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Dave wrote in message . ..
Balderdash. A transformer that correctly drives the co-ax is a great advantage. Depends on the radio. Very few modern radios would benefit as far as s/n ratio. All the transformer usually does is pump up the s meter. If when hooking up the antenna, the noise level increases, you have enough signal. Increasing the level does not increase the s/n ratio unless the radio is half dead. On the lower frequencies, you have so much signal level with any decent length wire, you could drastically reduce it, and still have plenty. On Mon, 07 Jul 2003 11:20:47 -0600, JJ wrote: Vince Fiscus, KB7ADL wrote: There is no real advantage for a balun on an antenna just for receiving. Well, there is in some cases. In cases of bad shack noise, you can drastically reduce noise ingress by adding a good balun or choke. Also, many directional antennas like yagi's need decoupling for an accurate pattern. Feedline radiation will skew the pattern. Also with verticals used for VHF/UHF, decoupling is critical for good low angle performance. Being all is reciprical, it's as important to receive as it is to transmit. But, I do agree, as far as s/n ratio is concerned with an HF wire antenna, a balun or transformer is not generally needed. If adding matching actually improves the s/n ratio, you likely have a fairly lame radio. The bigger payoff is reduced noise ingress from the shack. That will improve the s/n ratio. If you actually have noise that is... MK |
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