Low Profile Antennas-A few questions
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Low Profile Antennas-A few questions
Where can I get some low profile antennas that look like or close to the ones on http://www.comtelco.net/ .... I need black ones to match my car. Do they make dual band in this sytle? Also very important question....Will these screw right onto my 3/4 inch drill mounts?
- Code3Response
- NOT ALLOWED TO BUY/SELL/TRADE
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I can get them for you at http://www.code3response.com - I carry Antenex. They do not make dual band models, and yes they wilsl screw into a regular 3/4 inch NMO mount. PM me if interested.
I have bought and tested all brands of these antenna's in a controlled environment, the only one that worked well was the Maxrad MLPV450, it performed at about +1 db at 1/4 wave, the antennex and comtelco were -3 db at 1/4 wave. and the vertical beam on the antennex was almost 17 deg. above the horizon.
Stan Glass
Government & Entertainment Division Manager (Kenwood)
Government & Entertainment Division Manager (Kenwood)
Don't use Antenex VHF Phantoms. I just returned all 12 that I reordered for inventory since 7 of the 12 were bad out of the package. They redesigned these things 3 times since I became a dealer and they just can't get it right. If you DO get one that works, I'll assure you that it will fail in weeks.
The UHF and 800 Phantoms work well, however.
I've been using COmtelco with no problems.
The UHF and 800 Phantoms work well, however.
I've been using COmtelco with no problems.
- FFParamedic571
- Banned
- Posts: 467
- Joined: Tue Aug 27, 2002 7:57 pm
Can anyone recommend a good low-profile model for a mobile scanner? I need to install a scanner in a Taurus, and would like the small NMO style antenna (such as http://www.comtelco.net/cgi-bin/w3-msql ... =A1641B440) for a scanner, but don't see any that would cover both the UHF and VHF public safety bands.....
Antenex Phantom Antenna
I've got the VHF Phantom antenna. I use it for APRS purposes, and it works well but I found the antenna has an EXTREMELY NARROW BANDWIDTH !! I can only get about 250 KHz on either side of the tuned frequency without going above 2:1 SWR. However, I found that it works quite well if you only need it to work on the one channel its tuned for. I drive a black Crown Vic so I get lots of strange looks from people, and even get asked what that "thing" is on the roof. At times I'll just say I left my mugg on the roof and thank them for telling me before it fell off.
Oh well . . .
Oh well . . .
Anthony,
Below are the links I think your looking for. This is where I found an antenna made for the 2-meter & 70cm amatuer bands:
http://www.wavehunter.com/phantvhf.htm
http://www.wavehunter.com/phantuhf.htm
The company is D&L Antenna Co. and here's their main website:
http://www.wavehunter.com/list.htm
Hope this is helpful to you. I was at work last night when you originally posted your message but I had all the info at home. Ahhhhh, finally home from a long night!
Below are the links I think your looking for. This is where I found an antenna made for the 2-meter & 70cm amatuer bands:
http://www.wavehunter.com/phantvhf.htm
http://www.wavehunter.com/phantuhf.htm
The company is D&L Antenna Co. and here's their main website:
http://www.wavehunter.com/list.htm
Hope this is helpful to you. I was at work last night when you originally posted your message but I had all the info at home. Ahhhhh, finally home from a long night!
I have the VHF model, and yes, it does work in the 144-148 MHz amateur range, and yes it is black in color. However, as I stated earlier in this thread the bandwidth on these antenna's are extremely narrow. Since I only use mine for APRS on 144.390 MHz I don't have any trouble using the Phantom antenna. But again, if you required such an antenna to cover the entire 3 or 4 MHz 2-meter spread then this antenna isn't for you. On the VHF model I was only able to achieve an acceptable SWR 250 KHz on either side of the tuned frequency. That's only a total spread of 500 KHz, which sucks for a VHF antenna!
I've never tried the UHF model so I don't know what kind of range you'd be able to achieve with it. I also noticed it's white in on their web page so I don't know if that model's available in black or not.
I've never tried the UHF model so I don't know what kind of range you'd be able to achieve with it. I also noticed it's white in on their web page so I don't know if that model's available in black or not.
Any of the bands are available in black or white. Using NON-METALLIC paint, one can paint it any color.
The VHF Phantoms have quite a few problems. Using many of them, you'll of course see this. I have one on my own vehicle and it works fine. The UHF's much more wide-banded. The VHF is narrow because of it's tuning network.
The VHF Phantoms have quite a few problems. Using many of them, you'll of course see this. I have one on my own vehicle and it works fine. The UHF's much more wide-banded. The VHF is narrow because of it's tuning network.
Sniper wrote:Hmmmm..how to take the antenna output of my radio and split it between a UHF and a VHF antenna......
Ah, Duplexer??
"I'll eat you like a plate of bacon and eggs in the morning. "
- Some loser on rr.com
eBay at it's finest:
Me: "What exactly is a 900Mhz UHF CB?"
Them: "A very nice CB at 900Mhz speed!"
- Some loser on rr.com
eBay at it's finest:
Me: "What exactly is a 900Mhz UHF CB?"
Them: "A very nice CB at 900Mhz speed!"
The antenna comes with several tuning "disks", which are essentially thin metallic round adhesive stickers. To achieve proper tuning you trim an appropriate amount around the disk depending on the frequency desired, placing it on the flat section at the top of the antenna. It also comes with a trimming template for your target frequency (although it's very general so you'll have to trim a small amount at a time). The disks are also black in color so they blend with the antenna.F1118 wrote:so you can tune the antenna yourself? you said you used it on the 2 meter band but if it was designed for 150 mhz how did you tune it?
- tiredfireman
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Wed Jul 16, 2003 10:49 am
lo profile ants
Remember that if you want looks, you sacrifice performance. Physics don't listen to salespeople. If the antenna 'wants' to be 50 odd inches long, curling it up into a disk is not going to make for good transmission.
The higher the freq, the shorter the antenna, so if you get into 800MHZ you will be down below 4 inches, but what's the point??
Also, one asked about receive. Antenna length really is only critical when transmitting. A coat hanger will receive for a scanner. Transmit involves complicated stuff like wavelengths to insure maximum output.
receive, in my experience, is based solely on length of antenna. Since you are trying to capture a small fraction of a volt signal, the longer the wire, the more signal strength you will capture. Again, this does not apply to XMIT.
If car-wash or riot damage is really a concern, use the lo-profile and feed it with the most power you can. Otherwise, use a 1/4 wave whip for transmit, and as long as you want for receive (scanner) ops.
The higher the freq, the shorter the antenna, so if you get into 800MHZ you will be down below 4 inches, but what's the point??
Also, one asked about receive. Antenna length really is only critical when transmitting. A coat hanger will receive for a scanner. Transmit involves complicated stuff like wavelengths to insure maximum output.
receive, in my experience, is based solely on length of antenna. Since you are trying to capture a small fraction of a volt signal, the longer the wire, the more signal strength you will capture. Again, this does not apply to XMIT.
If car-wash or riot damage is really a concern, use the lo-profile and feed it with the most power you can. Otherwise, use a 1/4 wave whip for transmit, and as long as you want for receive (scanner) ops.
Gettin' too old for this... but still kickin' anyways