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#21
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On 2 Dec 2008 06:15:20 GMT, Top wrote:
(Dave Platt) wrote in : In article , Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick wrote: I suspect you'd get more bang for your buck by simply mounting a single antenna in a better location (e.g. roof mount) and paying attention to making the antenna's grounding to the chassis/groundplane as direct and solid as possible. Cophase being omindirectional? You need to do some more reading before you try to correct anything. IF the cophased antennas are less than 1/4 wave apart, there is virtually no change. |
#23
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On Tue, 2 Dec 2008 03:17:22 -0500, "Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick"
wrote: "Dave Platt" wrote in message ... In article , Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick wrote: You still didn't give any useful information. No surpise since you have none. For an average of the cb band running 1/4 wave the antennas should be spaced 54 inches apart. Use a commercially produced cophase harness if you can find it. Make sure you match the SWR and you will out do any other mobile off the front or rear. Top Thanks Top! I think that Top's calculations (and recommendations) are a bit off? I'm a "single antenna" guy myself. I think, in a truck, at least, that "big radio" is synonymous with "big wris****ch". :-) We can't mount the antennae high or center, because the 13', 6" height of the truck is where the low bridges start. Also, most tractors have this horrific system that intergrates AM/FM with the CB coax. A CB stick on the left mirror and an AM/FM on the right, and a splitter in the coax, so I always run my own coax seperately. And I have a cellular antenna on one side, any way, for dual plane signal boost, and it has to be 8" (I think) away from other sticks. But hhhhhere's a question for the braintrust: I'm after a (mobile) VHF radio that's common to northern (i.e., the Yukon, and Northwest Territories) Canadian truckers- who don't monitor CB bands. (info ![]() I'm sure, as a sine wave challenged layman, that I can't use the same antenna and coax as my CB? No dumb****. As I have tried to explain to you once before, DO NOT buy one of those radios. If you get caught with it in the USA alone, and are transmitting on it, no license? Bye bye. Pay the $10,000 fine lose the radio. Every trucking company in Canada that uses them has a Canadian license to operate them with. They are not like CB's. They are commercial business radios. I trust maybe now you'll listen to one of the radio experts for a change. Would one of you in the radio groups who knows Canadian radios please explain this to the jerk? He thinks that because he's a trucker, he can have any damn radio he wants in his truck. |
#24
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In article ,
Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick wrote: But hhhhhere's a question for the braintrust: I'm after a (mobile) VHF radio that's common to northern (i.e., the Yukon, and Northwest Territories) Canadian truckers- who don't monitor CB bands. (info ![]() I'm sure, as a sine wave challenged layman, that I can't use the same antenna and coax as my CB? In principle, you could combine the CB output (27 MHz) with the VHF radio output (up above the 2-meter band) using a diplexer, and feed the result down a single coax. At the antenna end, you'd have a couple of choices. You can use another diplexer to split out the HF and VHF signals, and feed them to two separate antennas. Or, you might be able to find a single CB-type antenna which is also capable of matching up well enough on these VHF frequencies to work tolerably well. The chances are very poor that a randomly-selected CB antenna would give you a tolerable SWR on the 160-or-so-MHz VHF band... and if it did, there's no telling what its vertical radiation pattern would look like. An antenna intended for these two bands would probably have to be custom designed - I can think of a couple of possible ways to do it. Such a dualband antenna would almost certainly be a compromise antenna on both bands - it wouldn't work as well as separate antennas designed for best operation on a single band each. Commercial HF/VHF diplexers run somewhere around $80, last time I looked. You'd probably find it less expensive in the end to just run a second coax and put up a second (VHF-only) whip antenna. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#25
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What if you ran a wire between those two truck antennas? Only
saying,,,,, cuhulin |
#26
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uuuuhhhh..... you're wrong as usual Bulli****.
