I'm sorry about all the negative comments you are getting from the technical know it all radio police. You are definitely going in the right direction!!!!
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@muddytiresclub426410 ай бұрын
I like videos that show people installing gear and testing. It shows others what can be expected. From out here in the high desert of Nevada..117Reno waving a hand and keep making videos.
@paulethier34165 ай бұрын
@@muddytiresclub4264 thank you!!
@baconwhiskey8219 ай бұрын
Thanks for the ride along, I always enjoy antenna/range testing!
@paulethier34168 ай бұрын
Thank you, more to come!
@donalddodson7365 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Useful info, no histrionics or drama & good demonstration of SWR, power and practical range. Well done.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Sir! I’m glad you enjoyed the video. Thank you for the super thanks. Have a great Christmas holiday and New Year.
@arlenewolf526010 ай бұрын
FYI, if you set up a base station, I think Comet makes a real nice high gain antenna. Keep your coax as short as possible and use only high quality coax. If you can keep the run under 60 feet Times Microwave LMR400 coax will do a good job for you. There is also Messi & Paoloni. What ever you do don.t cheap out on any portion of your antenna system. Over 60" on GMRS and you will need hard line.
@paulethier341610 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tip!
@mitchh6702 Жыл бұрын
I agree with your findings ! Antenna is the most important piece of the communication picture. Subscribed and commented on several of your videos. Enjoying your content.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Awesome, thank you!
@mattschultzy671 Жыл бұрын
There are amateur radio repeaters on satellites and the International Space Station. 5 watts of power is more than enough to hit those with a handheld. UHF (GMRS), VHF, and pretty much everything over about 50 MHz (GMRS channels exist in the 462 and 467 MHz ranges) will pass right through the ionosphere and not bounce back down to Earth. That is why GMRS is line of sight only. CB channels exist right around 27 MHz, which is why you can get some bouncing off the ionosphere and some really long ranges as a result, in the right atmospheric conditions. The upshot to all that? Height off the ground is more important than antenna, which is more important than power, because everything GMRS is going to be line of sight only with no atmospheric bounce. If you are on top of a mountain, you will get phenomenal range, even with 5 watts. A bigger and more efficient antenna (1.5 on your SWR meter is perfectly good, a 1.1 would be even better) will make the most of the signals you receive and the power that you transmit. For those who do not know, SWR is essentially a measure of how much power is getting out of your antenna, versus how much is being reflected back into you transmitter. The bigger the number, the less efficient the antenna and the power is being reflected back into your transmitter and not getting out to the world. Too high a SWR and that power bouncing back into you radio can actually damage your transmitter. That is the whole purpose of "tuning" an antenna. To get a length of antenna that best matches your frequency's wavelength. It is a "harmonic" that allows the most efficient transfer of your signal from the transmitter to the atmosphere around you. So height is most important, because it creates a line of sight. The antenna is VERY important because it is that interface between your transmitter and the atmosphere. Power is important to maintaining the signal in a cluttered environment where you signal is trying to reflect around, or to push through to a lesser degree, objects and obstacles around you to get to your desired destination. In other words.... Have your antenna as high up as you can. Have as efficient an antenna as you can. Then have as much power as you need to overcome any obstacles in your signal path. It is also useful to understand that an antenna does not have to be fancy to be efficient. It is all about having a length of conductor that is resonant with the frequency you are trying to work on. Paul mentions that his original car antenna is a 1/4 wavelength and that the new one is a 5/8 wavelength. These are literal values. The short antenna is literally 1/4 of a radio wavelength at about 465 MHz, which is 1/4 of about 70 centimeters or so (the actual wavelength of 465 MHz is 64.47 centimeters). That antenna is likely about 6 inches, which is 15.24 centimeters, which is 1/4 of 60.96 centimeters. How well that length matches up exactly will depend on the "ground plane" underneath your antenna and the actual "electrical length" of you antenna. The SWR meter is the best way of finding this match once you are in the right ball park on length. Multiple lengths will be resonant with a given frequency, with 5/8 being another typical "resonant" length for an antenna. The reason this is all worth knowing??? You could hang a length of speaker wire from the roof of your house, and if you make it a resonant length, you can make a large and very efficient antenna for your home. You could connect this to your handheld inside or a