Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: UHF antenna base

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    near Kilmore central Vic but work in Melb every day :(
    Posts
    359
    Total Downloaded
    0

    UHF antenna base

    A question
    I just bought a couple of cheap UHF antenna bases from Jaycar
    I have just notice that the Threaded centre "post" (that the antenna screws onto) is not insulated from the ground (body of the car?)
    is this correct?
    I doesn't sound right to me?
    did I get duds?
    thanks
    jase

  2. #2
    VladTepes's Avatar
    VladTepes is offline Major Part of the Heart and Soul of AULRO Subscriber
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Bracken Ridge, Qld
    Posts
    16,055
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Depends on the aerial type.

    I know with 27 MHz some antennae are ground dependent some are ground independent.

    I think that all UHF are ground independednt (not sure about this though). Perhaps the bases you have are actually for a ground dependednt 27MHz antennae rather than a UHF one ?
    It's not broken. It's "Carbon Neutral".


    gone


    1993 Defender 110 ute "Doris"
    1994 Range Rover Vogue LSE "The Luxo-Barge"
    1994 Defender 130 HCPU "Rolly"
    1996 Discovery 1

    current

    1995 Defender 130 HCPU and Suzuki GSX1400


  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    near Kilmore central Vic but work in Melb every day :(
    Posts
    359
    Total Downloaded
    0
    they are defiantly UHF (26TPI vs 25 TPI off the top of my head)
    perhaps they are supposed to be grounded? I don't know it just looks wrong (and I thought I would have noticed on UHF bases before now?)
    why run a shielded cable to an antenna then ground it? (the cable not the shield)
    I could just connect the antenna cable straight out the back of the UHF to the chassis (not that I would just that's the same logic)
    come on where the radio techs P38 Ron are you out there?
    Jase

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Sydney's gritty inner west (2204) and verdant Mount Wilson
    Posts
    7,446
    Total Downloaded
    0
    There are two types of UHF aerials:

    One that relies on attachment to a metal surface to radiate the signal and the other (Ground Plane Independent) that doesn't.

    It sounds like the bases that you have belong to the former type.

    Some useful info on UHF aerials here:

    http://www.mobileone.com.au/antennas/default477.htm
    Last edited by one_iota; 12th October 2006 at 06:04 AM.
    Mahn England

    DEFENDER 110 D300 SE '23 (the S M E G)

    Ex DEFENDER 110 wagon '08 (the Kelvinator)
    http://www.aulro.com/afvb/members-rides/105691-one_iotas-110-inch-kelvinator.html

    Ex 300Tdi Disco:



  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Melbourne, outer South East
    Posts
    2,283
    Total Downloaded
    0
    If those are the bases I think they are, they have a threaded brass post that runs up the middle. This is what the antenna whip screws on to and the centre conductor of the coax connects to. There should be an insulator where that post goes through the metal of the car.

    If you could post a photo of it, it might help us tell if something is missing from the kit.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    near Kilmore central Vic but work in Melb every day :(
    Posts
    359
    Total Downloaded
    0
    sorry can't post a pic (I tried last time and couldn't get it to work ??)
    it's like you say but NO insulator
    like you I imagined the "center post" (that the coax conductor connects to (not the shield) & the antenna screws onto) should be insulated from the body of the vehicle but in this case it is not??
    It's connected to (short circuited to) the shield and therefore the body of the car??
    J
    "Help me" radio techs

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Somewhere else, QLD
    Posts
    1,863
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Fear not - it being a UHF base, the insulator for the centre wire is inside the mount. To fit it you need to strip the sheath and some of the outer conductor of the coax off for about 3cm, and wind the cable into the base. Then you solder it at the top.
    Last edited by langy; 17th October 2006 at 07:25 PM.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    near Kilmore central Vic but work in Melb every day :(
    Posts
    359
    Total Downloaded
    0
    thanks Langy, you're spot on , I knew it was a "solder the top type" but couldn't see how it was separated / insulted from the bottom half
    but a check with a multimeter tells me no connection top to bottom (the copper to air ratio is correct )
    looking inside you can barely see a line, and disassembled nothing on the outside? the join is obviously sleeved under the moulded plastic lower section somehow?
    anyway Thanks heaps
    I'll install it now, much happier that it's correct

    Jase

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Search AULRO.com ONLY!
Search All the Web!