I posted this explanation in response to a post in another thread but thought it was worthy of one of its own seeing as it gets brought up so much....
I'll tell you how this whole nonsense came about. (This is simplistic).
Lets take a simple dipole antenna. First of all read this to get a basic understanding of how it works and keep in mind the following graphic. As we can see, current flows in both halves equally which is a good thing. Each leg is an adequate source and return path for the flow of electrons to and from the other leg. A dipole is effectively a perfect self contained antenna from an electrical point of view.
Your vertical is for all intents and purposes one half of a dipole and you need to make up the other half with a RF ground in order for electrons to flow. That is usually done by using radials.
Now here is how the myth gained traction. With antennas with effectively no or poor RF ground the antenna tries to use anything it can both as a source of electrons and giving them somewhere to go, in short to try to balance the antenna. The one thing it has it can use is your coax. On a dipole as you change the length of the legs it alters the tuning of the antenna. Because your coax has become part of the antenna and is effectively being used as the "missing leg", altering its length alters the tuning of the antenna.
CBers (and sadly too many amateurs) not having a requirement for much technical knowledge to put up an antenna didn't realise they had a crap installation with very little or no RF grounding. Some however did notice as they altered the length of the coax the SWR altered and that if they cut it to multiples of a quarter wave long that they got the lowest SWR and bingo, the myth of having to have coax that is 9ft, 18ft, 27ft, 36ft etc for CB was born. It then got regurgitated endlessly. And it was all bollocks but because of the sheer number of poorly installed CB antennas and the fact that this appeared to work it became regarded as fact.
You do not want the coax to be part of the antenna. It means more noise on received signals, it can mean noise on your transmitted audio, you can get RF burns and in a vehicle it can interfere with the ECU, you'll set off neighbours burglar alarms, you'll cause TV interference to you and your neighbours, you'll pick up your transmitted audio on your hifi speakers because we have stray RF going where we don't want it to go. Simple truth is that if altering the length of your coax alters the SWR then you've an inadequate RF ground and you need to be addressing that at the antenna.
So does the myth work? Yes it does but only because there is a fault in your antenna system and this allows it to "work" the same as any botch you can do on a car or an appliance in your home to keep it running for example. The SWR will be low, you'll be able to make contacts but you'll experience the issues I highlighted above and it doesn't fix the problem.
If anyone ever comes out with the "you want to be cutting your coax to X, Y or Z length", it is literally the best indication that they actually don't know what they're talking about and it is advisable to pretty much ignore anything that comes out of their mouths when it comes to antennas and to treat other information with caution. As has been said there are times when you do need coax to be a specific length such as phasing or when using it as filtering in a repeater but for a typical home base or mobile antenna install, no you don't.
I'll tell you how this whole nonsense came about. (This is simplistic).
Lets take a simple dipole antenna. First of all read this to get a basic understanding of how it works and keep in mind the following graphic. As we can see, current flows in both halves equally which is a good thing. Each leg is an adequate source and return path for the flow of electrons to and from the other leg. A dipole is effectively a perfect self contained antenna from an electrical point of view.
Your vertical is for all intents and purposes one half of a dipole and you need to make up the other half with a RF ground in order for electrons to flow. That is usually done by using radials.
Now here is how the myth gained traction. With antennas with effectively no or poor RF ground the antenna tries to use anything it can both as a source of electrons and giving them somewhere to go, in short to try to balance the antenna. The one thing it has it can use is your coax. On a dipole as you change the length of the legs it alters the tuning of the antenna. Because your coax has become part of the antenna and is effectively being used as the "missing leg", altering its length alters the tuning of the antenna.
CBers (and sadly too many amateurs) not having a requirement for much technical knowledge to put up an antenna didn't realise they had a crap installation with very little or no RF grounding. Some however did notice as they altered the length of the coax the SWR altered and that if they cut it to multiples of a quarter wave long that they got the lowest SWR and bingo, the myth of having to have coax that is 9ft, 18ft, 27ft, 36ft etc for CB was born. It then got regurgitated endlessly. And it was all bollocks but because of the sheer number of poorly installed CB antennas and the fact that this appeared to work it became regarded as fact.
You do not want the coax to be part of the antenna. It means more noise on received signals, it can mean noise on your transmitted audio, you can get RF burns and in a vehicle it can interfere with the ECU, you'll set off neighbours burglar alarms, you'll cause TV interference to you and your neighbours, you'll pick up your transmitted audio on your hifi speakers because we have stray RF going where we don't want it to go. Simple truth is that if altering the length of your coax alters the SWR then you've an inadequate RF ground and you need to be addressing that at the antenna.
So does the myth work? Yes it does but only because there is a fault in your antenna system and this allows it to "work" the same as any botch you can do on a car or an appliance in your home to keep it running for example. The SWR will be low, you'll be able to make contacts but you'll experience the issues I highlighted above and it doesn't fix the problem.
If anyone ever comes out with the "you want to be cutting your coax to X, Y or Z length", it is literally the best indication that they actually don't know what they're talking about and it is advisable to pretty much ignore anything that comes out of their mouths when it comes to antennas and to treat other information with caution. As has been said there are times when you do need coax to be a specific length such as phasing or when using it as filtering in a repeater but for a typical home base or mobile antenna install, no you don't.