Radio is wonderful pastime because we can take it as far as we want and there is always more to learn.
@LeeMcc_KI5YPR3 күн бұрын
Thanks, Jim. Good to see you.
@RvtvvideoproduktiesNl3 күн бұрын
Good to see you Jim and keep safe. 73
@19095987Күн бұрын
Jim, thanks for the content you post. It is extremely helpful. I remember our QSO one afternoon where you helped me with the settings on my ICOM 7300. I have never changed those settings after that QSO. I consistently get reports of "great audio" or "beautiful audio" by other radio operators, especially during Parks on the Air activations. I always tell them you were the one who helped make the adjustments. We had spoke briefly once after that during one of the activations and you had asked what the allure of POTA was. Again, thanks for all of your informative content. Best wishes, AI5NQ
@peter-vk3acz4 күн бұрын
Great work as always, Jim. Thank you!
@LazloNQКүн бұрын
Just a great explanation! I recent met a guy who wasn't sure about getting his ham license because he wasn't sure about all the details concerning setting up antennas and the rules of the radio. I broke it down for him based on my experience. I just made a simple dipole with a coiled coax rf choke (which got my family to call it my cantenna) and adjustable ends to tweak the swr. Antennas like this aren't super good performers compared to beams, but they can and do make the radio happy so you can throw out a signal. You can only go up from there! I'm thinking about building a semi-permanent beam using paracord and copper wire. There is no end to the fun you can have with antennas. Thanks for your videos Jim. They are always informative.
@jerryKB2GCG3 күн бұрын
Glad to see another video from you!
@jo347194 күн бұрын
Excellent video I always learn something from them, Thanks!
@YllaStar959703 күн бұрын
Congratulations on reaching 50.1K subscribers, l know this was a milestone you wished to reach.🎙️
@9w8zzkmohamad593 күн бұрын
Great sharing Jim. Take care. God bless you
@gogeorge73 күн бұрын
Great insight Jim. 73 KK3R Houston, Tx
@ka6psdrbeswick7093 күн бұрын
Found this very informative, never even considered the test you conducted. Funny, I just replaced some lmr400 with rg393 and swr went up by .2 now it makes sense. 😊
@RoyGNH3 күн бұрын
Always learning from you as a new General ticket holder! I wish you and your family a wonderful Thanksgiving! All the best 73’s!
@rickgilbrtКүн бұрын
Thanks for the reminder about how coax loss affects SWR. Good to see you on a new video.
@briansauk68372 күн бұрын
Clear and concise with practical example- always enjoy. However, the VF should not come into play. While that does affect where the peaks and minimums occur on the line, the SWR is independent of that. Some meters that don’t make a proper measurement may be affected by that, but not the actual SWR.
@joelaut122 күн бұрын
Great explanation! Makes complete sense, and good to see you. 73 KC2GRN
@Stingmni3 күн бұрын
Hi Jim. Always enjoy your teaching 73
@BillCohron19 сағат бұрын
What an absolutely fantastic explanation. Thank you so much for making videos like this.
@daviddahlgren96033 күн бұрын
That's exactly what I was assuming !
@2140BlackCreek3 күн бұрын
Great explanation and so good to see you Jim! 73 AA7MO
@MrTommy001Күн бұрын
Glad I saw this. I've always thought the 'larger' the coax, the less resistance. But as a newbie ham, what I think rarely coincides with fact . . . 😉
@KE6GRM3 күн бұрын
Thank you Jim. Good to see you. Ai6lz
@robertruth32813 күн бұрын
Great demo Jim. Thanks!
@nickl38724 күн бұрын
Thanks Jim❤
@daviddahlgren96033 күн бұрын
Thanks Jim
@alanpfahler17073 күн бұрын
Thanks for another great video!!
@3henry2143 күн бұрын
The topic of SWR and a lossy coax was one of the things the technician test covered. I knew the correct answer, but not the why behind it. Thanks Jim for finally clearing that up for me. 73 de KN6VMK
@AC9BXEric3 күн бұрын
Ah, that's fun. "My antenna has been up there for 20 years and the SWR is getting better." Well....
@TheRdeanpeek2 күн бұрын
tks Rockland River....🙋
@EndlessWaltz22 сағат бұрын
Thank you so much for the video!
@Scott-bw4og4 күн бұрын
New subscriber and ham. Thanks to you I’ve made fewer mistakes. My first antenna was a discone. Took your advice and bought lmr400 for it. Just put up my first end fed and used the lmr400 and ran rg8x for the discone. Using a nanovna proves your advice to use the best cable you can afford. Thanks.
