Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi guys
It says in the manual that if the aerial selector switch is in the Norm position the terminal long wire and 50 Ohm coax socket are *both active. BUT, it also says the Whip socket, which is also the 50 Ohm coax socket, is only active when the switch is in the Whip position. What if you 2 antenna connected to the radio at the same time? One as a long wire connected to the terminal and 2 small dipoles on the 50 Ohm socket. If **both active when the switch is on Norm, how is the signal being distributed to the radio? I mean wouldn't this be a bad setup? 3 different antennas to the same radio? I was switching the aerial selector to the Whip position when I wanted to only use the dipoles. But then I wanted to use a long wire too cause certain fequencies came in better with a lower noise floor with it and vice versa. But it seems I can't switch to the long wire alone. The dipoles will always chime in too. If I switch to the Whip position,, I can use the dipoles alone but not the other way around. So what do you suggest?? Also what I don't understand if switch is Attenuation position, it works on both ant connections. But the Whip has a built in pre amplifier. So why would you want to attenuate the pre amp? It seems like a clumsy approach to me. Thanks for any replies Lucky |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Lucky,
|
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "RHF" wrote in message oups.com... Lucky, . An Antenna Switch with Four Inputs an One Output will be a more effective solution to your mulit-antenna problem. Connect the Antennas to the Swtich and connect the Switch to the Receiver. . Four Inputs to One Output Antenna Switches : http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/switch/2415.html http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/switch/1864.html http://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/switch/0362.html . iane ~ RHF . . . . . Not a bad idea. Thanks! I could easily use the switch with my other rigs too. But do these switches reduce gain or sensitivity at all?? Any drawbacks? Lucky |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dale Parfitt" wrote in message news:aU9le.863$Pm3.686@trnddc08... "Lucky" wrote in message ... Hi guys It says in the manual that if the aerial selector switch is in the Norm position the terminal long wire and 50 Ohm coax socket are *both active. BUT, it also says the Whip socket, which is also the 50 Ohm coax socket, is only active when the switch is in the Whip position. What if you 2 antenna connected to the radio at the same time? One as a long wire connected to the terminal and 2 small dipoles on the 50 Ohm socket. If **both active when the switch is on Norm, how is the signal being distributed to the radio? Did you look at the schematic? It's pretty clear what is going on. The intent is not to connect 2 different antennas at the same time- it is to give you the option of one or the other. The attenuator and preamp are only connected to the coaxial socket. One would use the preamp position with the short whip- rather than a preamp, it is a Z converter; making the whip+ preamp into an active antenna. The attenuator position is to prevent strong stations from overloading the 150's wide open front end. 73, Dale W4OP Hi Dale Yes I knew about the small whip and pre amp for portable use. I guess both antennas can't be hooked at the same time even though it would have been nice to be able to switch from the long wire to the coax socket like on the R75. I tried to improvise by using the "Whip" preamp position to cut off the long wire and just use the coax but it seems I was not doing that. I was just switching in the preamp on the dipoles and the long wire stayed active too. I was under the impression since the preamp only worked in the Whip position, it cut off the long wire connection at the same time letting me choose between the two. Under that impression I wondered why it wasn't vice versa. Did you understand what I mean?? I guess I need a separate switcher like RHF suggested. Thanks Lucky |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "RHF" wrote in message oups.com... Lucky, . If the Whip Antenna's SO-239 Jack and Pre-Amp 'position' work together; then you could use a Shielded Coax Cable Loop Antenna instead of the Whip Antenna connected to the SO-239 Jack and switch-on the Pre-Amp. Consider to possibility . . . . iane ~ RHF . . . . . Well right now I'm doing that but using 2 small dipoles hooked up to the 239 jack and a 4:1 current balun. Why a loop instead? Do loops function better with a preamp? I do know they null out noise much better then long wires or dipoles. Thank you Lucky |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "RHF" wrote in message oups.com... Lucky, . If the Whip Antenna's SO-239 Jack and Pre-Amp 'position' work together; then you could use a Shielded Coax Cable Loop Antenna instead of the Whip Antenna connected to the SO-239 Jack and switch-on the Pre-Amp. Consider to possibility . . . . iane ~ RHF . . . . . But, if you put the antenna switch to "Norm", you can use the 239 jack without the preamp according to the manual. This is what I used to use when I first got it. I rarely used the long wire spring antenna terminal. So again why a loop with the preamp?? I wonder what antennas most people use on their 150's? The wire spring terminal or the coax socket and why?? Lucky |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I use my '150 with the high impedance input, using a Radio Shack air core
loop antenna. My reason for this is so the input circuit doesn't load down the loop............this way, I can take advantage of the unloaded Q of the antenna. This provides a sharper tuning characteristic. The preamp is good for very short antennas. Since it is a broadband preamp, it sees many tones (signals). It has a relatively low dynamic range; its multitone response is not very good. The result is that signals far removed from your desired receive frequency can drive the preamp into gain compression if their level is high enough. There is another complication here........it doesn't have to be just one strong signal. Several medium level signals, if their integrated (combined) power is high enough, can also drive the preamp stage into gain compression. There are two results that I know of that can happen. First of all, the amplifier can appear to not have any gain at the desired frequency, and second, since the distortion of the amplifier rises at the 1dB compression point, signals can appear at different points on the tuning dial where they are not supposed to be. An example of this is with my AOR-7030. In the Chicago area, if I have a long wire connected and the whip amplifier is engaged, I can hear MW stations in the 15MHz range. If you thing of the absence of bandwidth limiting in the same manner that you think of the aperture of an optical system, things become clearer. If you were to connect a sensitive RF power meter to a long wire antenna and compare the power levels of broadband response vs bandwidth limited response (preselector), you would see a lower level of integrated RF power with the bandwidth limited response. This is the reason that receivers with input filtering ahead of the 1st stage perform better than receivers with a wide open front end. There are exceptions such as the Racal 6790, the WJ receivers, the AOR7030, and other receivers in the "premium" catagory, but even these units would perform better with some sort of preselection. My definition of preselection can be either a tunable form or fixed tuned lowpass, highpass or bandpass circuits. Pete "Lucky" wrote in message ... "RHF" wrote in message oups.com... Lucky, . If the Whip Antenna's SO-239 Jack and Pre-Amp 'position' work together; then you could use a Shielded Coax Cable Loop Antenna instead of the Whip Antenna connected to the SO-239 Jack and switch-on the Pre-Amp. Consider to possibility . . . . iane ~ RHF . . . . . But, if you put the antenna switch to "Norm", you can use the 239 jack without the preamp according to the manual. This is what I used to use when I first got it. I rarely used the long wire spring antenna terminal. So again why a loop with the preamp?? I wonder what antennas most people use on their 150's? The wire spring terminal or the coax socket and why?? Lucky |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Lucky,
|
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "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 |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FA: VHF / UHF Antenna Assortment - starting at $5.00 | Swap | |||
Discone antenna plans | Antenna | |||
Yaesu FT-857D questions | Equipment | |||
LongWire Antenna | Shortwave | |||
EH Antenna Revisited | Antenna |