base station. Yup, just some speaker wire will perform just as well, if not better, than a fancy commercial antenna. A commercial antenna is just more convenient to get. They did all the measuring and building for you, of course. I have a very efficient antenna made out of steel tape measure and some PVC pipe in a "Yagi" configuration that has fantastic gain! The easiest to make is a simple dipole of the correct length. A simple dipole is just two wires, of the same resonant length, one wire connected to the center contact of whatever connector you use, and the other connected to the ground contact of that connector. Obviously that is not going to drag behind your car, but it can hang at your house from the roof or a tree in the yard. It is also something you can throw over a branch if you are camping. You can make an amazing dipole with two lengths of speaker (or other lightweight wire) wire about 48 inches each and some connectors. Look up GMRS antenna projects online if you are interested. Just have a SWR meter on hand to help you get the right length dialed in for the best resonance (lowest SWR, 1.00 being the best). Usually you cut the wires a little longer than you think, and then fold back the ends until you get your best SWR number. Then you can leave them or trim the wires to that length permanently. Of all the things yo could learn about radio, understanding antennas is the number one thing that will let you squeak out the greatest possible performance from even the cheapest radio. Height is might, but your antenna is also more important than what radio you are running. Looking back, I am going to apologize for the absurd length of my comment. It's a bit ridiculous for a youtube comment, but hopefully you will see something in this wall of text that is useful, so I will leave it as is all the same. I hope you enjoy your radios and making future videos!
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Holly cow! This is awesome. What a bunch of great information. Thank you for commenting and sharing all of this with me (us) to learn from. I always like to learn and this gives me a lot to digest.
@javabeanz85499 ай бұрын
I wouldn't worry about the length of the comment when it contains that much knowledge! I will be passing this video along to some folks that I have been talking about antennas with, and pointing out this comment.
@bc_usa4 ай бұрын
Size matters?😎
@mixrmandd6 ай бұрын
At home I'm running a uv-5r connected to a Ed fong dbj-uhf set at 20' my mobile unit is a5r connected to a Browning 5 DB gain nmo mount both of these radios do about 6 Watts on high setting.... The terrain here in central Arizona is comparable to yours with some mountains but it's very flat to the east of my location..... I have achieved 10 miles simplex and better than 30 to the shaw Butte repeater..... I totally recommend the Ed fong antenna it works well and Ed is a good guy....
@paulethier34166 ай бұрын
Ok good to know. Thank you for the advice.
@michaelstora702 ай бұрын
I love the double 5/8 for mobile. I have a Tran 1173. It will function kind of like a dipole without a ground plane but a ground plane will give you a mirror image of both radiating sections and act kind of like a colinear.
@paulethier34162 ай бұрын
Thanks for commenting. Yes, it works far better than any other antenna that I have. Its a dramatic improvement.
@NickFrom12289 ай бұрын
Good info. You can't underestimate the important of a good antenna. Even a mediocre radio with a good antenna will do well. I had the same antenna and ditched it. The midland mxta26 is good so I use it instead. World of difference. Melowave makes a good antenna but its spendy and screams "Fed".🙂 For base stations Comet makes an 11' antenna that is quite good but its a tall one. One other thing to keep in mind is repeaters help a lot. Be sure to check what is in your area. Where I'm at, with the repeater we have people talking 80 miles to the repeater and it reaches out for a long ways. I've talked to it with a handheld from 38 miles and while not perfectly clear it was clear enough to completely understand. Since UHF and VHF are higher frequency they are line of site. So the mantra for those is "Elevation is king". If you have a problem communicating, find the highest unobstructed point possible.
@luish1977910 ай бұрын
with a 50watts mobile radio you will cover much more ground. i got XTL2500 motorola and work pretty well...
@paulethier341610 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment. Yeah the 50 watt would work better for sure, but line of sight around here is terrible.
@riteplaceritetime0072 ай бұрын
This video was awesome, very helpful
@paulethier3416Ай бұрын
Awesome. Thanks for commenting.
@forgetyourlife Жыл бұрын
Rg-58 is very lossy at 462Mhz. That’s a good part of it as well.
@arlenewolf5260 Жыл бұрын
That Hershey kisses mag mount comes with that horrible 174 "U" coax, it probably only had 2 or 3 watts at the antenna if the radio had 15 watts at the radio.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for commenting. It’s such a small coax it’s not surprising that it would be that restrictive. I’ve read and I’ve heard that Midland did it this way so that you could throw it on your vehicle quick and go.