@JamminJellies3 күн бұрын
I was really proud that my first antenna that I built had great SWR across the 20m band for my privileges. I came to realize later that my cheap coax had a lot to do with it. I would be interested to see a real life comparison between the RG8x and LMR400 and the impact on signal strength from the same antenna with the same power on 10 meters, similar to your video on the impact of power that you did not too long ago. I notice that my received signal reports are typically much better than my sent signal reports on the higher bands. I am using 100’ of RG8x with a 80m off center fed dipole with the feed point at about 35’. Thanks for the video and 73.
@AliReza-zx8km3 күн бұрын
Nice... Thank you sir...
@jimearl14993 күн бұрын
When I read the video title, that was my guess as to why the 8X showed lower SWR. 73, Jim K6KCP across the river from you here in West Sac.
@timg5tm9413 күн бұрын
Good to see these videos keep coming Jim - keep safe. Tim.
@raymondmartin67373 күн бұрын
Thanks, Jim, as always. We wish you good health and a very Happy Thanksgiving. 73 de W2CH Ray and KC2NKU Marylyn. 😅
@michaelpolimer212819 сағат бұрын
Hi Jim, always nice to watch one of your videos........my understanding on what's going on......... Lets say you are putting out 100 watts at the Tx. for simplicity lets say your coax yields 3db of loss so you only have 50 watts at the antenna. Lets say you have a very bad match up there and have 10 watts of reflected power but by the time it gets back to the SWR bridge its only 5 watts (same 3db loss). The meter does its "calculation" using the original 100 watts(all it knows) but only has 5 watts of reflected power to work with so the ratio between forward & reflected power looks a lot better (100:5) there than at the antenna where its 50:10 watts. Only fictional "lossless" coax will yield the same number at both ends of the run. The better the cable the closer you get to the same number at both ends. the way I see it anyway..............be well and enjoy Thanksgiving......73 Mike, K1FNX near Boston
@rogerlafrance63553 күн бұрын
Twice the line loss must be considered, going to the antenna and returning from the antenna. VNA's have a Return Loss scale in Db to make measurements of complex antenna systems easier, a 24Db RL minus 1Db line loss times two equals a 22Db RL about 1.2VSWR at the antenna terminals. Demo, a 10Db pad will read a 20Db RL on a VNA and about a 1.3 on a VSWR meter.
@franzliszt31953 күн бұрын
Very interesting situation well explained. 73
@richardgroves290Күн бұрын
Pahh, no mystery. I had this sussed!
@alanjames45262 күн бұрын
Hi, Jim. Again, an excellent video and explanation. You always amaze me. 73 Alan KZ6B
@aerofart3 күн бұрын
Aha! I was thinking only about the effects of the outer shield and the different lengths, but hadn’t considered that SWR measurement relies on the reflected signal and the loss it experiences in the cable. So this is why measuring measurements should be done at the feed point, correct?
@RB95223 күн бұрын
Nice demonstration. It would be interesting to see what the results would be if the SWR meter was located at the distant (load) end of the cable(s). - 73 WC8J
@happyhome412 күн бұрын
Of course, this begs the question of now that “we” can see that our antenna is working less well than we hoped (and hope is not a plan), what do we do about the antenna ? The “system” question.
@Aimsport-video3 күн бұрын
That’s why I measure SWR at the antenna.
@K4VTE1818Күн бұрын
Curiosity.. what's the 2 boxes behind you on top of with red light on. Fellow ham shacks are always interesting to me. And also very interesting about coax. I never would have though so.
@67rsls3 күн бұрын
Great video Jim as always very informative. Heard you on the air a couple times and was going to try and call you but you were going qrt both times. Hopefully I’ll get to work you at some point. Happy holidays! 73 KB8NEV Rick.
@robertmeyer47443 күн бұрын
Great demo .The loss in coax can hide the actual SWR at the antenna . If taking a outher measurement at the antenna side you will see how a lossy coax can hide the SWR . And better coax will show more true number . Best to tune antenna buy measuring SWR at the antenna . Then if SWR really jumps up then you know you need better coax. You can test coax with a 50 ohm dummy load. then use a 75 ohm load and compare the two. I find a lot of that RG8X sold today ,not so good at all. ABR /DX Engineering / M & P have good versions of RG 8X . But will cost some $$ . A bunch of that RG 8X sold on Amazon and eBay is very lossy and poor quality . Just a waste of money ! I start with buying my coax from a good known source then pick the type and length and ends I want. I bet after re tunning the antenna with LMR 400 it will work a lot better ! 73
@clems69893 күн бұрын
Also, the feedline is acting like an impedance transformer at anything except a perfect SWR .
