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Philip Levine December 1st 03 11:26 PM

apartment antennas
 
Just getting back into shortwave listening after a 30 year absence.
Now I live in an apartment in NYC and have access to the fire escape
on the 3rd floor outside my window. While waiting for my radio to come
in the mail I'm researching all kinds of antenna possibilities which
do not look too conspicuous.

I'm sure there are plenty of ideas out there and I'd love to hear from
you. Would a balcony vertical antenna work better than a long wire
(well, not particularly long) or a slinky type. The good news is that
I can probably get some kind of antenna outside on the fire escape so
there should be some options there.

Thanks to all.

Phil

Gary Sanford December 2nd 03 12:43 AM

On 1 Dec 2003 15:26:42 -0800, (Philip
Levine) wrote:

Just getting back into shortwave listening after a 30 year absence.
Now I live in an apartment in NYC and have access to the fire escape
on the 3rd floor outside my window. While waiting for my radio to come
in the mail I'm researching all kinds of antenna possibilities which
do not look too conspicuous.

I'm sure there are plenty of ideas out there and I'd love to hear from
you. Would a balcony vertical antenna work better than a long wire
(well, not particularly long) or a slinky type. The good news is that
I can probably get some kind of antenna outside on the fire escape so
there should be some options there.

Thanks to all.

Phil



You could always try the fire escape itself! Maybe with a counterpoise
or even directly with a delta match. In any case, good luck with the
RFI. I used to live in north Jersey and don't miss all the
interference.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gary Sanford


Gregory L. Dome December 2nd 03 01:39 AM

Hang a Slinky@ by the window by the fire escape, use the escape as a
counterpoise. I used the Slinky for years as an indoor antenna in a house
that I could not have an outdoor antenna and it worked well. Greg
"Gary Sanford" wrote in message
...
On 1 Dec 2003 15:26:42 -0800, (Philip
Levine) wrote:

Just getting back into shortwave listening after a 30 year absence.
Now I live in an apartment in NYC and have access to the fire escape
on the 3rd floor outside my window. While waiting for my radio to come
in the mail I'm researching all kinds of antenna possibilities which
do not look too conspicuous.

I'm sure there are plenty of ideas out there and I'd love to hear from
you. Would a balcony vertical antenna work better than a long wire
(well, not particularly long) or a slinky type. The good news is that
I can probably get some kind of antenna outside on the fire escape so
there should be some options there.

Thanks to all.

Phil



You could always try the fire escape itself! Maybe with a counterpoise
or even directly with a delta match. In any case, good luck with the
RFI. I used to live in north Jersey and don't miss all the
interference.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Gary Sanford




Macman December 2nd 03 01:44 AM

I recently read somewhere where, and please don't laugh, someone actually
used a metal slinky toy as an antenna in just your situation. He said that
he simply let it drop out a window for DX'ing and when he was done, just
pulled it back in.

I've never heard of how successful it was, but it may be cheap and fun way
to experiment.

73's,
Todd
KB3KNV



Macman December 2nd 03 01:45 AM

Must be on the same wavelength. If you have done this, how successfull was
it?



Diverd4777 December 2nd 03 01:51 AM

Hi Phil:

A Fire Escape !

Wow ! ! !

You can get out on the fire escape & hook up all Sorts of antennas.

My suggestion is to use Black Stranded, insulated Radio Shack hookup wire;
- comes in 100 foot rolls.

Whilst waiting for your new Toy to arrive, go out on said fire escape with a
transistor radio hooked up to headphones.
Move arond a bit,
trying NOT to look like a Spy or Burglar, & see what dirction
signals come in from best.

- Also, make a wire lead-in to where your radio will eventually sit.

A Fire escape.!

How Brutally Cool !!!

YOu can probably hook up wire between your windows(s) as listed below,
OR string wire all along the hand rail up & down

Start slow, don't terrify ( or **** off ) the neighbors & you should have all
sorts of opportunities ahead

Signed

- Jealous -

( Dan / NYC )

( Below is some other instructions ( modifiable ) that may come in handy )
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~

MATERIALS

Some Stranded, Insulated copper wire from Radio shack
Colors so it matches the bricks / outside of your building

Some stick-on Cord holders
One tube clear Silicone sealer glue
One black magic marker
One Rusty red magic marker
A roll of Duct tape color of outside of apt.

One Mop
One piece of twine or string.

PROCEDU

See how far it is in between two windows of your Apt..

Measure out a piece of string this distance + ~ 6 - 8 feet.
Attach a small soft edged weight to it.

( Look Outside to see no one is looking !! )

Secure curious household pets

Open Both Windows.
Insert mop part way out one]
Close that window to secure mop handle

Run over to the other window QUICK!
Take the twine with the weight on it & (without risking life & limb)
Toss the string over the mop.
Secure the end of that end of the string with a bit of slack
Close that window
Run over to the other window with the mop that has the twine handing down off
it

Pull the mop in
Close the window.
NOW
Attach stranded wire to the end of the string.
Slightly open window
Run over to other window.
Open it & pull in string until wire / string connection is through..