@curtw8827 Жыл бұрын
The short run of RG-58 is not significant, not like he could run some LMR400 to the roof.
@forgetyourlife Жыл бұрын
@@curtw8827 sure but it’s part of it short run or not. Also the braid on Rg-58 is notorious for being leaky.
@curtw8827 Жыл бұрын
@@forgetyourlife so I ran some calculations for 12 ft of coax at 462 mHz. Original RG174, 45% power loss, LMR24O, 15% loss, RG58 , 23% loss. I use LMR240 for GMRS. The factory RG174 is even worse since it's much longer than 12 ft. The coax fittings at 462 is a whole other discussion.
@ke4asc Жыл бұрын
5 Miles is not bad for simplex. Don't be too discouraged, the 5/8 wave has a bit more gain than a simple ground plane style antenna. Great video by the way.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for commenting. Yeah the little antenna does surprising well. But that 5/8 wave is a beast for sure. We have so many mountains around here it tough with any antenna.
@mandytuning3 ай бұрын
I have a yaesu ftm6000 and sbb5. My home have a j pole ladder ant from n9tax on a Baofeng. Did 12 miles on simplex and still was going , I was blown away cause is the flat center Florida with to many houses on the way
@daveengstrom9250Ай бұрын
Distance is one thing but elevation is more important. You will be able to transmit and receive 50-70 miles if you are up high and no hills in the way. And you are right, the antenna is far more important than the radio. If you tune your new antenna your results will be even better.
@paulethier3416Ай бұрын
Thanks for commenting and sharing. I've settled on a 1/4 wave antenna and I'm happy with the performance. It also fits in the parking garage.
@Doors122 Жыл бұрын
Great video, very informative. Underrated channel.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that! Thank you!
@horaciolopez7721Ай бұрын
That’s pretty cool. I only get 4 miles on a ghost antenna on a 50 watt radio.
@paulethier3416Ай бұрын
Yeah, I've had mixed results with the ghost antenna. I've settled on a 1/4 wave NMO mount on a bracket on my roof rack. Happy with the performance and low profile look. Thanks for commenting.
@Barracuda480827 ай бұрын
Height is might, on both ends..so is your power at the antenna . Cable loss plays a huge part in both receive and transmitting
@paulethier34166 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment. I’m still relatively new to this radio stuff and I’m learning something new almost daily. I appreciate the input.
@edwardlemley5222 Жыл бұрын
Antenna and coax are everything. $5 antenna and coax hooked to a $1000 radio and you have a $6 dollar setup.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for commenting.
@ClementhHannah2 ай бұрын
I run a anytime db20g and I have a comet antenna on mine. It seems to pickup really good. The radio is small and the antenna is around 17 inches long
@paulethier34162 ай бұрын
Is the comet antenna a mag mount?
@ljpinna36235 ай бұрын
Hey Paul, on the air here in dalton. Hit the rootapeater in pittsfield next time your in the area.
@paulethier34165 ай бұрын
Ok will give it a try. What channel & tone?
@robertkeyes2586 ай бұрын
Ah you need to drive up to the top of Mount Greylock, you'll get some real DX there.
@paulethier34166 ай бұрын
Some day I’ll give it a try
@joeschnell56958 ай бұрын
Midland makes a 50 watt version of the 275 model that you have. But that one you have to wire direct to car battery. Also the coax on the antenna that came with the radio is EXTREMELY high loss for the frequencies that GMRS operates on. If you were to buy a 1/4 wave nmo antenna and put it on the new mag mount you got, you can compare and see the difference quality coax can make.
@paulethier34168 ай бұрын
Yes sir. I have a 1/4 wave on the way for my NMO hood mount. We will do a video soon actually comparing a ghost antenna and a 1/4 wave. I chose the 275 for that exact reason. With the 12 volt plug I can move vehicle to vehicle so I like the convenience of it. Thanks for the comments.
@horaciolopez7721Ай бұрын
I have a ghost with the mxt575 and lucky to get 4 miles of range. So maybe change the coax that came with it? I bought the package and it came with an additional coax.
@kdracing3941 Жыл бұрын
Greetings from central mass great content just subbed.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I'm happy you enjoyed the video.
@RisingTidesAC20 сағат бұрын
I think that Midland is narrow band only. You might want to upgrade your radio.
