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For Jim (and kibitzers of all stripes :-):
I had a curious situation yesterday while flying my Fly Baby. An aircraft complained that my radio was unreadable. Yet a buddy on the ground with a aircraft-band receiver said that my radio was a bit scratchy, but perfectly readable. I think I'm getting bit by my antenna patterns. Both antennas are mounted internal to the aircraft, with one being a horizontal coax-type dipole (with baluns) mounted underneath the metal turtledeck (!) and the other being my PVC-pipe job mounted vertically just a foot or two behind my manly back. Right now, I have the horizontal dipole hooked to the receive side and the vertical one to the transmit side. But they're hooked that way because of a similar complaint I had *last* summer. I know pattern is a problem with the horizontal one, since transmissions from aircraft behind me are very garbled (directly in line with dipole). I think the vertical one is ending up with a horrid pattern forward (due to the nearby ugly-bag-of-mostly-water), which might explain yesterday's complaint. (Note to newcomers in this saga: I'm using a Narco Escort II, which has separate receive and transmit antennas. Unlike many radios, the Narco uses the Nav antenna for Comm reception. It must have both antennas connected for two-way operation.) So... I'm starting to break down and am considering putting an antenna on the *outside* of the aircraft. I was originally going to use your copper-tape setup, running one arm down the landing gear leg and the other across the fabric-covered belly, but I added a long metal belly inspection panel last year that messes that up. http://www.bowersflybaby.com/tech/belly_pan.html The obvious thought it to install a conventional aircraft comm antenna on the belly panel itself...it's about 1 ft x 3 ft and would make a very good ground plane. But the panel is just ~.016 aluminum, supported along the edges. I'd probably have to add a cross-brace in the fuselage to mechanically support a full-size antenna. It would complicate removing the panel for routine maintenance, and would get in my way when I want to sit flat on the bottom longerons dangling my feet out the belly for working on my avionics box underneath the control panel. A big 'ol comm antenna would be a hassle...but what about mounting a rubber-duckie antenna, instead? A BNC connector would let me quickly remove it to pull the panel, and since it doesn't really require a massive ground plane, I could mount it far enough aft that it could pick up the existing support structure for the belly panel. So...what d'ya think? Follow-up question: I do my antenna switching on the ground, now, switching coaxes between radio outputs. Are there any inexpensive switch boxes that would let me take two RF inputs and select which antennas they connect to, without switching cables? Ron Wanttaja |
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First Ron you want to make sure it is YOUR problem not the other guys
receiver. A bad antenna pattern usually won't "garble" a transmitter. It can reduce signal strength which would cause your signal to go into the noise. two questions how far away was the other aircraft and what was his orientation to you? Also what is the swr on your antenna? My suggestion first is if you have a buddy with another plane (prefer two seater with a helper installed in the second seat!). Have him monitor your signal with a know good receiver/antenna and try different orientations and distances to see it it is indeed your problem. As far as antennas go my first impression would be an inverted 'V' type antenna, which is basically a dipole with the feed end forming an angle (between 45-90 degrees, not real critical) it isn't as directional as a dipole is. Then make sure you have it matched properly and separate the receive and transmit antennas by as much as possible to decrease likelyhood of your transmitter feeding back into your receivers. I hope this helps a bit! John |
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On Sun, 03 Apr 2005 20:57:32 GMT, Ron Wanttaja
wrote: For Jim (and kibitzers of all stripes :-): So...what d'ya think? Follow-up question: I do my antenna switching on the ground, now, switching coaxes between radio outputs. Are there any inexpensive switch boxes that would let me take two RF inputs and select which antennas they connect to, without switching cables? Ron Wanttaja Ron, I have had pretty good luck with a stainless antenna on a .024 metal panel on the belly of my Jungster II (all wood) It resides between the gear and in bent about 30° aft. I riveted on a doubler around the attach point. It looks like you could attach it to the front panel. If you leave a loop of slack in the antenna wire it makes it easier to remove and inspect under the panel. Usually if people say they can't receiving me it is usually their equipment or a wire has become loose somewhere in my circuits. Ed Sullivan |
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On Sun, 03 Apr 2005 15:34:28 -0700, Ed Sullivan
wrote: On Sun, 03 Apr 2005 20:57:32 GMT, Ron Wanttaja wrote: For Jim (and kibitzers of all stripes :-): So...what d'ya think? Follow-up question: I do my antenna switching on the ground, now, switching coaxes between radio outputs. Are there any inexpensive switch boxes that would let me take two RF inputs and select which antennas they connect to, without switching cables? Ron Wanttaja Ron, I have had pretty good luck with a stainless antenna on a .024 metal panel on the belly of my Jungster II (all wood) It resides between the gear and in bent about 30° aft. I riveted on a doubler around the attach point. It looks like you could attach it to the front panel. If you leave a loop of slack in the antenna wire it makes it easier to remove and inspect under the panel. Usually if people say they can't receiving me it is usually their equipment or a wire has become loose somewhere in my circuits. Ed Sullivan In order to ward off an attack from Barnyard Bob I should have said: is bent 30° and: if people say they aren't receiving me. |
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On Sun, 03 Apr 2005 21:13:04 GMT, UltraJohn wrote:
