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"Lucky" wrote in message ... "RHF" wrote in message oups.com... Lucky, . The Coax Cable {Shielded} Loop Antenna will have a relative 'small' size an therefore a smaller signal level; but the relative noise level will be reduced much lower then the signal level (greater noise reduction). . The Coax Cable {Shielded} Loop Antenna can be rotated / positioned to help 'tune-out' your local noise sources. . The Coax Cable {Shielded} will usually have a better Signal-to-Noise Ratio then many other larger antennas. . The Pre-Amp can be used to boost the lower signal levels of the Loop Antenna to Hear Radio Signals that may not be hear with other Antennas due to the higher noise levels present when using the other Antennas. . . Two (2) Coax Cable {Shielded} Loop Antennas for Shortwave All Band Coverage. . A single 25 Foot piece of RG8 Coax Cable with PL-259 Plugs on each end can be made into two separate Coax Cable Loop Antennas : Cut into a 9 Foot and 16 Foot sections. . = Thirteen Foot (13') Loop Element with a Four Foot (4') Diameter and a Three Foot (3') Feed-in-Line for a Total Length of 16 Feet. This Thirteen Foot (13') Coax Cable {Shielded} Loop Antenna is roughly 'cut' for the 49m Shortwave Band with good coverage across the 75m, 60m, 41m, and 31m Bands. . = Six Foot (6') Loop Element with a Two Foot (2') Diameter and a a Three Foot (3') Feed-in-Line for a Total Length of 9 Feet. This Six Foot (6') Coax Cable {Shielded} Loop Antenna is roughly 'cut' for the 22m Shortwave Band with good coverage across the 31m, 25m, 19m, and 16m Bands. . Sizing the GreerTech Coax Cable {Shielded} Loop Antenna for the Shortwave Bands : http://www.greertech.com/hfloop/charts.html#SWL%20CHART . . RG8 'type' Coax Cable "In-Door" Loop Antennas : . * Coax Cable [Shielded] Loop Antennas {GreerTech} http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/1625 . * Tuning the GreerTech [Coax Cable] HF Loop Antenna http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/1730 . * Loop Antenna -or- Active Loop Antenna ? ? http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortw...a/message/1394 . . iane ~ RHF . . . . . I have built my own loop but it's way to big and I have to downsize it. I used like a 12Ft copper coil with a 1/2" to 5/8" ID I then bought a 8 Ft by 1" length of PVC tubing and cut side holes the size of the coil OD or a little bigger on top and midway. Then after getting the coil as round as possible, I slid it thru the PVC holes I made. I used a small wooden round peg inside the ends of the copper coil for separation. I picked a large air variable capacitor off Ebay and hooked up the coax using the shielded method from here and from other sites. http://www.dxzone.com/cgi-bin/dir/jump2.cgi?ID=9868 This page had good info I used for building one but I made mine round not square. http://www.dxzone.com/cgi-bin/dir/jump2.cgi?ID=9868 And here is great resources for building your own loop: http://www.dxzone.com/catalog/Antennas/Loop/ I'm going to trim this loop down and hook it up to the 150's socket and put the switch on "Whip" for the pre amp to kick in. I also have a couple round pieces of metal that you find in lamp shades to keep them round. They are usually on the top and bottom part of the lamp shade. They look and feel great for making a small desk side loop and you can choose the size you want from a selection from thrift shops that sell old lamps and shades. One shade can make 2 loops. I might make a new one but using a smaller air cap and a good rotating stand for it. I'd pick up a small electric remote control rotator and leave the loop on the terrace and control it from the room. They are not expensive. Thanks for good links RHF. They help give me more ideas so I can experiment. Lucky Sorry for the two same URL's being the same. Here is the main page I used: http://www.dxzone.com/cgi-bin/dir/jump2.cgi?ID=9376 Lucky |
This is interesting. Have you (or anyone else in the group) actually
used a preselector and/or highpass filter with a 7030 and found it to result in improved performance? The 7030 is said to have such a robust front end that additional filtering is the last thing I'd expect to make a noticeable difference. In fact, I'd expect whatever tiny improvement that resulted from the extra filter to be outweighed by insertion loss. However, I have an open mind about this--as well as a Kiwa highpass filter, standing by. Steve |
wrote in message oups.com... This is interesting. Have you (or anyone else in the group) actually used a preselector and/or highpass filter with a 7030 and found it to result in improved performance? The 7030 is said to have such a robust front end that additional filtering is the last thing I'd expect to make a noticeable difference. In fact, I'd expect whatever tiny improvement that resulted from the extra filter to be outweighed by insertion loss. However, I have an open mind about this--as well as a Kiwa highpass filter, standing by. Steve Hi there Steve I'm also interested in that Kiwa highpass filter you mentioned. They do the mod for you too. What have you added to the 150 as improvements? Lucky |
I haven't really added anything. I already had the Kiwa highpass filter
(which is a very good filter) and have been using it to reinforce the 150's front end. The Kiwa filter completely eliminated what minor problems I had with intermodulation. Otherwise the 150 works fine as it is. Steve |
wrote in message oups.com... I haven't really added anything. I already had the Kiwa highpass filter (which is a very good filter) and have been using it to reinforce the 150's front end. The Kiwa filter completely eliminated what minor problems I had with intermodulation. Otherwise the 150 works fine as it is. Steve Steve, This is what Kiwa offers for the 150: http://www.kiwa.com/HF150.html Where did you get your highpass filter and did you install it yourself or is it external? Lucky |
Yes, I have the external highpass filter sold by Kiwa. You can find
information about it he http://www.kiwa.com/bcb.html. Since MW DX-ing doesn't interest me very much, and since it's a pain to be tuning a preselector all the time, it's nice to have a filter like this that will heavily attenuate *everything* below 2500 khz. I.C.E. sells a comparable highpass filter (model 402), and I believe Par Electronics does as well. Steve |
Hi Steve,