@mewrongwayKOCXFКүн бұрын
Jim it went higher because more power was reaching the antenna and more being returned.
@user-ef3nu1eh7z3 күн бұрын
So am i expecting the similar response changing from g8x to g213?? I just boughht 200' 213 for 2 runs replacing my smaller lines
@Redbelly3573 күн бұрын
I use the new Bluetooth coax cable. SWR is not an issue.
@analog_guyКүн бұрын
Assuming both the RG8X and LMR400 are of reasonable-quality manufacture, if the two types are compared in on-the-air tests, then no difference, or at most an insignificant difference, will be noted on the HF bands. On the other hand, if something goes wrong with the antenna, the RG8X will provide a bit more protection to the transmitter as compared to the LMR400. So which is better? If you feel good having spent more money on LMR400, then okay, but please don't ever make someone who is using RG8X feel bad about their choice.
@tworkman432 күн бұрын
Hello, I would not think that this difference would be significant. 1:3 vs 1:7 at 14Mhz. I would be curious to know if this difference would be the same on the other HF bands, 7, 21 & 28. Let me presume that the difference would be less noticeable at 7 Mhz vs 28Mhz.
@donaldjones17593 күн бұрын
What would one do to offset the SWR
@socialite12832 күн бұрын
Different line loss in the cable would explain change in SWR.
@Felixgebert-e2n3 күн бұрын
👌👍👏
@jasonpirok3 күн бұрын
So if SWR changes with the wire used in the feedline, how can you ever trust any SWR value?
@revbikerbigd8664Күн бұрын
Add a choke at antenna and do the test again !
@JustinRuth-km4wz9 сағат бұрын
Phase angle and volocity
@franzliszt31953 күн бұрын
Question: why do HAMs do CW with a code with short and long tones? Why not two different frequencies. I was at an ARRL meeting and K6CTW told me if you use two different frequencies, then your transmission rate can increase 10 to 15 percent.
@BrianFields2 күн бұрын
Using 2 (or more) frequencies is called FSK, frequency shift keying. That's what most other digital modes use in some form or other. Listen to RTTY sometime. There are two tones, Mark and Space. CW only requires one oscillator for the one tone.
@ragheadand420roll3 күн бұрын
✌️🇺🇸🙏
@DavidLopez-bz4rj17 сағат бұрын
RG8/RG11 has nearly the same attenuation loss than LMR400. I changed my coax from one to another a few time ago... No difference at all...(VHf, 2 meter band)
@somethingclever12342 күн бұрын
the answer at 3:25
@n6dl32121 сағат бұрын
greater return loss on the RG8x
@TheRetiredtech3 күн бұрын
Simple haven't watched. But less loss will show a higher swr unless you have a perfect match. Now i will see what you say.
@bobrunge75944 күн бұрын
So a higher SWR reading means less of a loss???? 🤔 Bob Runge W1LSZ
@rudolphguarnacci1973 күн бұрын
I don't think you used enough question marks.
@mikesradiorepair3 күн бұрын
In a nutshell yes. VSWR is a ratio of power transmitted to power reflected. With the lower loss coax cable more of the transmitted power makes it to the load (the antenna) and if there is a mismatch at the load some of that power is reflected back to the transmitter. More of the reflected power makes it back to the transmitter with the lower loss coax cable which causes the measured VSWR to increase. The VSWR of the load never changed. What changed was that the lower loss coax cable increased the accuracy of the VSWR measurement because more of the reflected power made it back to the meter and less of it was burned up as heat in the coax. Mike KC3OSD
@bobrunge75943 күн бұрын
@@mikesradiorepair Thank you Mike… appreciate your reply.
@Pioneer9363 күн бұрын
@mikesradiorepair also with lower loss feedline more of the reflected power will reflect back from transmitter back to antenna
@glenmartin24373 күн бұрын
Thank you, Jim. Have a great day, anyway. N0QFT Glen
@richardcallihan97463 күн бұрын
😇73
@RobertYonng3 күн бұрын
Old trick use lossier cable to lower swr at radio.
@rs440olli74 күн бұрын
losses, losses, losses.....
@ham-radio4 күн бұрын
Yes, yes and yes. 73, Jim W6LG
@rs440olli73 күн бұрын
@ham-radio What should perhaps be mentioned or recommended in general in this context is the purchase of a (nano) VNA. And in the application, the calibration of the coaxial cable used. Then there is no longer any doubt and you get clarity about the actual conditions at the feed point. In most cases, the money would also be much better invested in the long term than in more expensive coaxial cable.