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This is sort of an odd question, so I hope someone here can help me with
it. I sometimes take my travel trailer camping in the late fall and winter, which leaves many hours of darkness to entertain myself. I camp in remote, unimproved campgrounds, so mostly operate on the trailer's 12 volt system and propane. I'm installing a sound system in the trailer, and have selected a Dual XDM6810 car stereo as the receiver/amp. I want to give the radio the best chance for decent reception in fringe areas, which means figuring out how to install a good antenna. I can mount the receiver either in the front or rear, but once the radio is mounted the antenna location is limited by the length of the lead wire. 1. I plan to install a conventional automotive whip antenna. The top and sides of the trailer are out because tangling with branches and brush would tear the antenna off of the trailer. That leaves mounting on the trailer tongue, the rear bumper, or on a detachable mount of some kind. Any suggestions? A rear bumper mount would put the antenna parallel to the metal skin of the trailer for most of its length. Would that be a problem? I suppose I could also install an electric antenna through the roof, though that would cost me some battery life and be a potential source of leaks. I'm looking for advice on location, brands and types of antennae. Am I overlooking a good idea out of ignorance? 2. What happened to loading coils? When I installed aftermarket automotive radios back in the '60s, they had a tuning coil. You extended the whip to the desired length, tuned the radio to a weak station, then turned the coil adjustment to give the best reception. Is there an aftermarket loading coil that I could use, or do the sophisticated electronics of modern car radios not require antenna coils? The AM sensitivity of this radio is listed at 22 uV, which I don't recall as being all that great. Things I have already thought of: - The propane furnace uses a DC universal motor to circulate air. I already found an RF choke to install in the power circuit, and can also put a noise suppressing capacitor across the furnace fan terminals if necessary. - This receiver has an external line input and will also read MP3 CDs, so I can always plug in a satellite receiver or play MP3 CDs. - I have a Radio Shack DX-440 (Sangean ATS-803A) SW/LW/SSB portable that will keep me entertained in truly fringe areas. -- For email, replace firstnamelastinitial with my first name and last initial. |
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