![]() |
|
"Harris" wrote in
. net: Thanks very much for the lengthy response. I see that I have much to learn about scanners and antennas. Regards. How are you determining what the signal strengths are? (I'm talking about actual rf signal levels at the input to the scanner, NOT what you're seeing on an "S" meter or hearing from the speaker.) If your outdoor antenna were delivering more signal strenghth to your scanner, your intermod would get worse, not better. As I tried to explain, when the scanner is subjected to STRONG local (unwanted) signals, the scanner will be de-sensitized. This will make it difficult to hear weaker signals. If attenuation is placed between the antenna and scanner, this "de-sensitization" effect will be reduced, and weak signals will actually appear stronger. In other words, less signal strength may actually improve reception in your case. Often folks try using pre-amps to improve reception, only to find that the preamp degrades reception (especially with handhelds). This is similar to what I described above. Sometimes, less is more! There you go. Adding attenuation improved your reception. I'm speculating that the attenuation (loss) in your feedline is having the same effect. RG-6 is much better than RG-58. However, 85 feet is a pretty long run. All coax cables have higher loss as you go higher in frequency. If your overload/intermod problems are indeed caused by nearby cell sites, those 800 MHz signals will be attenuated more than signals at lower frequencies. And your outdoor antenna is probably less effective at 800 Mhz than at lower frequencies. So your antenna and feedline are acting like a "low-pass" filter in that they attenuate the higher frequencies. All of that is consistent with what you are hearing. Art N2AH |
Soliloquy . ..
^ | ^ \|/ ^ + ^ /|\ ^ | ^ ^ My onmi-directional antenna looks like the above ... ^ If I were to attempt to place a reflector on this antenna, ^ it would, I trust, be electrically connected to the center ^ radials but insulated from the brackets? How would I ^ determine the size and spacing? My comments were in response to your query on directionality and they are probably not useful in your system. I am not an antenna expert, only an amateur experimenter, and I have not seen any documentation on reflectors and directors on anything except half-wave dipoles. Although, as I move around town and examine TV antennas it appears to me that they are making some sort of use of reflectors, directors, or both. But the function of reflectors and directors, on the receive side, is to increase the amount of the desired frequency reaching the antenna. They may not be very useful if the intent is to scan a wide range of frequencies. N2AH appears to have your answer. Frank |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:16 PM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com