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Mark wrote:
I currently have four Sony HF radios which will shortly be joined a JRC NRD-545. I also currently have two antennas, a longwire and a di-pole. Time for a tidy-up! What does everybody do when they want to share two or three antennas amongst several radios (short of constanly unplugging and replugging everything)? Can I simply build myself a switch box? Put each antenna onto a common bus and use switches to assign to the various outputs that are connected to the various receivers? Can it be that simple? Yep! What kind of connectors do you have on the antennas? A simple thing you could do is put PL-259 connectors (the same kind generally used on CB antennas) on each antenna. Get a rotary coax switch (available at ham shops such as http://www.aesham.com or http://www.hamradio.com or http://www.mfjenterprises.com) for each receiver. Use T-connectors and short coax jumpers to wire each antenna to the same position on all five switches. That way, you can assign any antenna to any radio. (it wouldn't be particularly hard to build a switch box yourself either, if you're good at soldering. There are no special construction techniques; just keep wire lengths reasonably short (6" or less) and try to keep the wires for the various antennas away from each other. (otherwise signal will "leak" from one to the other) There's nothing wrong with using the same antenna on more than one radio at the same time. A multicoupler is certainly the "right" way to do it, but is probably overkill for what you're doing. And what of using two antennas at once? It'll be relatively hard to design a switching arrangement that does this while still allowing any receiver to access any antenna. But if you can work it out, two antennas at once is no problem. People have been known to tune the same station with two different radios, each hooked to a different antenna. The fading patterns are often different on different antennas, so when the station fades out on one it may fade up on the other. I'm thinking of feeding all the record outputs to a small multi-channel mixer. (I currently have a home recording studio, so I can then feed the output to a nice amp and set of speakers). That's certainly a good way of handling the audio. Please don't let people tell you you shouldn't hook shortwave radios to a high-fidelity amplifier/speakers. Having decent audio quality makes listening a lot more comfortable & enjoyable. You can always use the selectivity controls on the radio to eliminate noise & interference. (and in your case, the EQ controls on the mixer - maybe you have some other audio gear that can be used to "scrub" the SW audio too?) -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |