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#1
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How to improve reception
I'm trying to get the Coast to Coast show, but because I'm in a highrise
surrounded by concrete, I get no AM reception. I just get static and a hum. Can an antenna be hooked up to the radio that would end outside my window to pick up the signal? There is also a building on one side, but it is clear for quite a bit outside my window. Can anyone please help? Please also e-mail, if kind enough to respond. Thanks! |
#2
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"Sheellah" wrote in message ... I'm trying to get the Coast to Coast show, but because I'm in a highrise surrounded by concrete, I get no AM reception. I just get static and a hum. Can an antenna be hooked up to the radio that would end outside my window to pick up the signal? There is also a building on one side, but it is clear for quite a bit outside my window. Can anyone please help? Please also e-mail, if kind enough to respond. Thanks! If you can get access to any location outside your apartment try an active antenna. Such a device consists of a high gain rf amplifier and a 2 to 3 foot long whip. Go to Grove Enteprises' web site www.grove-ent.com |
#3
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Sheellah wrote:
I'm trying to get the Coast to Coast show, but because I'm in a highrise surrounded by concrete, I get no AM reception. I just get static and a hum. Can an antenna be hooked up to the radio that would end outside my window to pick up the signal? There is also a building on one side, but it is clear for quite a bit outside my window. Can anyone please help? Please also e-mail, if kind enough to respond. Thanks! There's two effects to be overcome. 1. Your radio is not sensitive enough, in which case it can be fixed by a MW loop (Select-a-tenna or Terk MW loop are the two easily obtainable; get the passive (cheap) versions, not the active ones; the cheap ones run $40-$60, a huge profit margin but worth it after you consider doing it yourself having to scrounge materials and pack it neatly.) A MW loop impedance matches the radio's internal loop antenna to free space and raises the sensitivity of most radios enough so that external noise is louder than internal noise, which is to say no radio will be more sensitive. All will hear the same noise no matter how much more sensitive they're made, at that point. That may be enough to hear your station. 2. Which brings up the second effect, you're surrounded by noise-making devices like dimmers, in which case you'll only hear them more clearly rather than the station you want. Other than aiming the radio (and MW loop if you got one) so as to minimize that noise, and aiming matters a great deal so try it, there's nothing you can do short of moving the radio or its antenna, if the radio allows you to attach an external antenna, or if you arrange an external antenna anyway, which is possible but not described here. A final alternative is a local FM transmitter: put AM radio and FM transmitter near a window, and play the AM radio into the FM transmitter. Listen to the FM transmitter inside the building. CCrane sells them, probably among others. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#4
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In article , Sheellah wrote:
an antenna be hooked up to the radio that would end outside my window to pick up the signal? There is also a building on one side, but it is clear for quite Easiest way: Put the RADIO right there on the windowsill. Most radios these days don't have connections for AM antennae. They use a loopstick (powdered iron bar wrapped with fine wire) inside the case to "pick up" the signal. Good enough for local reception. Also, go to this website: http://www.selectatenna.com/ This type of antenna is just a big coil that you tune to match the frequency your radio is tuned to. No connections. Just sit both of them next to each other and play with the positioning until you find the spot that best works for THAT particular station. -- Sven Weil New York City, U.S.A. |
#5
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Sheellah wrote:
I'm trying to get the Coast to Coast show, but because I'm in a highrise surrounded by concrete, I get no AM reception. I just get static and a hum. Can an antenna be hooked up to the radio that would end outside my window to pick up the signal? There is also a building* on*one*side,*but*it*is*clear*for*quite a bit outside my window. An antenna outside your highrise isn't likely to do you much good, but placing a radio with a large ferrite coil/receiving loop in your window and turning said radio to increase the AM signal might greatly help. Radio Shack also sells a loop that can increase signals you receive by coupling to the present loop you have. I assume that you have a decent radio like for example the approximately $50 GE Super Radio with a large loop. If you're for example trying to use your stereo or tuner, it likely lacks a good enough AM antenna |
#6
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Sheellah wrote:
I'm trying to get the Coast to Coast show, but because I'm in a highrise surrounded by concrete, I get no AM reception. I just get static and a hum. Shiny side OUT. |
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