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Wellbrook Antennas
Dear "Telamon,"
It really is true - Ibiquity bought a large number of Wellbrook ALA 1530 antennas (I'm not sure in which of the various incarnations of the '1530 they were) as they found that this one was the most reliable and consistent antenna for them to use when testing AM IBOC. (Please note that I am NO fan of "digital" MW or SW [AM] in ANY form!) Their order was so large that Andy Ikin was forced to delay individual orders that came in after the Ibiquity order; he is only one person and there are still only 24 hours in a day! I understand that it took him several months to catch up. I cannot comment on the performance of any of the ALA 1530 range, having never owned one nor have I even personally known anyone who does; I can only comment on the performance of the Wellbrook ALA 330S (the shortwave-primarily model) of which I do own two (one used with my Grundig Satellit 800 and the other with my AR7030 Plus). It is overall the best antenna I personally have ever used in fifty years of shortwave listening. (Though I am sure that I have not used as many as you - or many others here - have, I have had a 300-foot wire, a 100- foot wire, several active antennas, and several whip-type antennas, both active and passive, over the years.) I would just like to mention another advantage of the Wellbrook (small) loop antennas over the (large loop) antenna you suggested (I think you may have touched on this in a later post) and that is the fact that a small loop will be most sensitive to the magnetic portion of the radio signal and will reject the electrical portion. This, of course, is the exact opposite of what a large loop will do. In other words, the small (amplified and well-shielded) loop will reject local electrical noise as well as atmospheric noise (especially in the summertime) whereas the large loop, like any large wire antenna, will pick up these extraneous interferences. In a community in which people live close together, such as my own situation, a large passive loop antenna just would not do. Only a small loop will perform in a satisfactory method assuming it is well-designed and well-made. Rotating a loop is also important in a situation such as mine in order to null out any especially pernicious noise; the Wellbrook ALA 330S has a very sharp null. (The null point is exactly the opposite of a large loop - 90° away - but I'm sure you already knew that.) Having two Wellbrooks for one receiver at 90° positioning would not be satisfactory (even if that option were affordable!) though it probably is fine for large loops, which are not quite as directional. If it hadn't been for the Wellbrook AA 330S and its rotatability and its rejection of local electrical noise, I would have had to abandon the hobby! Best, Joe P.S. The small, amplified, Sony AN-LP1 Active Antenna, though not even in the same ballpark as the Wellbrook ALA 330S, nonetheless is the best affordable loop antenna I have found for use with portable shortwave radios, the Eton E1, Grundig Satellit 800, Drake SW-8, and several Lowe portables excepted. The AN-LP1 provides a good, relatively quiet, signal and does not cause overloading on most good compact portable shortwave receivers. While rotating it is cumbersome at best, it can be done if necessary. It's great for taking on trips as well. On Apr 7, 10:03 pm, Telamon wrote: In article , RHF wrote: SNIP The Wellbrook Loop Antenna was the only Off-the-Shelf Consumer Grade AM/MW Antenna good enough to Null-Out the Digital Side-Band Noise {Hash} from Adjacent IBOC AM/MW Radio Stations to allow iBiquity Corp to 'pass' the FCC Broadcast Standard for the Acceptance of IBOC's used concurrently with Analog AM/MW Radio. another - it's sounds crazy -but- it's true {maybe ?} fabrication - by ~ RHF . In a word, YES. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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