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Antenna Info
everyone should know!
Courtesy of Firestik
Antennas
- Every industry has its bottom
dwellers. No one can protect you from them. Consumers who make decisions
based strictly on price, or on what someone says instead of what they can
do, will often fall prey to the bottom dwellers.
- Beware of information from
"experts" (real or self-proclaimed). There is antenna theory and
there is antenna reality. We have yet to see a vehicle that simulates a lab.
While theory is a good starting place...experience is invaluable when it
comes to real problems. The knowledge gained from the best book on theory
will not necessarily produce the best antenna design.
- Some "experts" may
"claim" 5/8 wave mobile antennas are not possible because they
would need to be 23 feet high. They are wrong! Physical length and ground
wave performance are not the same. If you ever hear someone make that claim,
ask them how a handheld CB can have a 1/4 wave antenna 8 inches long and
mobile 1/4 wave antennas can be anywhere from 12-60 inches long in spite of
the fact that a physical 1/4 wave is 108 inches.
- Never key up or attempt to
operate your CB without a working antenna or "dummy load"
(non-radiating antenna simulating device) connected to the radios antenna
jack, unless you have extra money to buy another radio, or know a good
repairman.
- All mobile and base
transmitting antennas need counter-poise, more commonly called ground plane.
The antenna is the reactive unit, the ground plane is the reflective unit.
Neither is more important than the other. In mobile installations with
standard antenna systems, the vehicle metal (body, frame, etc.) acts as the
ground plane. In "no-ground-plane" systems, the coax shield is
used for counterpoise.
- Most, but not all,
manufacturers pre-tune their mobile antennas on a test bench. To protect
your radio's circuitry and achieve optimum performance, mobile transmitting
antennas (CB, cell phone, amateur, etc.) need to be tuned on the vehicle.
- Before transmitting, you
should check your antenna system for shorts or opens. If you have continuity
between the center pin of the connector and the outer threaded housing, you
may have a short. Don't transmit! If you do not find continuity between the
center pin of the coax and the antenna base, you have an open. Fix it. (See
"Testing Continuity") Exceptions: Some base loaded antennas use a
center tap design and there will be continuity from ground to center
conductor. Also, Firestik "No Ground Plane" antenna kits will have
coaxial center pin to ground continuity.
- SWR that pegs the needle on
all channels almost always indicates a short in your antenna system. Do not
attempt to tune the antenna until the short is fixed. Operating with high
SWR will probably damage your CB's internal circuits.
- Make sure that the antenna you
are using is the right antenna for your application. Don't use a TV antenna
or an AM/FM antenna for your CB. Do not operate your CB without an antenna
or dummy load.
- Transmitting antennas are
sensitive to objects in their "near field of radiation." Tune your
antennas in an open area. Never tune inside or next to a building, near or
under trees, near or under power lines, and never with a person holding or
standing next to the antenna. Try to simulate normal operating conditions.
- If you mount two or more
antennas close to each other, you will alter the transmission patterns of
each one. The affect may be either positive or negative. We recommend that a
minimum of 12" exist between your CB antenna and other types of
antennas.
- Your radio cannot tell one
component from another. As far as the radio is concerned, the coax, stud
mount, mounting bracket, antenna and vehicle is ONE unit. Don't be too quick
to fault your antenna until you are sure that all of the other components
have been given equal consideration.
- Of all antennas returned to
Firestik for warranty service, 75% show no signs of being tuned to the
vehicle. All antennas should be checked prior to use. Most will require some
adjustment. Less than 3% of all returned antennas have actual performance
causing problems. Of those, half of the problems are user or installer
created. High SWR and other performance problems are 20 times more likely to
be caused by bad coax, bad connections, shorted mounts, poor installation
location or faulty test meters.
- In almost every instance, once
you get the same SWR reading on channels 1 and 40, further antenna tuning
will not improve the readings. If the SWR is still over 2:1, you have other
problems to conquer. Exception: There are rare occasions when the ground
plane is so small or large that the system is way out of phase (especially
with high-performance antennas). If you have high SWR on all channels and
have confirmed that you have no opens or shorts in the feedline, try making
a small tuning adjustment in the antenna. There are times when the SWR will
drop equally across all channels under unusual ground plane conditions. If
you find this to be the case, carefully adjust the antenna.
