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ok guys finished my wilson 5000 vs radio shack antenna test

I would suspect the wilson would outperform the rat shack antenna by a small margin. Given that their whips are the same length, The tightly wound coil on the ratshack is acting more like a wire wound resistor than the wilsons substantially wider coil. If tested in a controlled enviroment I bet the wilson would show a higher Q (more efficient)

But Real world tests kinda say it all...........Im surprised by the find...Good Work
 
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Long skinny coils are less efficient than short fat ones, but the difference is very small. I won't guess how those two antennas compare, but I have to think there won't be a significant difference between then.
- 'Doc
 
I've made some home brew base antennas with 4' Firestiks that performed pretty good. Does anyone have an idea how a couple of R.S. base-loaded antennas would work compared to the top-loaded fiberglass Firestiks in a horizontal or inverted v configuration?
 
The tightly wound coil on the ratshack is acting more like a wire wound resistor than the wilsons substantially wider coil. If tested in a controlled enviroment I bet the wilson would show a higher Q

The higher "Q" will also enhance the tuning over a broader range of frequencies.
 
The higher "Q" will also enhance the tuning over a broader range of frequencies.

An antenna that has just enough bandwidth to cover the CB band (0.45 MHz) will have a Q of about 62, while an antenna with the same center frequency with 1 MHz bandwidth will have a Q of about 27.

Wider bandwidth means lower Q, not higher.

Q = fc / (f2 - f1)

Where:

fc = center frequency
f1 = lowest frequency in the range
f2 = highest frequency in the range


The DB
 
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An antenna that has just enough bandwidth to cover the CB band (0.45 MHz) will have a Q of about 62, while an antenna with the same center frequency with 1 MHz bandwidth will have a Q of about 27.

Wider bandwidth means lower Q, not higher.

Q = fc / (f2 - f1)

Where:

fc = center frequency
f1 = lowest frequency in the range
f2 = highest frequency in the range


The DB


You beat me too it. (y) Low Q=wide bandwidth while high Q=narrow bandwidth but with greater efficiency usually.
 

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