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In article om,
"exal" wrote: Steve wrote: snip Anyway, that is my initial and not-so-scientific impression of the pa0rdt-Mini-Whip. I feel like I have just discovered SWL after doing it for 3 years. Congrats to Roelof for a great work! Are you in a rural, urban or suburban location? Have you grounded the coax shield in any way where it meets the antenna? What kind of antenna were you using before? I tried the mini-whip and was disappointed, so I'm curious about why it works so much better for other people than it does for me. I am in a suburban neighborhood north of the DFW area (Allen specifically). I did not ground the coax shield. I have been using a 75 ft wire at a height of 8', or the internal whip until now. I attached the mini-whip to a PVC pipe of about 8 ft length. I extended it out from a second floor bedroom window at about a 60deg angle which allows me to anchor it to the window sill and secure it to the roof overhang. This places the mini-whip at a height of about 20ft and a distance of about 4ft or so from the side of the house. I ran the coax down the pipe with cable ties straight to the power feed unit. The power feed is connected to a 12V deep cycle battery and directly to the radio via a 1ft coax. Roelof and other users have stated that it only works well if you get it high and as far away from noise sources as possible. Honestly, I am very impressed. It has a much lower noise floor than using the wire and provides much more gain than the internal whip. The wire could pull in some stations that are, for me, pretty weak but I always struggled to understand through the noise. The internal whip is pretty quiet but just couldn't bring in anything much. Last night I heard dozens of stations I had never heard before, and the ones I had heard before were dramatically clearer. Now I need to state that I am by no means a DXer. I simply do not have the antenna space or the wife's permission for a large loop or anything like that. I guess that makes me a BCB listener. That's ok though. I am very excited about this antenna and plan on spending a lot of hours re-exploring the bands. If you want, I can take some pics of my setup and area to which you can compare your own. It might shed some light. There is a good chance that if you stood on a ladder holding the radio at the same location your reception would be about the same on the whip although the levels would be lower without the active antenna amplification. Since the active antenna is an electrically small E mode active antenna using a battery to drive it instead of a AC mains supply helped keep the noise floor low so that using it was an actual improvement. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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