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On Sat, 28 Jan 2006 07:25:58 -0500, "Lenny"
wrote: Great pix, thanks Weatherall. Does the Ferrite Rod only aid in AM broadcast reception, or does it also aid SW reception? Lenny In most AM/FM radios, the ferrite bar antenna is for AM reception only. A separate whip antenna for FM is reasonably close to a quarter wavelength on the FM frequencies; a 1/4 wave whip antenna on the AM band, 530 to 1700 Khz, would be hundreds of feet long, hence the shortened AM antenna using the ferrite rod. On little radios, the rod is a couple of inches long, on others such as the C.Crane CCRadio or the GE SuperRadio the rod is bigger, about 8 inches long, hence their supposed "DXing" capabilities for AM. On shortwave radios, I'm not sure which frequencies the ferrite bar would be used for, certainly the American AM broadcast band, not sure about others. One disadvantage to the whip antenna, it is vertical, and vertical polarization picks up more manmade interference. Horizontal antennas such as the ferrite bar are a little more immune. Bob k5qwg "weatherall" wrote in message ... Lenny Wrote: OK, I'll admit it. I don't know what people are talking about when they say the E1 doesn't have an AM antenna. Doesn't it have a whip antenna. What more could you want? What the heck is a "ferrite rod antenna" anyway? Hi Lenny: Here are pictures of the insides of a Tecsun PL-200 radio. It's hosted on radiointel.com, a fun & useful site. In some of the pictures you will see tightly coiled copper wire around a bar (that's the ferrite). It's at the top of the radio, and would be on the left side if you're looking at the front. http://www.radiointel.com/review-tecsunpl200.htm -- weatherall |
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