@WPGinterceptor460Interceptor5 ай бұрын
umm that 1/4 wave doesnt lose power, its 0Db.. that 5/8 is 4 or 5 DB and it does have a ground plane as the magnet mount IS the ground plane!! and no im not radio police, you just have alot to learn
@paulethier34165 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment. I’m learning almost daily and appreciate constructive feedback.
@WPGinterceptor460Interceptor5 ай бұрын
@@paulethier3416 we all started somewhere.. 50 years ago for me!! Ground plane is VERY important.. What was the issue with the NMO base mount kit antenna with the 4 ground radials??
@charlestimm96969 ай бұрын
When’s the 50 watt base station going in Paul
@paulethier34169 ай бұрын
Soon I hope
@BigInjun058 ай бұрын
Cohoes just a little over sn hour north of me looking to get into gmrs myself
@paulethier34168 ай бұрын
You have a lot of repeaters in your area
@apollomorelos727 Жыл бұрын
was that channel 19 simplex or Repeater 19
@paulethier341611 ай бұрын
Repeater 19
@alvinmorris54048 ай бұрын
When you were showing the swr reading you were standing outside and the door was open I'm just curious if it would be a little better or maybe worse if you were inside the vehicle and the door was closed I know it would sometimes make a difference back in the CB days oops just let my age show lol 😂
@paulethier34168 ай бұрын
Thank you. I knew that but when I got filming I was worried about camera angles and stuff. Total oversight on my part.
@osamaabdelgader94267 ай бұрын
You remind me of me and my wife when I get an antenna, shes the only person that does that with me. than you sir for you great content. Forgot to ask, would it make a difference if the antenna is mounted on the side of the hood ?
@paulethier34167 ай бұрын
Oh yeah we do it all the time she’s a good sport
@stevenbudnick1252 Жыл бұрын
Loved the video. Always looking for repeaters in VT I travel from Bennington to Ludlow/Rutland Killington . It seems to be totally void of any GMRS repeaters. i have same Midland and use their 6 DB antenna.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for commenting. Check out mygmrs.com lots of repeater locations and you can contact the owners for use permission. I don’t think VT has many repeaters but there is one in Hoosick NY that would get you Bennington. Happy you enjoyed the video.
@stevenbudnick1252 Жыл бұрын
thanks, hardly if any repeaters@@paulethier3416
@n2jve19892 ай бұрын
Just curious what repeater were you using when you made the contact in Cohoes as I have a friend that owns a repeater 462.650 I think in Grafton , N.Y. If your up between 6am to 8:15 weekdays there is a traffic net that goes on during that time
@paulethier3416Ай бұрын
Yes, that's the repeater. His name is Bob, right? I've spoken to him when I was testing out my new base antenna. On my base radio its not problem hitting the repeater. On my mobile from here in MA its hit or miss. I've heard the traffic net but in my mobile with poor service I never comment because I thought I would just add some confusion with a broken transmission. I do love listening when I'm in the albany/troy area. Thanks for commenting.
@n2jve1989Ай бұрын
Yep that the guy Bob. We have been friends since the early 90s we are both hams. Take care and have fun!!! Mike
@PhillyTechCheck4 ай бұрын
Can someone leave link to this antenna? That range is Great!
@paulethier34164 ай бұрын
There should be a link in the video description that will take you to a browning antenna. I could not find the Laird at Amazon. It was out of stock.
@DougPoulton Жыл бұрын
You were only putting out 11 watts with your car not running because the radio was only getting 11.8 vdc input power. With your car running the alternator was providing 13.8 to 14.2 vdc to your radio.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for commenting and sharing that information
@bill87510 ай бұрын
Have these radio MFR's not heard of VRM's? That small of a variation should not make a difference if the radio is designed properly. I guess its because its all Chinese made stuff that they can't be bothered to put any effort into the PS in these?
@javabeanz85499 ай бұрын
@@bill875even the Midland radios have that issue. Tried one with the car off, 41W the meter read, started the vehicle, 49W.
@michaelstora702 ай бұрын
@@javabeanz8549Midland are not that good but are acceptable. They are radio on a chip not superheterodyne. Now that they support split tone I would not reject a gift Midland.
@javabeanz85492 ай бұрын
@@michaelstora70 They seem like an Okay radios, but without dual or quad watch, and with a useless S meter, I really don't want one. I have some of their little FRS radios, battery life is poor, range is Okay. My main GMRS radio is a BTech GMRS-50V2, has a much more useful S meter and has dual, triple or quad watch available.