First Ron you want to make sure it is YOUR problem not the other guys receiver. A bad antenna pattern usually won't "garble" a transmitter. It can reduce signal strength which would cause your signal to go into the noise. I've had enough separate cases of folks complaining about my radio. Not lately, though...in fact I've done some fairly complex coordination with other traffic on busy days in the pattern (e.g., "Fly Baby's on crosswind, and has the traffic on the 45...I'll swing out and follow you") and no one complained. two questions how far away was the other aircraft and what was his orientation to you? Don't know... just a voice breaking in and saying, "Hey, Ron, your radio's unreadable." Weren't any of my "known buddies" in the air at the time, but the FBO owner may have been flying one of his airplanes. Also what is the swr on your antenna? Never been checked... :-) My suggestion first is if you have a buddy with another plane (prefer two seater with a helper installed in the second seat!). Have him monitor your signal with a know good receiver/antenna and try different orientations and distances to see it it is indeed your problem. In the past, I've set up an old Escort 110 in my hangar with a small tape recorder and then gone and shot some T&Gs. There's definitely a higher noise level when I transmit...but when you consider that a decimal meter reads about 109 dB chest-high, that's probably to be expected (and it's one reason I spent the $$$ for an ANR headset...). But like my buddy yesterday, I felt my transmissions were understandable albeit with high background noise. Things may have admittedly changed; probably time to do this again. One email suggested I check connectors; a good idea as I did have a BNC connector come loose a few years back. Or maybe I ought to pull the wind muff off my mike boom; maybe the microphone got itself turned around. On Sun, 03 Apr 2005 15:34:28 -0700, Ed Sullivan wrote: ] Ron, I have had pretty good luck with a stainless antenna on a .024 ] metal panel on the belly of my Jungster II (all wood) It resides ] between the gear and in bent about 30° aft. I riveted on a doubler ] around the attach point. I've done this with my transponder antenna... the builder of my plane used 0.040" aluminum in that area and it's probably strong enough. But...a) Do I want it just a couple of inches from my transponder antenna, and B) The panel is attached to the airplane with just a couple of wood screws. Don't know if I want to add the twisting load from the drag of a long antenna. And, again, I think antennas are ugly. I think the rubber duckie on the belly would be less noticeable. Ron Wanttaja |
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In article ,
Ron Wanttaja wrote: For Jim (and kibitzers of all stripes :-): I had a curious situation yesterday while flying my Fly Baby. An aircraft complained that my radio was unreadable. Yet a buddy on the ground with a aircraft-band receiver said that my radio was a bit scratchy, but perfectly readable. I think I'm getting bit by my antenna patterns. Both antennas are mounted internal to the aircraft, with one being a horizontal coax-type dipole (with baluns) mounted underneath the metal turtledeck (!) and the other being my PVC-pipe job mounted vertically just a foot or two behind my manly back. Right now, I have the horizontal dipole hooked to the receive side and the vertical one to the transmit side. But they're hooked that way because of a similar complaint I had *last* summer. I know pattern is a problem with the horizontal one, since transmissions from aircraft behind me are very garbled (directly in line with dipole). I think the vertical one is ending up with a horrid pattern forward (due to the nearby ugly-bag-of-mostly-water), which might explain yesterday's complaint. (Note to newcomers in this saga: I'm using a Narco Escort II, which has separate receive and transmit antennas. Unlike many radios, the Narco uses the Nav antenna for Comm reception. It must have both antennas connected for two-way operation.) So... I'm starting to break down and am considering putting an antenna on the *outside* of the aircraft. I was originally going to use your copper-tape setup, running one arm down the landing gear leg and the other across the fabric-covered belly, but I added a long metal belly inspection panel last year that messes that up. http://www.bowersflybaby.com/tech/belly_pan.html The obvious thought it to install a conventional aircraft comm antenna on the belly panel itself...it's about 1 ft x 3 ft and would make a very good ground plane. But the panel is just ~.016 aluminum, supported along the edges. I'd probably have to add a cross-brace in the fuselage to mechanically support a full-size antenna. It would complicate removing the panel for routine maintenance, and would get in my way when I want to sit flat on the bottom longerons dangling my feet out the belly for working on my avionics box underneath the control panel. A big 'ol comm antenna would be a hassle...but what about mounting a rubber-duckie antenna, instead? A BNC connector would let me quickly remove it to pull the panel, and since it doesn't really require a massive ground plane, I could mount it far enough aft that it could pick up the existing support structure for the belly panel. Range with a rubber-duckie is 'medium lousy' compared to f full 1/4 wave with a good ground plane. So...what d'ya think? Follow-up question: I do my antenna switching on the ground, now, switching coaxes between radio outputs. Are there any inexpensive switch boxes that would let me take two RF inputs and select which antennas they connect to, without switching cables? A switchbox for receiving antennas is relatively "trivial". Switching for xmit antennas is somewhat more involved, especially at high power levels. _Many_ ham radio operators have switching relays that work with transmitters rated for power in the kilowatt range. Used to alternately connect a transmitter or receiver to a single antenna. Almost all integrated two-way "transceivers" also have a T/R switch (usually a relay, sometimes solid- state) for switching the antenna between the transmit and receive sections of the box. Switching 2 radios among 2 antennas, i.e. "A-1 / B-2" or "A-2 / B-1" is more problematic, *if* one side would be transmitting. Shielding in the switching assembly becomes a significant concern -- using a 'standard' DPDT switch is out -- although that approach does work for receive-only antenna switching. You _can_ do the cross-switching, by using _4_ T/R relays. There are 'fail safe' issues to contend with, to make sure that the transmitter and receiver don't both simultaneously connect to the same antenna. It's definitely _doable_, but "inexpensive" is probably not an operational qualifier. ![]() market. However, probably the _least_cost_ way to accomplish in-flight switching would be to mount 4 BNC connectors 'somewhere convenient' -- one to each antenna, and one to each radio -- and a pair of patch-cables, to connect 'antenna X' to 'radio Y'. It wouldn't be "pretty", but it would provide the functionality. |
#7
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