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Carter-k8vt wrote:
Don't worry about matching the impedance. It is relatively non-critical for short wave listening. However, you may want to devote a little attention and thought to some kind of lightning protection. Well, that depends. IF you attach a long wire antenna to a 50 ohm coax cable, then the coax cable to an input on the radio whose impedance is changing, that coax cable becomes part of the antenna system and ceases to be a transmission line. In the case of a long-wire antenna, the result is minimal. Maybe it changes the antenna pattern in a minor way, but you won't notice any real difference. BUT, now take a highly directional antenna which you are swinging around to avoid a noise source.... run that into the 50 ohm cable and into the high-Z receiver, and now the signal pickup on the transmission line will become a problem. Finally, if you mean an SO-239 to be mounted on the radio, I vote "no", only because IMHO, it buggers up the radio and reduces what ever resale value it may have; however, this is just my personal pet peeve. And there is no reason not to just make a PL-239-to-pigtails cable, if you're plugging the receiver into a distribution box or T/R relay that has SO-239s on it. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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