Top was Military and got his commo expertise there. IIRC he's not a truck driver at all. |
#27
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"Zeke" wrote in message ...
uuuuhhhh..... you're wrong as usual Bulli****. Top was career Military and got his commo expertise there. IIRC he's not a truck driver at all. Exactly, a matter of public record here that Richard has seen several times previously, and just forgot. Here's Richard's esteemed military career (and how he was caught lying about it): http://bolo_bullis.tripod.com/ What's amazing is that Richard and I were just discussing what a total, absolute and complete asshole he makes himself look like every time he tries to make himself look tough or smart at anyone's expense. Of course he can't hear a word of that, and immediately starts this. Richard, who is also a career pedophile and damn proud of it, has had, and will always have, the same problem, and that's that he just can't keep his festering gob shut. What amazes me is that he's skunked a dozen usenet groups over the years, is internationally know as a scumbag, but still sees the world through his own rose colored glasses, like we might have forgotten his previous and extensive bombast and flummery. Funny, or sad? -- Popeye "Best thing for him, really. His therapy was going nowhere," -Hannibal Lector. www.finalprotectivefire.com http://picasaweb.google.com/Popeye8762 |
#28
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"richard" wrote in message
... On Tue, 2 Dec 2008 03:17:22 -0500, "Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick" wrote: "Dave Platt" wrote in message ... In article , Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick wrote: You still didn't give any useful information. No surpise since you have none. For an average of the cb band running 1/4 wave the antennas should be spaced 54 inches apart. Use a commercially produced cophase harness if you can find it. Make sure you match the SWR and you will out do any other mobile off the front or rear. Top Thanks Top! I think that Top's calculations (and recommendations) are a bit off? I'm a "single antenna" guy myself. I think, in a truck, at least, that "big radio" is synonymous with "big wris****ch". :-) We can't mount the antennae high or center, because the 13', 6" height of the truck is where the low bridges start. Also, most tractors have this horrific system that intergrates AM/FM with the CB coax. A CB stick on the left mirror and an AM/FM on the right, and a splitter in the coax, so I always run my own coax seperately. And I have a cellular antenna on one side, any way, for dual plane signal boost, and it has to be 8" (I think) away from other sticks. But hhhhhere's a question for the braintrust: I'm after a (mobile) VHF radio that's common to northern (i.e., the Yukon, and Northwest Territories) Canadian truckers- who don't monitor CB bands. (info ![]() I'm sure, as a sine wave challenged layman, that I can't use the same antenna and coax as my CB? No dumb****. As I have tried to explain to you once before, DO NOT buy one of those radios. **** you, dickhead. If you get caught with it in the USA alone, and are transmitting on it, no license? Bye bye. Pay the $10,000 fine lose the radio. Sure. What's the fine for my 250 watt kicker? Don't forget to add that in. Every trucking company in Canada that uses them has a Canadian license to operate them with. They are not like CB's. They are commercial business radios. I trust maybe now you'll listen to one of the radio experts for a change. I am. They said the radios were available, the private frequencies, not the radios, are licensed, and the freqs I'm interested are available to the public. And the license, if you want one, is easy and cheap. Were your mother and father related -before- the wedding? Inquiring minds want to know. Because you have an uncanny resemblence to the Deliverance banjo boy. Would one of you in the radio groups who knows Canadian radios please explain this to the jerk? He thinks that because he's a trucker, he can have any damn radio he wants in his truck. Jesus, are you stupid. Try reading the thread that I cited, that flatly proves you wrong. And as I already stated, and you apparently forgot, the radio would be for emergencies only, and that I would have no reason to use it in the states. Your memory is just shot, ****head, have you ever met a guy named John Francis? Or been to Australia? I find it amazing that you'd be afraid of an FCC fine, that I have a one-in-ten-million chance of -ever- receiving, while you publically brag about being in possession of 45,000 child pornography pictures. Amazing. Simply amazing. -- Popeye "Best thing for him, really. His therapy was going nowhere," -Hannibal Lector. www.finalprotectivefire.com http://picasaweb.google.com/Popeye8762 |
#29
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"Dave Platt" wrote in message
