An old Ham once told me..."the stock rubber duck antenna that comes on any HT is nothing more than a dummy load that radiates".....
That really became apparent yesterday afternoon during a severe thunder storm and a Skywarn activation. With some serious lightning dancing around I decided to disconnect the antenna on my base 2 meter, and switch to my Yaesu VX-170 HT.
Now I'm only a couple miles away from the repeater, the repeater's antenna is minimum 200 feet up, and I was barely making it. I ended up having to stand in the doorway of the garage, and hold the HT up in the air while talking through the speaker/mic.....not the smartest approach to communicating in a severe thunder storm........
However, it was the incentive I needed to finally order an after market high gain HT antenna for this radio. I looked at and compared all the HT antennas offered by Cheapham.com and ordered the Smiley 5/8 slim duck 2 Meters - SMA, Item#:SMI-14626A.
It's advertised to give +6 db gain over stock antennas.
Hopefully during the next severe thunder storm I can carry out my Skywarn duties full quieting, and in the safety of my radio shack, and not holding an expensive lightning rod in the air......
That really became apparent yesterday afternoon during a severe thunder storm and a Skywarn activation. With some serious lightning dancing around I decided to disconnect the antenna on my base 2 meter, and switch to my Yaesu VX-170 HT.
Now I'm only a couple miles away from the repeater, the repeater's antenna is minimum 200 feet up, and I was barely making it. I ended up having to stand in the doorway of the garage, and hold the HT up in the air while talking through the speaker/mic.....not the smartest approach to communicating in a severe thunder storm........
However, it was the incentive I needed to finally order an after market high gain HT antenna for this radio. I looked at and compared all the HT antennas offered by Cheapham.com and ordered the Smiley 5/8 slim duck 2 Meters - SMA, Item#:SMI-14626A.
It's advertised to give +6 db gain over stock antennas.
Hopefully during the next severe thunder storm I can carry out my Skywarn duties full quieting, and in the safety of my radio shack, and not holding an expensive lightning rod in the air......