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#1
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I know this has been asked many time before but I am going to ask again. The
only place i can have an antenna at the place I live is in the same room as my radio so I am wondering if I can run a wire around the room? Can I bend it around the corners to make it longer or just run a staight piece along one wall. TIA Bob |
#2
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![]() Ink addict wrote: I know this has been asked many time before but I am going to ask again. The only place i can have an antenna at the place I live is in the same room as my radio so I am wondering if I can run a wire around the room? Can I bend it around the corners to make it longer or just run a staight piece along one wall. Try it several different ways. Experiment. dxAce Michigan USA http://www.iserv.net/~n8kdv/dxpage.htm |
#3
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Ink addict wrote:
I know this has been asked many time before but I am going to ask again. The only place i can have an antenna at the place I live is in the same room as my radio so I am wondering if I can run a wire around the room? Can I bend it around the corners to make it longer or just run a staight piece along one wall. TIA Bob If you're in a wood frame building that doesn't have aluminum siding, you might try an antenna like one of my friends has. It's a loop of wire around the perimeter of his living room, up near the ceiling. He uses thumb tacks or push pins every few feet to hold it up. You can see it if you look for it, but most folks don't notice it because the he used wire wrap wire (it's thin) and it and the pins are the same color as the walls. He uses an impedance matching transformer where the antenna connects to the coax. I like loop antennas indoors because they don't pick up as much RFI as a random wire. |
#4
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Ink addict wrote:
I know this has been asked many time before but I am going to ask again. The only place i can have an antenna at the place I live is in the same room as my radio so I am wondering if I can run a wire around the room? Can I bend it around the corners to make it longer or just run a staight piece along one wall. TIA Bob Best advice is to experiment. Depending on where you live, you will have better results with different lengths of wire. If in a high signal area, too much wire may overload the receiver and magnify noise. If in medium or low, longer is often better. Bends in the wire will changes the reception to some degree. I have about 100 m around the outside of my house eaves and the looping nature doesn't harm reception, but this is for my location: far from sources of interference and also from signals I want to hear. The length of wire will also depend on your receiver. Portables in general may not benefit from long aerials. I use the around the house wire for an Icom R-75. With portables (YB400, ATS909, ATS404) I use the roll up wires that come with these units, and it is more than enough. |
#6
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you might want to try a "slinky" antenna, either in dipole configuration or
as a long wire strung around the room. B "Ink addict" wrote in message ... I know this has been asked many time before but I am going to ask again. The only place i can have an antenna at the place I live is in the same room as my radio so I am wondering if I can run a wire around the room? Can I bend it around the corners to make it longer or just run a staight piece along one wall. TIA Bob |
#7
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I have a similar problem. I used push pins pushed into the four corners
around the window in my room and ran hookup wire around that. The trouble is, this apt. complex has dsl and it really interferes with shortwave listening. There isn't much I can do about except move S. Nevertheless, the antenna works well with my dx 394. If I get up early on, sometimes there is good reception. ~~~~~ God gives peace not war + "Ink addict" wrote in message ... I know this has been asked many time before but I am going to ask again. The only place i can have an antenna at the place I live is in the same room as my radio so I am wondering if I can run a wire around the room? Can I bend it around the corners to make it longer or just run a staight piece along one wall. TIA Bob |
#8
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"ShortwaveMan" wrote in
ink.net: I have a similar problem. I used push pins pushed into the four corners around the window in my room and ran hookup wire around that. The trouble is, this apt. complex has dsl and it really interferes with shortwave listening. There isn't much I can do about except move S. Nevertheless, the antenna works well with my dx 394. If I get up early on, sometimes there is good reception. DSL interferes with shortwave? Good to know. Now I won't get DSL, but will stick with a cable modem, with its shielded cable. I thought that the twisted pairs of phone lines would prevent most signal leakage. |
#9
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On Fri, 04 Feb 2005 06:55:02 GMT, Conan Ford
wrote: "ShortwaveMan" wrote in link.net: I have a similar problem. I used push pins pushed into the four corners around the window in my room and ran hookup wire around that. The trouble is, this apt. complex has dsl and it really interferes with shortwave listening. There isn't much I can do about except move S. Nevertheless, the antenna works well with my dx 394. If I get up early on, sometimes there is good reception. DSL interferes with shortwave? Good to know. Now I won't get DSL, but will stick with a cable modem, with its shielded cable. I thought that the twisted pairs of phone lines would prevent most signal leakage. It does, the problem is that when you can easily detect microvolts, it isn't hard for a twisted pair that is carring volts to radiate enough energy to be detecatable at the microvolt level. |
#10
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On Fri, 04 Feb 2005 18:26:50 -0700, matt weber
wrote: On Fri, 04 Feb 2005 06:55:02 GMT, Conan Ford wrote: "ShortwaveMan" wrote in hlink.net: I have a similar problem. I used push pins pushed into the four corners around the window in my room and ran hookup wire around that. The trouble is, this apt. complex has dsl and it really interferes with shortwave listening. There isn't much I can do about except move S. Nevertheless, the antenna works well with my dx 394. If I get up early on, sometimes there is good reception. DSL interferes with shortwave? Good to know. Now I won't get DSL, but will stick with a cable modem, with its shielded cable. I thought that the twisted pairs of phone lines would prevent most signal leakage. It does, the problem is that when you can easily detect microvolts, it isn't hard for a twisted pair that is carring volts to radiate enough energy to be detecatable at the microvolt level. Another take on it: I have DSL and don't have any issues when my modem and router are turned off - and the power to the wall warts also turned off. It may well be that the interference is not from the DSL itself but the supporting equipment. |
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