@RadioNest Жыл бұрын
Looks like you changed the coax too. The coax could be a larger percentage of the improvement than the antenna.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
The coax on the stock antenna is part of the antenna and can not be changed. The new coax came with the antenna base. So, yes you are correct. Everything antenna related is new and upgraded from the stock antenna. Thanks for commenting.
@larryjanson40114 ай бұрын
sad for me but i have a ford aluminum truck. there is no magnet that works for me. and i have not found a roof rack for this truck. thought about a rack on the bed right behind the cab. but the manufactures love them to much. but yes a better antenna out does, more power out of the radio.
@paulethier34164 ай бұрын
Look at a hood mount it clips right to the back of your hood with two set screws. It’s in one of my other videos. Here is a link they work well amzn.to/3vBODGY
@TheYodoc6 ай бұрын
You should have removed the 1/4-wave antenna from the roof entirely prior to running the test with your new antenna. Even though the 1/4-wave was not connected, it was still acting as a reflector or a director, as if it was an element on a Yagi, or beam, antenna. You have have been having a null spot which was affecting the performance of the new antenna. BTW the new antenna is a "stacked" collinear-array of 5/8 wave verticals, which gives approximately 3 - 5 dBi of gain over the 1/4-wave vertical. 73 de Larry, K3LT - WSDI872
@paulethier34166 ай бұрын
Thanks for this information. I’m still learning this radio stuff and having some fun in the process.
@HardcoreFourSix11 ай бұрын
did you tune that antenna (for 465 mhz)? 1.5:1 is not bad, but I think 1.2:1 SWR is achieveable with that antenna
@paulethier341611 ай бұрын
I did not tune it, because I’m going to be changing the antenna mount to something other than the magnetic. Once I find out that works well for me, I will tune it at the final installation.
@javabeanz85499 ай бұрын
@@paulethier3416I went with a Nagoya antenna and lip mount myself. NMO200 I think is the antenna model, and I picked up a Nagoya mount to match.
@arlenewolf5260 Жыл бұрын
Now go from your 15 watt radio to a 50 watt mobile and you might actually get another mile. Every little bit helps.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment. I was wondering how far 50 W radio would transmit compared to a 15. Do you think it would only be a mile or so? I was debating about getting a 50 W. I’m not sure it’s worth the investment.
@arlenewolf5260 Жыл бұрын
This is not exact, but a formula that can give you a rough idea (all you experts out there please do not comment negatively on this, I already said it is not exact). You can use the formula that for every 100% increase in power you can estimate approximate a 1 db gain. Pretend you were on CB and someone was doing a 3 on your meter with their 4 watt radio. If they peaked it to 8 watts out they might do 4 pounds on your meter. If they put in hi output finals and were able to put out 16 watts they might do 5 pounds on your meter. If they got 32 watts out they might do 6 pounds on your meter. If they got 64 watts out they might do 7 pounds on your meter. If they got 128 watts out they might do 8 pounds on your meter. If they put a huge amp and got 256 watts out they might do 9 pounds. You get the picture as you go up in power you need to really up your power to get a single "S" unit. Now here is a test you can do. Again this is rough theory. For every 100% increase in height you can estimate a 50% increase in range. If you took a tiny bubble wrap FRS radio on level ground and it was at you mouth level (about five feet off the ground) and it went a mile if you then got on top of a ten foot ladder you might get 1.5 miles. Now on level ground do the same test in a car (by an overpass) and when you run out of range go on top of the overpass and see how much additional range you might get. Do you know where there a 5 story parking garage get on top and that one mile FRS radio might do 4 or 5 miles. Height is everything. On your GMRS radio you saw what a gain antenna did with your mobile. Imagine what a 7-9 DB gain base antenna can do with some height. Although power is not that important I would definitely get the 50 watt radio. It will probably clean up your signals in your fringe areas. I would start like you did. A good gain antenna ultra high quality double shielded coax or for the base antenna maybe hard line and on GMRS base installations keep your coax/feed line as short as possible.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Wow! What a lot of great information. I’m not sure if you saw my video about the CB radio when I went on top of the mountain near my house. I might give that a try with this GMRS and see if I can get anybody to reply just to see what type of distance I’m getting. Thank you for sharing all of this great information and for commenting.
