And more generally, I'm curious about the extent to which relatively
small metal objects interfere with reception. In my (admittedly
limited) experience, so long as an outdoor antenna is at least a few
feet away from metal objects (e.g., gutters, ventilation pipes, etc.),
their effects on reception are minimal. Is this correct? I don't know
the physics, and other may have had experiences that differ from mine.
So you tell me: Are metal objects bigger problems than I think?
Steve
Mess around with it !
See where it gets the best reception / least interference
then get a long peice of closet pole
coat it with weather resistant paint
& mount it in that place, on the closet pole
& then
take your wife out somewhere nice for dinner
~H~
Steve
Steve
---------------------------
That depends....
An active antenna mounted on a small metal mast, or even a Rohn 25
TV style tower will experience minimal effect from the mast.
But mounted down near aluminium siding, or near a metal awning, near
metal roof will experience some effect. Well grounded metal should be
OK. But metal that is more or less floating, like aluminium siding,
will pick
up noise(any unwanted signal) and reradiate it into the antenna.
The best rule of thumb is far from any lines, electric, telephone, or
cable.
Even being over conductive pipes like water or NG can introduce noise.
I have my Amrad mounted up high on a shingled roof with a rat wire,
AKA hardware cloth, ground underneath. Works great.
Same thing for loop antennas or even wire antennas.
High and clear is the best.
Some may swear the "Snake" antenna is a "great thing". While I guess
it may have a place, it is about as far from a acceptable antenna as I
can think of.
High and clear.
With a good ground.
If I had to choose between a less then ideal antenna, say ~30'
unmatched
direct feed without coax with a good ground, and a great antenna with a
"so so" ground, I would go with the marginal antenna and good ground.
Even with a great active antenna like the AmRad, you still need the
best
ground you can get. Improving your ground will give a better return for
your time and money then anything else.
Terry
The metal objects I'm primarily concerned with are ventilation pipes
that come up through the roof of the building. Any random wire up there
is going to get within at least four or five feet of at least one or
two of these pipes. I've done some trial experiments with 100 ft
lengths of wire, and didn't notice and detrimental effects of this, but
I'm always curious about what others have found.
Another concern is the paint that coats the surface of the roof. It's
the shiny aluminum paint that's used to keep buildings cool in the
summer. I don't know how much of an effect that can have. I lose a lot
of signal and gain a lot of noise if I let a length of wire drop down
directly onto the roof, but this is probably due more to the wiring and
appliances inside the building than the aluminum paint on the roof. The
noise of course drops way down when the wire is up 7 or 8 feet in the
air.
Frank
Tucson
Here is another Message to Read about the LF Engineering
H-800 Skymatch Active Antenna available at the Shortwave
Listener's (SWL) Group on YAHOO !
.
* LF Engineering H-800 Skymatch Active Antenna
-=V=- Low Noise Inverted "L" Antenna
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Shortwave-SWL-Antenna/message/2217
.
.
iane ~ RHF
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