert11 wrote:
For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? Modern receivers have such a wide dynamic range that 2.5 dB of loss on a received signal is usually of no consequence at HF frequencies. Some hams don't even worry about that amount of signal loss on transmit, ~ half an S-unit. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#6
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Bob Miller wrote:
(One of my local computer stores has Beldon RG-58U at 22 cents a foot.) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you're going to search the internet, you have to spell it right: Belden. Bill, W6WRT |
#7
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Robert11 wrote:
For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The answer depends on the noise figure of your receiver. Most modern receivers have very low internal noise and will work fine under the conditions you describe. Older receivers, especially tube sets, generate so much internal noise that it may be stronger than the signal you are trying to receive and the 2.5 dB loss will render the signal inaudible. In other words, it depends. :-) Bill, W6WRT |
#8
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At 30 MHz, you're right at the border between HF and VHF. Below about 30
MHz, atmospheric noise dominates, and reducing the coax loss will make no difference at all in your ability to hear signals. Above about 30 MHz, receiver noise dominates, and reducing the coax loss 2.5 dB will make an improvement, the amount depending on the relationship between the receiver noise figure and the atmospheric noise. But the boundary is fuzzy, so right at 30 MHz it's probably a toss. But here's a very simple test you can do which will give you a definitive answer: Tune the receiver to a frequency where there's no signal, and disable the squelch if it has one so you can hear the noise. Then disconnect the antenna from the receiver. (With some receivers you might have to replace the antenna with a dummy load rather than just disconnecting it, but that isn't usually necessary.) If the noise level drops when you disconnect the antenna, reducing coax loss or otherwise improving antenna efficiency won't make any difference in your ability to hear signals. If the noise doesn't drop, then efficiency improvements will improve your ability to hear signals. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Robert11 wrote: Hello: Don't have a good feeling for the significance of this: For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? Specifics would be 100 feet of RG 58 at 30 MHz Or is it worth the extra $ to go to a less lossy coax (application would always be for receive only) BTW: R/S Coax a decent quality ? Thanks, B. |
#9
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![]() "Robert11" wrote in message . .. Hello: Don't have a good feeling for the significance of this: For a receive only application, using coax from the Balun of a simple outside antenna to the receiver, is a loss of, e.g., 2.5 db "meaningful" ? Specifics would be 100 feet of RG 58 at 30 MHz Or is it worth the extra $ to go to a less lossy coax (application would always be for receive only) BTW: R/S Coax a decent quality ? Thanks, B. Don't get the R/S coax. If you can handle the aluminum wire shielding of the cable TV RG-6 coax , use that. Less loss and the 70 ohm vrs the 50 ohm is nothing to worry about. I usually use the RG-8X coax for frequencies below 30 mhz instead of the rg-58. Not that more expensive. |
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