I went for 500 plus ohms at 27mhz.
I don’t have a choke at the radio or amp however, only at the feedpoint.
I don’t have a choke at the radio or amp however, only at the feedpoint.
I'll hold my hands up and given I work nights, do at least 10 hours and sometimes up to 15 and flip from nights to days and back again with the inevitable lack of sleep it wouldn't be beyond the realms of possibility for me to post some absolute complete unadulterated bollocks I'd never post when functioning normally and thinking clearly.
Is it possible to do too many? If I have one before the amp, and one before the radio?
Too many what?
Coax turns thru a ferrite, or too many ferrites?
This is something you've mentioned many times that I have yet to get a good understanding of. So, a 1/4 wave antenna has a 36.8 ohm impedance over perfect ground - ok, I've read that many times. Yet, with a 1/4 wave ground plane antenna the radials are nearly universally dropped to 42 or whatever degrees (from 90) to get closer to 50ohm impedance.
The question that leads to is why would we not be happy with a 50ohm match on a vehicle - and I'm referring to an R of 50ohms at a Z of zero. If that's the results then should we keep "improving" the ground seeking a perfect 36.8 ohms? It seems that at the end of the day a vehicle-shaped-object isn't ever going to behave exactly like a theoretical perfect ground.
I've seen your posts talking about antennas tuning short indicates a good RF ground. Mine have universally tuned short. In fact, I am puzzled every time the subject of 102" whips come up and folks assert that it needs a 6" spring, or a riser, to be 108" and work properly on the CB band. That's never been the case for me. The same with other antennas...7' skipshooter I toyed around with a couple months back looked best around 26mhz, with the tuning stub completely removed. It worked well, but was way too long. Same with Wilson antennas I always have to trim several inches to get them in the ball park.
If you feel like entertaining my thoughts, please feel free. Not intended to second guess, rather trying to wrap my head around what I could gain by lowering the feedpoint impedance below 50ohms....and if it would even be possible.
Common mode current is the portion of conductor currents not matched by exactly opposite and equal magnitude currents. This is the portion of total current responsible for a feedline behaving like a single wire line. Common mode current is most commonly caused by improper feedline installation or antenna design.
Too many what?
Coax turns thru a ferrite, or too many ferrites?
Skip the SWR, your only working with a coax to attach to the antenna - you need the SWR thingy ok between both to allow the coax to transfer power to from the antenna and radio.
Ah, got it...
Sorry to intrude...
But many skip over the best parts and just go directly to the SWR...
It's the journey getting there is where they learn the most...
Please continue...
The goal when using a 1/4 wave antenna is to end up with a feedpoint impedance of 36.8 Ohms where the resonant point (X=0) of the antenna is..
When I'm on my CB with 4W I talk to the next town 10 miles away with a S9 signal report, when I'm going to a nearby city and with my 4W mobile managing to talk to people on Ch19 over the top of local home bases and when I'm driving down the road with the preamp on and still able to make out what people with S0 signal strength are saying because I've zero engine noise it's proof to me it works.
I have been told now, that this choke should be at the base of the antenna, not at the radio end.
With respect to the original topic of reducing noise through bonding, there is some useful info here, at least one account that vehicle noise was perceptibly lower after concerted effort to bond the vehicle.
But a lot of it doesn’t mean anything. To be RXd an S9 at 10 miles, without the full context, I feel is just an anecdote. I’ve been recorded from my mobile S9+20 at 5000 miles, and my story is just the same - it tells no one anything.
Same with regards to talking over base stations with a mobile. Plant your feet in the right spot and you can do that with an HT. But if one were told demonstrate that, what would it prove with respect to bonding? And of course, I have to be reminded that @Marconi has quoted directly from article where the author tells us we may not be able to observe a difference. That’s a pretty strong caveat, in my mind.
Then, most recently, I installed 5 1/2” split beads at the antenna feedpoint, right inside the headliner.
And that made a huge difference in the noise. I’m certain of it.
Not to pretend I understand it all, but I wanted to share what worked for my truck.
So in regards to the QSO range. This is no skip, just direct mobile to base between two towns. No doubt you've seen, know of or have experienced the fact that many mobiles struggle to make a few miles.