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Bill Turner wrote:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ No doubt that is correct. So how about this: I have a '95 Thunderbird which I dearly love and don't want to cut holes in. I've been think of going to a welding shop and having a metal piece made which I could bolt to the frame in the back and which would stick out about six inches or so behind the rear bumper, and installing a ball mount on it. This will keep the lower part of the antenna about a foot away from the body and allow a nice, long whip overall. The loading coil would be in the center, homebrew of course. :-) And not a hole in sight. Comments? Bill, W6WRT I'm not sure why, but most amateurs don't seem to realize that the whip isn't an "antenna" and the car "ground", but each is half of a dipole-like antenna. The car part is often much more important with regard to radiation characteristics and efficiency than the whip part. With the arrangement you suggest, the antenna consists of a vertical wire -- the whip -- and a fat, horizontal "wire" -- the car. Whatever current flows into the whip, an equal current flows over the outside of the car, originating at the base of the whip. Any antenna with a low horizontal wire will be quite lossy, because the wire's current will induce a heavy current in the lossy ground beneath the wire, or car. The best arrangement, as others have pointed out, is to mount the antenna right at the center of the top of the car. This makes the car "wire" vertical, a much more efficient arrangement, which the "shootouts" consistently show. You'll also find that larger trucks, which effectively form a longer vertical "wire" for the car part, outdo smaller ones for the same whip. Of course, sometimes you don't have any choice, and you just have to do the best you can. I once had a bumper mounted antenna consisting of a CB whip base loaded with an inductor wound on a powdered iron core to resonate on 40 meters. The car was a VW Squareback, so the antenna had the increased disadvantage of proximity between the square back and the antenna. As others have pointed out, this can reduce efficiency farther. Yet I had a successful QSO with JA while driving down Highway 101, running 8 watts, CW. So you can still communicate and have lots of fun even with a very sub-optimal system. But anyone wanting to improve his system has a much better chance of doing it if he has a basic understanding of how the antenna really works. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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