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Radio Question
Over the weekend, I stumbled into a Panasonic RF-4800 general
communications receiver. It looks like it just came out of the box. Mint+. I have some issues that perhaps some of you can help with. I spend most of the week working out of an RV in an RV park. The park rules are such that they really frown on antennas other than TV. So it leaves out a long wire antenna. My TV antenna (no cable in the park) is about 12' to the yagi. So I have a mounting height issue..the Slinky trick is out. Anyone got a good suggestion for a low profile receiving antenna that will cover broadcast to 31 mhz? Vertically polarized, or horizontally..horizontal would be best. The RV has a surface aprox 7' wide by 20' long. loop antennas are out. No way to turn it from inside and are a bit high profile. Second big question. The only place to put this receiver is within 3 feet of my computer. So Im getting freaking huge birdies all over the spectrum with the puter/monitor turned on. The receiver has a 50ohm Pl259 coax connector, as well as a binding post for a long wire. Plus a binding post for AM broadcast and a third for FM broadcast. The RV itself is a damned good Faraday cage. Aluminum siding, aluminum window frames and screen. Even the local stations fade to zip when the door is closed. I have to leave the cell phone near a window to work. So the antenna has to be external. Shrug. Anyone got any suggestions? Ive got a chunk of wire tossed over the roof at the moment, but tis not particularly effective. Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" |
You could get a couple of pipe flanges and mount one inside on the
ceiling and the other one on the roof and rig/make a handle thingy to turn a loop antenna in any direction you want to turn it.Some of that caulking/putty stuff would keep it water proof. cuhulin |
Dear Gunner,
It's expensive, it's a "loop," but it might be just what you're looking for! Check out the AOR WL500 Window Loop Antenna. http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/sw_ant/0238.html I own one. I use it with my Grundig Satellit 800. It's relatively non-directional above 6 MHz. I like it very much. I believe AES and Grove also sell this antenna. Hope that's at least of some interest to you. Best, Joe |
On 5 Apr 2005 11:28:55 -0700, "Joe Analssandrini"
wrote: Dear Gunner, It's expensive, it's a "loop," but it might be just what you're looking for! Check out the AOR WL500 Window Loop Antenna. http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/sw_ant/0238.html I own one. I use it with my Grundig Satellit 800. It's relatively non-directional above 6 MHz. I like it very much. I believe AES and Grove also sell this antenna. Hope that's at least of some interest to you. Best, Joe Many thanks Joe, looks very interesting Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" |
Gunner wrote: Over the weekend, I stumbled into a Panasonic RF-4800 general communications receiver. It looks like it just came out of the box. Mint+. I have some issues that perhaps some of you can help with. I spend most of the week working out of an RV in an RV park. The park rules are such that they really frown on antennas other than TV. So it leaves out a long wire antenna. My TV antenna (no cable in the park) is about 12' to the yagi. So I have a mounting height issue..the Slinky trick is out. Anyone got a good suggestion for a low profile receiving antenna that will cover broadcast to 31 mhz? Vertically polarized, or horizontally..horizontal would be best. The RV has a surface aprox 7' wide by 20' long. ................................................. .............................. I used a Winnebago for a few summers and found that a CB whip (96") worked fairly well. RV people are quite used to CB antennas and accept them as part of the game. You can get mounting clamps from truck stops and perhaps Radio Shack, and you will need to run RG58U through a hole somewhere and get the right antenna connector for the Panasonic. Don't forget to take down the whip when you move the rig. Also, I found that a wire run across the windshield and held in place by tape worked fairly well but was hopeless when moving due to static and engine noise. I used to connect it to the whip....73... |
What is it that makes those antennas so expensive?
cuhulin |
On Tue, 05 Apr 2005 10:53:17 GMT, Gunner
wrote: Over the weekend, I stumbled into a Panasonic RF-4800 general communications receiver. It looks like it just came out of the box. Mint+. I have some issues that perhaps some of you can help with. I spend most of the week working out of an RV in an RV park. The park rules are such that they really frown on antennas other than TV. So it leaves out a long wire antenna. My TV antenna (no cable in the park) is about 12' to the yagi. So I have a mounting height issue..the Slinky trick is out. Anyone got a good suggestion for a low profile receiving antenna that will cover broadcast to 31 mhz? Vertically polarized, or horizontally..horizontal would be best. The RV has a surface aprox 7' wide by 20' long. loop antennas are out. No way to turn it from inside and are a bit high profile. Second big question. The only place to put this receiver is within 3 feet of my computer. So Im getting freaking huge birdies all over the spectrum with the puter/monitor turned on. The receiver has a 50ohm Pl259 coax connector, as well as a binding post for a long wire. Plus a binding post for AM broadcast and a third for FM broadcast. The RV itself is a damned good Faraday cage. Aluminum siding, aluminum window frames and screen. Even the local stations fade to zip when the door is closed. I have to leave the cell phone near a window to work. So the antenna has to be external. Shrug. Anyone got any suggestions? Ive got a chunk of wire tossed over the roof at the moment, but tis not particularly effective. Gunner Rule #35 "That which does not kill you, has made a huge tactical error" Gunner, Perhaps your TV antenna mast needs to have guy-wires just in case of wind ;) You may wish to make those guy-wires from one continuous length of wire that is, in actuality, your random wire antena. Discreetly feed the starting point with coax and bring it into the RV. I'm not really sure how well this would work for you but it shouldn't cost too much in money or time to give it a try. Howard |
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Bart Bailey wrote:
Yes, it improves reception, ...of noise from both inside and outside the shack. g Whoops - I forgot the original post mention the noise problem. It worked for me because it was a quiet, rural location - no line noise, etc. BTW, I've had good luck with the MFJ 784B DSP filter when I do have noise - someone mentioned the Timewave AN-4 (?) - it's more expensive but if it takes the manual intervention out of the process, I'd recommend going that way. |
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