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Old January 13th 05, 11:48 PM
mikeFNB
 
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the higher the better.
extended coax length will ofcourse increase coax losses but they will be far
lower than the gain you will get by sticking it up high, and outside.

mike

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oups.com...
Does the length of coax decrease performance in scanning as much as
when you are transmitting?

I can put an antenna in my attic where I will only have about 5 feet of
coax. (My scanner is upstairs) I could mount an outside antenna on top
of my tv tower at about 30 feet, but would need to run about 50 feet of
coax. The total elevation if it was in my attic would be 20 feet or so.
(But I do have alot of insulation that might block the signal).



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Old January 14th 05, 12:03 AM
Jim
 
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"mikeFNB" moc.dlrowltn@FNB7G-ekim wrote in message
...
the higher the better.
extended coax length will ofcourse increase coax losses but they will be
far
lower than the gain you will get by sticking it up high, and outside.

mike

wrote in message
oups.com...
Does the length of coax decrease performance in scanning as much as
when you are transmitting?

I can put an antenna in my attic where I will only have about 5 feet of
coax. (My scanner is upstairs) I could mount an outside antenna on top
of my tv tower at about 30 feet, but would need to run about 50 feet of
coax. The total elevation if it was in my attic would be 20 feet or so.
(But I do have alot of insulation that might block the signal).




I hope I'm not posting twice (The first one vanished for no good reason)!

The best thing you can do is mount a bullet amp at the antenna. Even the
best quality coax has a large loss at microwave frequencies. Use the type
of amp meant for satellite television. Since you aren't transmitting you'll
get by cheap. This will also allow you to use cheaper RG6.


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Old January 14th 05, 02:27 AM
DougSlug
 
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Careful, though...if you have a sensitive receiver, adding the amp could
actually reduce performance by overloading your receiver and possibly
introduce intermodulation distortion depending on what stations are nearby.
Since he won't be monitoring microwave frequencies, there are several
choices of coax that would work quite well for a 50' run. In reality, there
is some point where the advantage you gain with altitude is cancelled out by
the loss in the coax. For a 50' run, you may be getting close to a wash,
especially for UHF, unless you use better coax. It's difficult to make
comparative measurements because you don't have antennas in both locations
at once, but it sure would be nice to be able to do that.

- Doug


"Jim" wrote in message
...
The best thing you can do is mount a bullet amp at the antenna. Even the
best quality coax has a large loss at microwave frequencies. Use the
type of amp meant for satellite television. Since you aren't transmitting
you'll get by cheap. This will also allow you to use cheaper RG6.




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