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On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 15:27:34 GMT, "Jeff"
said in rec.radio.scanner: "Al Klein" wrote in message Four things you should be aware of: 1) A discone is a negative gain antenna - that is, it has less gain than a dipole, which is the standard by which 0 gain is measured. Name 1 "scanner" antenna that does have gain? Not an amatuer antenna a "scanner" antenna. Since we never covered "scanner antenna" in antenna theory, define what you mean. Dipoles (or ground planes) have, by definition, 0dbd gain. A discone has negative gain, vis-a-vis a dipole. With trunking a fact of life nowdays most people want to listen anywhere from 100 to 900Mhz. There are only 2 antennas that work well all the way thru that area, one is the discone The discone operates, at best, over a 4:1 frequency range, not exactly VHF-hi to 850. Actually a nice link, very informative and agree with it totally. I use Quad Shielded RG 6 with only about a 25' run. Im good up to about 1 Gig. Not much above that to listen to anyway. I'll go along with 2.3db loss being ok, but what is quad shielding buying you with an unshielded scanner? Actually a good discone is closer to a 10: 1 ratio. When are they awarding you your Nobel prize? Most antenna engineers will quote you 3:1 for real world antennas. Some claim that they can actually achieve 4:1, but I suspect the machining costs would make the antenna unaffordable. Most, without the vertical stinger are good from 100-1000Mhz. I have transmitted on mine on 52, 144, 440, and 904Mhz with anywhere from excellent to good results. I can do the same thing with my R7, but that doesn't make the antenna an antenna at those frequencies. Conductors don't accumulate signal, they radiate it. The math for a discone is totally different than the math for a dipole. They just dont work the same way. Yep - the rule of thumb is that the lowest frequency is that at which the radials are 1/4 wave and the highest frequency is 3 times that for a good design that's been well implemented. You're getting carried away here again with the grounding thing. Nobody, and I mean nobody puts a grd system in as you describe here. No one you know - okay. Many people I know have and do. It simply isnt needed. Not unless you want a good ground. I'm not talking about not having the mic bite you, I'm talking about not living in a hole in the ground after the pole pig on the pole in front of your house suffers a direct strike. I'm not making this up - read the National Electric Code on grounding, or ask an electrician. This is important - people are killed every year by bad antenna installations. Not many - but if you're one of them, it doesn't matter how many there are. The people that do get killed are the idiots that put up a mast and an antenna 10' from a power line, and when it goes down and lands on a power line bad things happen. I'm talking about those killed by lightning. You don't run a ground system to blow breakers on a 440 line that are located a few miles, and a few transformations, from the ground. Rule No. 1, do not put ANY antenna even remotely close to ANY power line and you wont have any problems. Until the clouds gather. I hope you sleep well when someone actually takes your advice and it results in his death. *N*E*V*E*R* take *A*N*Y* chances with lightning. 50 million volts can't be "handled" by anything man can do when it has tens of thousands of amps available behind it. |
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