- SWR that is high on all
channels (over 2:1 but not pegging the needle) after the antenna has been
tuned normally indicates a ground plane or coax cable problem.
- The doors, mirrors, spare tire
racks, luggage racks, etc. on many vehicles are insulated from a good ground
with nylon or rubber bushings. This also stands true for fiberglass
vehicles. Make sure that your antenna mount is grounded, even if it entails
running a ground wire to the vehicle chassis. Bad hard ground at the mount
generally equates to less than optimum performance. Exception: No ground
plane antenna kits do not require a grounded mount.
- If you are hearing whining
noises from your radio while your vehicle is running, it is probably due to
"dirty power" being supplied to the radio. Under dash power may be
more convenient, but the "cleanest" power will be found by running
the radio's power leads straight to the battery.
- You can never buy coax cable
that is too good for your system. Never compromise quality for cost when
purchasing coax. Your best bet is to stick with coax that has a stranded
center conductor and 90% or higher shielding.
- Most manufacturers of high
performance antennas recommend a specific length of coax cable. If your
antenna manufacturer suggests a specific length, give priority to that
recommendation.
- If your ground plane is good,
your mount grounded and, your antenna favorably located, coax length rarely
becomes an issue. But, if one or more mismatches occur, you may find high
SWR. This can often be corrected by using 18 feet lengths of high quality
coax.
- Excess coax between your radio
and antenna mount should never be wound into a circular coil of less than
12" in diameter. Doing so can cause system problems. Your best option
for handling excess coax is to serpentine the cable into a 12 to 18 inch
yarn-like skein. Secure the skein in the center with a wire tie and tuck it
away.
- Single antenna installations
require coax with approximately 50 ohm's of resistance (RG-58/U, RG-58 A/U
or RG-8X). Dual antenna installations require the use of 72 ohm cable
(RG-59/U or RG-59 A/U).
- Coaxial cables with foam (polyfoam)
center conductor insulation should be your last choice for use on mobile
(vehicle) installations. Even though it will work initially, it has limited
life and does not stand up to the conditions encountered in the mobile
environment. Choose coax with polyvinyl insulation when doing mobile
installs.
- Coax cables should never be
cut and spliced together like common electrical wire. Line losses will
occur.
- Coaxial cable with holes in
the outer insulation, severe bends, or door, trunk or hood caused pinches
will cause performance problems. Treat your coax with care.
- If you live in an area where
rain and/or sleet is common, wipe your antenna down with a rag that has been
coated with WD-40, Armor-All, Pledge, light oil, etc. This trick prevents
ice build up that can overload and cause your antenna to break. In an
emergency use butter, cooking oil or anything else that will repel water.
- When tuning your antenna(s),
make sure that you do so with the vehicle doors, hood and trunk closed. If
left open, they can cause inaccurate SWR readings. Try to simulate actual
operating conditions.
- Mobile antennas, for best
performance, should have no less than 60% of their overall length above the
vehicles roof line. For co-phased antennas to perform optimally, the space
between the top 60% of the two antennas needs to be unobstructed.
- Remember, all transmitting
antennas need ground plane (counterpoise). Base antennas, much like "no
ground plane" antennas, build it in. Do not use mobile antennas for
base station applications unless you know how to build your own ground
plane.
- If you are installing a single
antenna on one side or the other of your vehicle, best on-the-road
performance will be realized if the antenna is on the passenger side of the
vehicle (Passenger cars and light trucks) Large trucks or vehicles pulling
large trailers should put the antenna on the drivers side to avoid the
signal from being blocked by the trailer and to keep from hitting road side
trees.
- Co-phased (dual) antenna
installations create a radiation pattern that favors communication directly
in front and back of the vehicle. This is why co-phase systems are popular
with people who do a lot of highway driving. Co-phase antennas must be
center or top loaded. Top loaded antennas are the best.
