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I am doing the same thing myself, but let's think about the anti-static
feature which uses a Ne-2 bulb a 10K resistor and IIRC a .01 capacitor The NE-2 is a NEON tube...They don't conduct, they FIRE like a Thyratron, they are gas discharge tubes...like a stone age Zener diode. The NE-2 ( when I used them in strobe-light power supplies, fired at 65 volts and until it reached 65 volts, it did NOTHING. Reading recent references I see it is listed as a 105-125 V device...perhaps that's for optimum "brightness"...I just know it FIRES at 65 ac volts. at any rate the 10K resistor is a good order of magnitude too low in my opinion...The reference ( a xeroxed page from a catalog listing all the neon tubes characteristics) says the bulb needs a 200K resistor for a 65V AC firing voltage (RF is AC) or 90V DC firing voltage. Can we have some practical experience here from the "listeners" about whether the resistors should be 10K or 200 K ? Yodar "-=jd=-" wrote in message .. . I'm a newcomer to SWL and I've been perusing the boards and the various sites. Lots of interesting info to be found all over - perhaps too much info. I'm quite possibly a good example of the adage that a little knowledge can sometimes be a dangerous thing. So, I'm thinking of the following to reduce noise while listening inside the house (with a Grundig YB400PE): The plan is to string 100-feet of #14 wire from a 14-foot post next to the house to a tree (about 130-feet away and 30-feet up) with about 30- feet +/- of rope on the post end of the wire. I'll connect coax from the end of the wire to a project box; from the project box to a ground-rod; from the ground-rod to the receiver. About the project box: It was raining and I was bored. I took the anti-static design from the AMANDX site (www.angelfire.com/mb/amandx/static.html) And the 9:1 balun from the hard-core-dx/nordicdx site (http://www.hard- core-dx.com/nordicdx/antenna/feed/9_1balun.html) And I've combined both designs into one box. The way I did it was to connect the capacitor from the static filter to the antenna side of the balun (hope that makes sense). Oh, it looks like hell, but I'm thinking it might actually work ok. I'm hoping to string it all up as soon as Tropical Storm "Bill" blows through and see if there's any difference from the built-in and wind-up antennas. Given that I am (admittedly) a totally green newbie and have *no* clue about the theory behind the random wire antennas, the anti- static filter or baluns, I'm wondering if anyone may have any advice they may like to offer regarding what I have planed, other than gales of derisive laughter... JD -- "Who are you going to believe, me or your lyin' eyes?" -Groucho Marx |
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