Those braided ground straps that always get in the way. Those are bonding straps. You may need to add more.
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Basics
A vehicle is not a ground plane, but rather acts like a capacitor between the antenna and the surface under the vehicle which acts as the ground plane. Since the surface in question is a poor conductor of RF, ground losses occur. If we wish to maximize the system efficiency (the mobile station as a whole), we need to maximize the RF continuity of the vehicle, hence proper bonding. Obviously, proper antenna mounting, and placement are important too. Remember, it is the metal mass directly under the antenna, not what's along side, that counts. And a ground strap is not a replacement for proper mounting!
Bonding also minimizes the leakage of RFI into (ingress) and out of (egress) the various bolted on parts of the vehicle. The exhaust and tail pipes are good examples of RFI egress. Bonding horizontal surfaces (trunk lid, hood, etc.) will have a greater effect than bonding vertical ones like doors, and hatches. It is not uncommon to see a 20 to 30 dB drop in received noise levels once they're properly grounded. Bonding is especially important for body-on-framevehicles, like pickup trucks. In these cases, the bed and cabin should be bonded to the main frame as well as between the bed and the cabin to prevent ground loops.
Remember that RF must return to its source. Low mounting forces a larger portion of this return current to flow through the lossy surface under the vehicle, rather than through the (less lossy) vehicle's superstructure. Therefore, it is easy to see why proper mounting, and proper bondingare requirements to maximize radiation efficiency.
There are a few pundits who are under the misguided belief, that running a braided bonding strap along the frame of a body-on-frame vehicle, bonded every few inches, will drastically improve the less than perfect ground plane a vehicle represents. It won't!
There is one important item to keep in mind about bonding specifically, and noise abatement in general; you can't always tell there has been an improvement by just listening! The reason centers around the AGC circuitry. That issue is covered in the high-lighted article.
From this link....
http://www.k0bg.com/bonding.html
The main link is this.....
http://www.k0bg.com
I understand completely where you are going with the ground situation I’ve chased my tail many of times with ground issues... I did run a jumper from battery negative (where radio is grounded at on the battery terminals ) to the antenna mount.. same issue... I also know for a fact the engine ground (block) to battery is good, and the bed to frame ground is good and the frame ground to battery is good
DEFINE GOOD grounds IN EXPLICIT TERMS. In another words how many places is it grounded? what kind of wire is used to affect the grounding? from what point to what point are the grounds being run? How long are the ground straps? The antenna needs a ground but not a wire run to the battery that may cause more issues than it solves.
I would be interested in knowing what noise the radio has with no antenna attached if the noise goes completely away with the RF gain wide open and the volume all the way up then you have an issue of a different magnitude.
Just some food for thought it's really hard to recommend any course to take unless we have established beyond a shadow of a dought that the injectors are the only culprit.
So, the noise is a high whine while the engine is running, & only when the engine is running? Not a clicking/ buzzing??
I wonder if it is the alternator, have you pulled the belt & started the truck to see if the noise is still there? I drive something similar, & have no issues myself... had a Toyota that had a nasty alternator whine. The ONLY thing that did anything to remedy that was a VERY large capacitor inline from the battery. Nothing else helped.
I’m at the point of trying that thanks I just need to order someProper dc ground and RF ground are two different things. RF does some funny things and it can be hard to imagine what it is doing when you are used to thinking about dc or even conventional ac power. I wonder if some ferrite rings on the injector power supply wires would help. This will usually clean up a noisy wall wart in the house. Definitely do the RF bonding as was suggested. I think that's your best bet as it has fixed the problem for another member.
Chris
noise is only when truck is running engine off noise gone... I’m going to add ground strap from bed to frame tonight didn’t get a chance to at lunch
antenna is grounded to bed showed good resistance to battery... big ass cm flat bed should have good ground plane????
Like I said I killed half the engine ran it off of 3 cylinders (not running off of all 6) and the noise changed. Only thing I Can do to chance noise in radio I can post a video of the noise if you would like
Oh I got you hold on let me try antenna disconnected GOOD CALL! ...You didn't read my post quite right. Do you have the noise with the antenna not connected and the volume wide open and the rf gain full on and no squelch? there I think I covered everything. I didn't say with the engine off.