... In article , Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick wrote: But hhhhhere's a question for the braintrust: I'm after a (mobile) VHF radio that's common to northern (i.e., the Yukon, and Northwest Territories) Canadian truckers- who don't monitor CB bands. (info ![]() I'm sure, as a sine wave challenged layman, that I can't use the same antenna and coax as my CB? In principle, you could combine the CB output (27 MHz) with the VHF radio output (up above the 2-meter band) using a diplexer, and feed the result down a single coax. At the antenna end, you'd have a couple of choices. You can use another diplexer to split out the HF and VHF signals, and feed them to two separate antennas. Or, you might be able to find a single CB-type antenna which is also capable of matching up well enough on these VHF frequencies to work tolerably well. The chances are very poor that a randomly-selected CB antenna would give you a tolerable SWR on the 160-or-so-MHz VHF band... and if it did, there's no telling what its vertical radiation pattern would look like. An antenna intended for these two bands would probably have to be custom designed - I can think of a couple of possible ways to do it. Such a dualband antenna would almost certainly be a compromise antenna on both bands - it wouldn't work as well as separate antennas designed for best operation on a single band each. Commercial HF/VHF diplexers run somewhere around $80, last time I looked. You'd probably find it less expensive in the end to just run a second coax and put up a second (VHF-only) whip antenna. Thanks! That's the kind of helpful and intelligent response I was looking for. The radio would be for emergency communications anyway, to trucks in the -immediate- vicinity. The 4 "LADD" frequencies are used by the scale houses up there, as well. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! -- Popeye "Best thing for him, really. His therapy was going nowhere," -Hannibal Lector. www.finalprotectivefire.com http://picasaweb.google.com/Popeye8762 |
#30
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"Dave Platt" wrote in message
... In article , Douglas W. \"Popeye\" Frederick wrote: The radio would be for emergency communications anyway, to trucks in the -immediate- vicinity. The 4 "LADD" frequencies are used by the scale houses up there, as well. I'd offer a "metoo" for some advice you got from another poster... do NOT operate unlicensed. Don't even install a radio for which you don't have whatever license is required by the law in the areas in which you will be driving. Thanks, but don't put too much stock in the idiot. I don't chat on the radio, regardless of how he tries to project his own activities on others, and from what I can discern so far, no license is required. I notice Richard the expert hasn't provided any such information, either. Possibly you're not aware of this, but unlicensed 10 meter radios with in-line amps are quite common in our trucks, and openly sold (although one major truckstop chain was, I believe, fined after several warnings) everywhere. I'll be happy to get a Canadian license if I can, but, I don't need or intend to use the licensed business frequencies. So, if as I understand, -that's- what I need a license for, I have no need for one. From the cite: "The Canadian equivalent of the FCC has a site in which it post Northwind Trucking as 165.840 MHZ.. Now in Canada they do not partition the VHF High band into commercial 151-162 and Government 162-174 like we do.. they are all over the place. Also They provide unlicensed LADD channels which are used alot by trucks Ladd 1 -154.1 Ladd 2 -158.94 Ladd 3- 154.325 and Ladd 4 173.370.. Again they are all over the place with stuff up there. Most of the action on Inuvik is on VHF. Nothing appears to be on 30-50 MHZ and the Hospital and Airport are using UHF." "They provide unlicensed LADD channels which are used alot by trucks" "They provide unlicensed LADD channels which are used alot by trucks" "They provide unlicensed LADD channels which are used alot by trucks" "They provide unlicensed LADD channels which are used alot by trucks" Where I drive is not where you live. http://picasaweb.google.com/Popeye87...43959490865794 That radio may mean the difference between freezing to death or not, or, literally, being eaten alive. "Officer, it's only for emergency use" is certainly preferable to that, and, grossly unlikely anyway. I've been through a score of vehicle inspections, with an illegal kicker in -plain sight-, and nobody gives a damn. They're a whole lot more concerned if we have brakes, and are sober. Contrary to Stupid Richard's rantings, I've never seen an FCC roadblock in 35 years of driving. Planning to use the "Officer, it's only for emergency use" response, when challenged, could be a very expensive tactic. You might find out, the hard way, that the local regulatory body takes a "possession is considered proof of intent to use" approach... even if you don't get hit with criminal charges or a civil forfeiture order, you could find that your radios are considered de facto "contraband" and are subject to being seized without warning. Here in the US, unlicensed operation could get you hit with equipment confiscation and a fine of many thousands of dollars. I'm sure that's true. If you want to operate VHF, you should either get a proper license (e.g. for business-band frequencies) or stick to radios which have no legal requirement for a license. For example, here in the U.S., the MURS (multi-use radio service) is a collection of a few VHF frequencies (formerly licensed-business-band) which have been reassigned, and which can be used without a license as long as the radio you use is properly certificated for this purpose. I don't know if Canada has a MURS-equivalent, or if any of the truckers up there use it. Check the regulations before you buy. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! -- Popeye "Best thing for him, really. His therapy was going nowhere," -Hannibal Lector. www.finalprotectivefire.com http://picasaweb.google.com/Popeye8762 |
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