@javabeanz85499 ай бұрын
Using a 50w on the base, I have talked to my brother in law on his 50w mobile, 46 miles away, over a mountain that's probably 1800 feet above direct line of sight. Not that the signal was great, but it was good enough to understand most of what we were saying.
@juanrivera-mq8kf8 ай бұрын
The antenna is it supposed to go on gmrs swr 1.0 or something better like 1.2 no More like 1.58 is not working good
@MarkDecamps Жыл бұрын
Get your ham license as well if you like to play with radios!
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Maybe someday I will. Thanks for commenting.
@NickFrom12289 ай бұрын
Can't disagree. The tech test is really easy so even though it is a test its really not hard so it's worth considering. It really opens up some coms ability.
@che59v Жыл бұрын
Go on 11M ssb and see what real range feels like.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Someday I hope to do just that. Thanks for commenting.
@muddytiresclub426410 ай бұрын
I like having both 11m and GMRS. Local talk and no skip can be nice too. I see them as equally valuable. GMRS repeater with a Zello gateway is tough to beat. I think I showed a video of what it takes. Pretty cheap to do
@che59v10 ай бұрын
@@muddytiresclub4264 even when it comes to local, 11m will do better, as it does not relay on "line of sight" or a repeater to achieve some good range. in a forest or hilly places, uhf is far from being a good option. enjoy both, we put out money on the one option that is a whole rounder. Using the GRMS repeaters is hectic at best, one of the problems with F.M is that its Easly blocked, unlike SSB or AM where few stations could be heard at the same time (the main reason to why aviation is using AM and SSB locally and globally)
@javabeanz85499 ай бұрын
The problem with 11M SSB is that it has all that range with skip. I was on last night and skip was covering a friend just 6 miles away, with a peaked radio. And yes, I have talked from California to Australia on a mobile, so I know the possibilities.
@che59v9 ай бұрын
@@javabeanz8549 There are 40ch (legal ones) to choose from, I never seen a situation where they all been busy. choice of antenna can enable skip to be better for local communications (Ie, directional vs omni directional), it is all question of range, more range = more possibility of faraway communications and noise.
@chris12x18 ай бұрын
what radio was your wife using?
@paulethier34168 ай бұрын
UV5R Baofeng
@curtw8827 Жыл бұрын
That skinny coax on that manufacturer supplied antenna was losing more than half your output power.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for commenting.
@terryshrives83226 ай бұрын
You must have a massive amount of interference over there. I can hit a repeater 30 miles away with my handheld and be legible. My Grandson and I talk on simplex at 7 miles in the city with very little break up.
@paulethier34166 ай бұрын
You’re lucky our line of sight here is limited to about 5-6 miles with max of 10. We can get up on top of the mtn we can go 30 to 40 miles no problem..
@theateranddrama1234 ай бұрын
Please tidradio
@paulethier34164 ай бұрын
I just made a video for the TIDRADIO H3. You should check it out, it’s a great little radio.
@JOHN_COSMO3 ай бұрын
You obviously like the hobby do yourself a favor and get a ham license
@paulethier34163 ай бұрын
Thank you for commenting. Maybe some day I will.
@evocati652328 күн бұрын
Getting into ham is the fastest way to hate the radio hobby, sad hams drain all the joy out of it
@frankpeletz181811 күн бұрын
@@evocati6523 You must be one!
@jesuspompa1473 Жыл бұрын
You have no idea how gain works. If you’re losing power through the antenna it’s through the coax not the physical antenna. The size of the antenna only manipulates gain. Please do research before you put silly things on KZbin.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for pointing out the obvious. Stock antenna and coax compared to a better antenna and coax. Just trying to show the difference between the two. There is no need to be rude.
@jesuspompa1473 Жыл бұрын
@@paulethier3416 you said “that this antenna makes the radio lose half of its power”. You didn’t say coax, cable or even antenna system. If you meant to say coax then use the right words, words matter.
@paulethier3416 Жыл бұрын
No I'm pretty sure I said " It's been estimated by some that this antenna makes the radio lose half its power" Why not leave a comment that says "The stock antenna is losing most of its power because of the very small coax cable that it came with" . I would have responded, "thank you for the comment and sharing this information". Then we can all learn from that statement and your knowledge of antennas. But instead here we are doing this because words aren't the only thing that matter.
@evocati652328 күн бұрын
@@jesuspompa1473your name should be pompous because you're a pompous αss