Getting ready to make jumpers. How long from radio to box and then how long from box to antenna?
619 the Chef choppin' lips and deep-frying Mud Ducks in the Yellin' Yukon and I'm gone...
Getting ready to make jumpers. How long from radio to box and then how long from box to antenna?
619 the Chef choppin' lips and deep-frying Mud Ducks in the Yellin' Yukon and I'm gone...
619 the Chef, choppin' lips and deep-frying those ducks in the Yellin' Yukon and I'm gone...
dammmmmmm your going big , wowwwwww a driver box and a big box. cool. I use a 18 feet coax from the radio to the driver box. I used to use a 12. I feel in my case the 18 footer brought the reflect down slighty more between the radio and the driver box . 6 feet between your driver and your big box should be fine . some boxes require you to use a 9 footer . it all depends on how good your box is tuned .
No just one box for now. Doughboy actually gave me the formula for the coax. 14.82 feet based on te velocity factor of the lmr400uf. My jumper from the radio to the back of the truck is made, and so is the antenna cable. I'm just about ready to go.
619 the Chef choppin' lips and deep-frying Mud Ducks in the Yellin' Yukon and I'm gone...
619 the Chef, choppin' lips and deep-frying those ducks in the Yellin' Yukon and I'm gone...
BOOTY MONSTER (05-23-2013)
there is no formula when your running from your radio to the driver box because every radio has a difference in line capacitance and every radio is tuned different to , especially if you have a variable from your radio. velocity formula is great from your last box in line to your antenna system .
Aaahhh ok gotcha! 4-10
619 the Chef choppin' lips and deep-frying Mud Ducks in the Yellin' Yukon and I'm gone...
619 the Chef, choppin' lips and deep-frying those ducks in the Yellin' Yukon and I'm gone...
This may help.
http://highfields-arc.co.uk/construc...s/coaxcalc.htm
Birdy (05-24-2013), High Voltage Mobile NJ (05-23-2013)
Is there any preferences on coax length from the radio to an external swr meter that will be removed after use?
Caveman 195 waving a hand in Southern Indiana
they say u are suppose to have at least 1/2 wave of coax between . sometimes 9 feet will work to .
the caveman (05-24-2013)
High Voltage Mobile NJ (05-24-2013)
what DB is talking about is using a electrical half wavelength of coax ...... not to be confused with a physical half wavelength of coax . the middle of the CB band (27.205 MHz.) has a wavelength of 36.1798 ft (rounded off) . a physical half wavelength of coax will be half of that length (18.0849) .
the difference between a physical half wavelength of coax and a electrical half wavelength (and multiples of it) is the EHWL will duplicate the vswr so it's not skewed by a meter or analyzer if the antenna is not tuned to a perfect 50 ohms . the few feet of extra coax length is negligible loss wise when using decent coax ..... even 8x . heres a link with info explaining it in more detail than i care to type .
http://www.dx-antennas.com/Coax.htm
" ........................ WHAT LENGTH?As mentioned the best length is the shortest, in this way the loss due to the cable is the lowest.
There can be one advantage by extending the length of the cable:.
A HALF WAVE coax cable or ANY multiple (1, 1½, 2 wavelength) length of this will show you: "exactly the same input resistance at both ends of cable". In normal words:
You can measure the exact SWR from the antenna with these lengths of coax cable.If your antenna is truly 1:1 it doesn't matter, each SWR measurement anywhere on the line and you will find 1:1.
Only when your SWR isn't 1:1 but higher your measurements will change according to length, this is when it can come in handy to keep the line a half wave long (or any multiple). .................
............................. COAX AND VELOCITY FACTORThe shielding and the core of a coax form a capacitor. Through the use of insulation material, the value of the capacitor is bigger then it would be in air, and this has the effect of slowing down the signal. This can be of great importance in some applications, although for many purposes it does not needed this information ;-)Velocity factor
The speed at which the signal travels is normally given the abbreviation VF and this is the fraction of the speed at which the signal travels when compared to a signal traveling in free space. So VF for a signal traveling at the speed of light would be 1.0, and for one traveling at half the speed of light it would be 0.5.
The velocity factor of the coax cable is found by VF = 1 / SQRT (dielectric constant)Coax cable electrical length
One important factor of a coax cable in some applications is the wavelength of the signals traveling in it. In the same way that the wavelength of a signal is the speed of light divided by the frequency for free space, the same is also true in any other medium. As the speed of the wave has been reduced, so too is the wavelength reduced by the same factor. So if the velocity factor of the coax cable is 0,66, then the wavelength is 0,66 times the wavelength in free space. ......... "
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