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This is mainly for newcommers to the SWL hobby
This article formsthe basies of my present SW/HF antenna ground setup. http://members.aol.com/WA1ION/nrants.pdf#search='NRANTS%20pdf This is a simple easy to build 9:1 matching transformer. Please read the rolling your own spliter for soem valid observatios on larger vs small torroids. And John doty's comments on using the feritte "binoculars" from the common TV 300:75 ohm matching tranformer for a really cheap 9:1 makes a lot of sense. http://www.hard-core-dx.com/nordicdx.../9_1balun.html John Doty's ground system. I used this for several years before upgrading to the WA1ION system. A very good system that may not be worth the trouble to improve upon. I had switched to a braid/foil coax and found I still had some birdies from my PC. Isolating the grounds removed the last audible trace of my PC clocks. http://www.anarc.org/naswa/badx/antennas/grounding.html John Doty made some measurements and shows why a 9:1 matching tranformer can help the average antenna receier combo. http://www.anarc.org/naswa/badx/ante..._longwire.html John Doty's low noise antenna design some pratical and workable antenna feedline sugestions. http://www.anarc.org/naswa/badx/ante...e_antenna.html John Doty had a chance to play with a decent radio in a very quite RF location. His comments are interesting and I found them usefull. At the very least it is nice to know that not everyplace is an RF wasteland. http://www.dobe.com/wts/funk/islandexp_JD.html I posted this one before, but even for those who don't wish to use an antenna splitter there is some usefull information. The comments on torroid size and the effects of the measured mismatch to actual receiver performance were especially illustrative. From my own experience in winding 9:1, and other ratio, transformers I found teh smaller feritte cores worked much better. Teh common TV matching binocular is hard to beat in terms of performance and availability. http://www.dxing.info/equipment/roll...own_bryant.pdf There has been and continues to be an ongoing debate over the merits of 50 Ohm coax vs 75 Ohm coax. I have used both and for LF/MW/HF receiving could measure no difference in the RF at the receiver. The Z of the cable had no effect on how well the radios received. This was with a variety of receivers ranging from a R390, R392, R5000, R2000 and a Lowe 150. A complete list would be long and tedious. What I found to be be much more important then the Z of the coax was the amount of shielding. Most braid only coax only has ~95% shielding. I found the 5% leakage allowed noise from my other radio room equipment, PC monitor etc, to enter the coax and added a lot of noise. By going to braid and foil coax I reduced the crud from my PC to negliable, ie below the threashold of reception, levels. I can run audio FFT programs and still find my PC, video board and other clock freqs, but for normal day to day listening they are just gone. John's comments on burrying the coax make sense and I decided to go a little better. I have collected a fair number of feritte RFI control beads over the years. I placed one about every 6~8" for the entire length of the cable. I cann't give any real numbers, but I am certain this helped reduce the common mode leakage on the coax. A similar but easier can be found at: http://www.arising.com.au/people/Hol...ph/CMBalun.htm Almost everyone has a dead AM radio kicking around and this a perfect use for the feritte rod. I have used similar configurations and found them to be nearly as effective as feritte beads or torroids. While this is common sense, it bears repeating:The lower your noise floor, and the lower the man made noise your antenna brings to your receiver the weaker signal you can receive. Since few of us can move to RF quite zones, the only practical action is to improve our antennas and grounds as much as practical. REducing the noise picked up by the antenna and ground can improve a system enough to make you think you just got a new and much better receiver. I am experimenting with the AMRAD LF active antenna and have found that it is very good antenna, and approaches a good long wire most of the time. At LF and VLF it is much quiter then my longwire. I still had to decouple the coax to keep noise from radiating back through the shield and entering the antenna. For the AMRAD a bunch of feritte beads or common mode choke is a must have. Terry |
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