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Jay January 26th 05 03:08 PM

Ferrite Coil Antenna Hook-up ?? How connect ?
 
I found an old ferrite rod antenna coil in my scrap box and would like
to know if it would be possible to hook it to my Philco 38-10 ?
It has the usual 4 leads on these antennas and I have no idea where
these leads should be connected.
Any and all information for my education on these antennas will be
greatly appreciated.
Thanks
James

Rob Mills January 26th 05 03:48 PM


"Jay" wrote in message
...

It has the usual 4 leads on these antennas and I have no idea where

these leads should be connected.

This isn't an answer, just a commit. The ferrite rod in my McKay Dymek DA 5
ferrite bar antenna has only a half dozen or so windings centered on the
rod. The rod (it's been a while since I've looked at it) is aprox 8 to 10
inches long. Rob Mills ~



Mark Zenier January 26th 05 06:29 PM

In article ,
Jay wrote:
I found an old ferrite rod antenna coil in my scrap box and would like
to know if it would be possible to hook it to my Philco 38-10 ?
It has the usual 4 leads on these antennas and I have no idea where
these leads should be connected.
Any and all information for my education on these antennas will be
greatly appreciated.


Is that a pre-WWII tube radio?

A ferrite rod loop stick is both the antenna and the tuning coil for
the first RF amplifier (if the radio has one) or the mixer RF input.
So you'd have to go into the band switch and disconnect the tuning coil
for that band, and then rewind the winding on the loop stick for the
same inductance. Not worth the effort, IMHO.

You could make a tuned loop stick out of it by connecting the right value
of variable capacitor and then add a link winding of a few turns that
hooked up to the antenna and ground inputs. But that's yet another knob
to twiddle. (You'd probably be better off with multi turn wire loop a
couple of feet across).

Mark Zenier Washington State resident


Jay January 28th 05 03:26 AM

Thank you Mark.
I know have a better understanding of the situation.
I think I will take your advise and just make a multi turn loop.
Jay

On Wed, 26 Jan 2005 18:29:36 GMT, (Mark Zenier)
wrote:

In article ,
Jay wrote:
I found an old ferrite rod antenna coil in my scrap box and would like
to know if it would be possible to hook it to my Philco 38-10 ?
It has the usual 4 leads on these antennas and I have no idea where
these leads should be connected.
Any and all information for my education on these antennas will be
greatly appreciated.


Is that a pre-WWII tube radio?

A ferrite rod loop stick is both the antenna and the tuning coil for
the first RF amplifier (if the radio has one) or the mixer RF input.
So you'd have to go into the band switch and disconnect the tuning coil
for that band, and then rewind the winding on the loop stick for the
same inductance. Not worth the effort, IMHO.

You could make a tuned loop stick out of it by connecting the right value
of variable capacitor and then add a link winding of a few turns that
hooked up to the antenna and ground inputs. But that's yet another knob
to twiddle. (You'd probably be better off with multi turn wire loop a
couple of feet across).

Mark Zenier
Washington State resident



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