You are correct in your assumption. The preselector isn't really necessary. My statement was purely theoretical.......I think that the only way you would see a difference would be if you would have a few signal generators hooked through isolators and combiners, set up at high output levels and tuned to different frequencies. This would allow you to see the multi-tone response under very adverse conditions. Under these conditions, a preselector would help. Do you need to do this in the real world? Not really, unless you were using this receiver on a ship where there were several high power transmitters being used at the same time. Pete wrote in message oups.com... This is interesting. Have you (or anyone else in the group) actually used a preselector and/or highpass filter with a 7030 and found it to result in improved performance? The 7030 is said to have such a robust front end that additional filtering is the last thing I'd expect to make a noticeable difference. In fact, I'd expect whatever tiny improvement that resulted from the extra filter to be outweighed by insertion loss. However, I have an open mind about this--as well as a Kiwa highpass filter, standing by. Steve |
"Pete KE9OA" wrote in message ... On topic, I hope....................Dave Z has just started a Yahoo newsgroup that centers on Lowe receivers. The URL is: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/lowe_hfreceivers/ Pete "Pete KE9OA" wrote in message ... Hi Steve, You are correct in your assumption. The preselector isn't really necessary. My statement was purely theoretical.......I think that the only way you would see a difference would be if you would have a few signal generators hooked through isolators and combiners, set up at high output levels and tuned to different frequencies. This would allow you to see the multi-tone response under very adverse conditions. Under these conditions, a preselector would help. Do you need to do this in the real world? Not really, unless you were using this receiver on a ship where there were several high power transmitters being used at the same time. Pete wrote in message oups.com... This is interesting. Have you (or anyone else in the group) actually used a preselector and/or highpass filter with a 7030 and found it to result in improved performance? The 7030 is said to have such a robust front end that additional filtering is the last thing I'd expect to make a noticeable difference. In fact, I'd expect whatever tiny improvement that resulted from the extra filter to be outweighed by insertion loss. However, I have an open mind about this--as well as a Kiwa highpass filter, standing by. Steve Pete, Of course it's on topic cause they might be discussing the antennas they use on the 150. I was wondering why there no discussion group geared toward the Lowe 150 and it's family members! Thanks Lucky |
Well, there is one now! I believe that you have already joined.
Pete "Lucky" wrote in message ... "Pete KE9OA" wrote in message ... On topic, I hope....................Dave Z has just started a Yahoo newsgroup that centers on Lowe receivers. The URL is: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/lowe_hfreceivers/ Pete "Pete KE9OA" wrote in message ... Hi Steve, You are correct in your assumption. The preselector isn't really necessary. My statement was purely theoretical.......I think that the only way you would see a difference would be if you would have a few signal generators hooked through isolators and combiners, set up at high output levels and tuned to different frequencies. This would allow you to see the multi-tone response under very adverse conditions. Under these conditions, a preselector would help. Do you need to do this in the real world? Not really, unless you were using this receiver on a ship where there were several high power transmitters being used at the same time. Pete wrote in message oups.com... This is interesting. Have you (or anyone else in the group) actually used a preselector and/or highpass filter with a 7030 and found it to result in improved performance? The 7030 is said to have such a robust front end that additional filtering is the last thing I'd expect to make a noticeable difference. In fact, I'd expect whatever tiny improvement that resulted from the extra filter to be outweighed by insertion loss. However, I have an open mind about this--as well as a Kiwa highpass filter, standing by. Steve Pete, Of course it's on topic cause they might be discussing the antennas they use on the 150. I was wondering why there no discussion group geared toward the Lowe 150 and it's family members! Thanks Lucky |
"Pete KE9OA" wrote in message ... Well, there is one now! I believe that you have already joined. Pete "Lucky" wrote in message ... "Pete KE9OA" wrote in message ... On topic, I hope....................Dave Z has just started a Yahoo newsgroup that centers on Lowe receivers. The URL is: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/lowe_hfreceivers/ Pete "Pete KE9OA" wrote in message ... Hi Steve, You are correct in your assumption. The preselector isn't really necessary. My statement was purely theoretical.......I think that the only way you would see a difference would be if you would have a few signal generators hooked through isolators and combiners, set up at high output levels and tuned to different frequencies. This would allow you to see the multi-tone response under very adverse conditions. Under these conditions, a preselector would help. Do you need to do this in the real world? Not really, unless you were using this receiver on a ship where there were several high power transmitters being used at the same time. Pete wrote in message oups.com... This is interesting. Have you (or anyone else in the group) actually used a preselector and/or highpass filter with a 7030 and found it to result in improved performance? The 7030 is said to have such a robust front end that additional filtering is the last thing I'd expect to make a noticeable difference. In fact, I'd expect whatever tiny improvement that resulted from the extra filter to be outweighed by insertion loss. However, I have an open mind about this--as well as a Kiwa highpass filter, standing by. Steve Pete, Of course it's on topic cause they might be discussing the antennas they use on the 150. I was wondering why there no discussion group geared toward the Lowe 150 and it's family members! Thanks Lucky Yes I'm fast! Lucky |
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