- Some people believe that
co-phased antennas must be separated by a minimum of nine (9) feet. We have
successfully used co-phase antenna systems with spacing as little as four
(4) feet. Space alters the pattern and not always negatively. Each vehicle
will be different.
- Co-phase antennas can improve
performance on vehicles that lack good ground plane characteristics
(fiberglass motorhomes, trucks, etc.). Instead of using available metal to
reflect the radiated energy, the antennas use each others field.
- When tuning co-phased antennas
(dual), it is best to adjust both antennas an equal amount to maintain
equality in their individual resonant frequency.
- On a co-phase system, if you
try to tune each antenna independently using RG-58 type coax and then
connect them to the co-phasing harness, you will almost always find that
they will appear electrically short as a set. We recommend that you first
assemble the entire system. Take all measurements and make all adjustments
with both antennas in place.
- If you are experiencing SWR
that is high across the entire band and have eliminated shorts, opens,
groundless mounts and coax as potential problems, suspect lack of ground
plane. Try adding a spring or quick disconnect to the antenna base. In some
cases, the repositioning of the antenna relevant to available ground plane
will solve the problem.
- One of the greatest benefits
of the FS series (patented tunable tip) antenna is noted when there is lack
of available ground plane. If the tuning screw reaches its "maximum
out" position before satisfactory SWR is realized, a common 1/4-20
threaded bolt or screw of a longer length can be used to replace the
supplied tuning screw. If the vinyl cap is too short to remain in place, the
user can disregard it or clip a hole in the top for the longer screw to pass
through.
- In rare instances, like
antennas mounted in the middle of a metal van roof, excess ground plane can
cause a problem. This usually shows up as high SWR across the band. In these
cases, a tunable tip antenna may not be the best choice. The reason being,
the antenna is too long and the tunable tip cannot adjust down far enough
(see line 40). If you suspect this, an antenna that wire can be removed from
will usually fit the bill (i.e. KW or RP series).
- There may be situations when a
tunable tip will bottom out before optimum tuning is achieved. If this
happens, try removing the knurled jam nut and finger tighten the tuning
screw against the o-ring. If still too long, remove the tuning screw
altogether. If total removal causes the antenna to go short, cut the tuning
screw in half and re-insert it into the tuning extender and re-test. The
following items on the FS Series "tunable tip" antennas, when
removed, will have an effect on SWR (in order from least effect to most
effect). O-ring, jam nut, tuning screw mass (cutting off length), vinyl cap,
tuning screw complete.
- The vinyl cap on any
"tunable tip" Firestik antennas is optional. However, your antenna
needs to be tuned as it will be used . . . with or without the tip.
- Magnetic mounts should be used
in temporary situations only. If you leave them in the same spot for a long
period, the paint will not age like that of the uncovered areas and/or
moisture will be trapped between the mount and vehicle causing rust or
discoloration. Periodically lift the magnet and gently clean off the
underside of the magnet and the vehicle surface.
- It is a bad idea to use
magnetic mounts and amplifiers together. Magnetic mounts rely on capacitance
grounding. This situation can literally cause the paint under the mount to
bubble or discolor due to excessive heat build up.
- On wire-wound antennas that
require wire removal for tuning purposes, best overall performance will be
achieved by keeping the loose end of the wire pressed down tightly against
the wire coil. If you use power amplification on top loaded antennas and do
not process the end of the wire load so it can dissipate its heat into other
adjacent coils, you can melt the tip of the antenna.
- Generally speaking, center
loaded antennas perform better than base loaded antennas, and top loaded
antennas perform better than all. For any given antenna design (base, center
or top loaded), the taller the antenna the better. With length comes a wider
bandwidth (lower SWR over more channels), more power handling capability and
overall performance increases.
- When ultimate mobile
performance is desired, function should be given precedence over mounting
location convenience and appearance.
- Don't confuse SWR with overall
performance. You should seek SWR of 2:1 or lower on channel 1 and 40, but
keep in mind that best performance may not be found at the lowest SWR
readings. For the most part, if you get your SWR below 2:1, on both ends of
the band, don't be overly concerned about using meter tricking procedures
that bleed off energy.