Pull in enough so that wire will reach SWR
Attach wire to SWR.
Close window.

- That's basically it. Modify as needed.

You can take Square stick -on cord holders
Camouflage them with magic Markers, &
Silicone glue them to the outside corners of the window,
Then loop more wire

( DONT FALL OUT WHEN DOING THIS !!)

around the cord holders. This makes the antenna longer.
repeat for other windows..This should help lots..

( Works for me !!)






In article ,
(Philip Levine) writes:


Just getting back into shortwave listening after a 30 year absence.
Now I live in an apartment in NYC and have access to the fire escape
on the 3rd floor outside my window. While waiting for my radio to come
in the mail I'm researching all kinds of antenna possibilities which
do not look too conspicuous.

I'm sure there are plenty of ideas out there and I'd love to hear from
you. Would a balcony vertical antenna work better than a long wire
(well, not particularly long) or a slinky type. The good news is that
I can probably get some kind of antenna outside on the fire escape so
there should be some options there.

Thanks to all.

Phil




GrtPmpkin32 December 2nd 03 01:57 AM

I recently read somewhere where, and please don't laugh, someone actually
used a metal slinky toy as an antenna in just your situation.


What's to laugh at? The Slinky-as-antenna concept has been around for a LONG
time, and has many, many proponents in the SW and amateur realm. Do a search
for 'slinky antenna' on google or your favorite engine, see how many hits you
garner.
I've experimented with Slinky antennas in the past, but more out of curiousity
than outright need (I use a 75" sloper and a large horizontal loop 'skywire',
about 200" a side, for my outdoor antennas) but they can be rewarding antennas.
For about a year I had an indoor Slinky antenna 'loop' running around the
ceiling in my room, all four walls. When storms or wind were howling outside,
or in snowy conditions (blowing snow and sand can cause a LOT of static
build-up on a longer wire antenna!) I could still do some rather nice listening
without fear of frying my radios. Worked pretty well on my scanners, too.
And you're right, it's cheap and it's fun!
Linus

The Traveler December 2nd 03 04:26 AM

(Philip Levine) wrote in
om:

Just getting back into shortwave listening after a 30 year
absence. Now I live in an apartment in NYC and have access to
the fire escape on the 3rd floor outside my window. While
waiting for my radio to come in the mail I'm researching all
kinds of antenna possibilities which do not look too
conspicuous.

I'm sure there are plenty of ideas out there and I'd love to
hear from you. Would a balcony vertical antenna work better than
a long wire (well, not particularly long) or a slinky type. The
good news is that I can probably get some kind of antenna
outside on the fire escape so there should be some options
there.


Hi Phil,

Consider a small antenna like the "H-800 SkyMatch Active Antenna"
from LF Engineering...
http://www.lfengineering.com/products.htm
....or better yet, from Grove Enterprises...
http://www.grove-ent.com/ANT15.html (this is where I bought it
from).

I have been using this antenna for a while now and it equals if
not surpasses limited space windom antennas. Now, it will never
beat a full size antenna, but for a limited space, outdoor antenna
(29" tall), it is giving me a good return on my investment. It's
quiet, small, forgiving and easy to instal.

--
The Traveler,
Oceanside, California

The Axelrods December 3rd 03 01:44 AM



Philip Levine wrote:

Just getting back into shortwave listening after a 30 year absence.
Now I live in an apartment in NYC and have access to the fire escape
on the 3rd floor outside my window. While waiting for my radio to come
in the mail I'm researching all kinds of antenna possibilities which
do not look too conspicuous.

I'm sure there are plenty of ideas out there and I'd love to hear from
you. Would a balcony vertical antenna work better than a long wire
(well, not particularly long) or a slinky type. The good news is that
I can probably get some kind of antenna outside on the fire escape so
there should be some options there.

Thanks to all.

Phil


Try looking under antennas at the AMANDX site listed below. A few ideas
that may be of help depending on your situation. Sometimes you have to
try a few things to see what is best

--
73 and Best of DX
Shawn Axelrod

Visit the AMANDX DX site with info for the new or experienced listener:

http://www.angelfire.com/mb/amandx/index.html

REMEMBER ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN HEAR FOREVER



Gregory L. Dome December 3rd 03 02:12 AM

The U.S. Navy used them for transmitting from ships in the 50's........hung
from the rigging vertical.
"Macman" wrote in message
...
I recently read somewhere where, and please don't laugh, someone actually
used a metal slinky toy as an antenna in just your situation. He said

that
he simply let it drop out a window for DX'ing and when he was done, just
pulled it back in.

I've never heard of how successful it was, but it may be cheap and fun way
to experiment.

73's,
Todd
KB3KNV






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