- The SWR meters built into CB
radios are okay for general readings, but are rarely sensitive and/or
accurate enough for fine tuning of antennas. Use them mostly to indicate
serious high SWR problems only.
- Firestik has tested literally
hundreds of SWR meters. A large percentage of these have shown to be off by
0.3 to 0.7 when compared to a piece of certified equipment. There is no
standard among production meters. However, unless a unit is defective, most
will indicate the most serious problems that you might encounter
- Aside from cost, the type of
wire used in or on antennas (copper, silver, aluminum, gold, tinned, etc.)
has negligible effect on antenna performance. The antenna must be designed
to resonate with the wire type and gauge chosen by the designer. However,
larger wire gauges will normally increase the bandwidth and heat dissipation
abilities of the antenna.
- Copper is 55% better than
aluminum, 27% better than gold and 578% better than tin insofar as
conductivity is concerned. Silver will conduct AC/DC current less than 2.5%
more efficiently than copper, but the cost to performance is generally
unjustified and any gain, insofar as RF transmission is concerned, is
negligible.
- If devices other than an SWR
meter are going to be used between the CB radio and antenna, always tune the
antenna system first without that device in line. If SWR is high with the
other device in line, you will know where the problem is.
- In "no ground plane"
systems, it is best to choose a system that terminates the coaxial ground at
the radio end of the cable. These systems are far less reactive to cable
routing errors and will almost always outperform systems that are terminated
at the antenna base or antenna end of the coax.
- Cables and antennas from
standard & no-ground plane kits are not interchangeable. The "No
Ground Plane" antennas from Firestik have a yellow band near the base.
- Wire wound antennas with a
plastic outer coating will greatly reduce audible RF static when compared to
metal whip antennas.
- If you leave your antenna on
your vehicle permanently, remove the rubber o-ring that is found on the
threaded base of some antennas. Tighten permanent antennas with a wrench.
Add a lock washer if you want.
- If you use mirror mounts and
often find yourself in areas with overhead obstructions, tighten the bolts
just enough to keep the antenna vertical at highway speeds. If the antenna
contacts something overhead, the mount will rotate on the mirror arm and
protect your antenna.
- If you use long antennas and
find that they bend too far back at highway speeds, tilt them forward if
possible. When under a wind load, they will end up in a relatively vertical
position.
- On antennas that are topped
off with a vinyl tip, make sure that you take your SWR measurements with the
tip in place. If you tune your antenna with the tip off and then reinstall
the tip, your SWR will change.
- Without advocating the use of
power amplifiers or unauthorized channels, take note that the Firestik II
tunable tip antennas have a fairly large metal tip that broadens the
bandwidth and dissipates a considerable amount of heat.
- It is illegal to use power
amplifiers with CB radios. It is illegal to "tweak" the radios
internal circuits to increase output power. The transmitter power of a
legal, FCC certified CB radio is 4 watts AM.
- If having one antenna for
CB/AM/FM is appealing, use a CB antenna and a splitter that allows it to be
connected to your AM/FM radio. Devices that let you use your AM/FM antenna
for CB use will leave you disappointed.
- On a budget? Buy a cheap radio
and a good antenna. Aside from added bells and whistles, all CB's are FCC
regulated to transmit no more than 4 watts of power. A good antenna on an
inexpensive radio will almost always outperform a bad antenna on an
expensive radio.
- Beware of the wire wound
mobile antennas mentioned in ads that claim them to be "full-wave"
or "wave and a half". At best, you are being deceived by the
misleading association of wire length to actual performance characteristics.
Wire length, for all intents and purposes, is irrelevant. With
"very" few exceptions, antennas must function as a 1/4 wave or 5/8
wave to be useful on mobile installations. For example, Firestik and
Firestik II antennas between 2 foot and 5 foot have a radiation pattern
similar to a 5/8 wave reference antenna. However, wire lengths range from 20
feet to 32 feet (0.6 to 0.9 of a full wave length). If wire length was
relevant, each antenna would need 22.5 feet of wire.
The above info is
courtesy of Firestik Antennas
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