So in 2018 my wife passed me down from the loft my ham international CB radio from the 1970s and I switched it on and it bloomin well worked! Put a vertical up and there was two people on in our area. All I was interested in was DX so I went on SSB and got a few contacts into Italy. A really nice lady used to come and chat with us local guys and she went on about how I should get my licence. . . So I did. I was watching your channel as well and thought that it was a natural progression. What a difference. . . I am so pleased with the hobby and the fun that I am having. I don't know why CB is a touchy subject on the ham radio as it was the first form of social media for us before the internet. I was actually taken to the crew room of our life boat station when I casually mentioned that I was interested in taking the exam and the guy who I was introduced to nearly collapsed when I told him that I was going on 11meters SSB. . . . He said that I would have to go to the local club for 3 years before being put through the course, so I did it with Essex ham. Ha Ha. Keep the videos coming. Kind regards Simon.
I wish you made this 16 years ago hahah. I acquired my first cb radio and was so misled and fear-mongered about SWR and blowing up my radio that i barely used the thing. I was not in amateur radio at the time and youtube wasnt all that flooded with trustworthy information at the time. I cant tell how many forums and articles i read that touched on this topic and i was still lost. Thanks for removing the mystery of radio and providing accurate information!
I don't understand, did you not have an SWR meter, or one built into the radio? Why not just think for yourself, and if unsure, research anywhere else online instead of now trusting YT?
@Jeremy Frances I dont understand your inability to comprehend plain English. Do you not know how to read? Was anything I said incoherent? Did you not watch the video? My point was that as a totally new and having no mentor or guidance at the time other than online research, I found minimal trustworthy sources. All CBer's have to worry about is SWR and have they all these crazy theories and schemes for their illegal rigs. I never said I trusted YT, but I trust Callum because he's transparent and actually runs a radio business. Who else should be trusted instead, you? Crawl back under your rock bud. It's much safer for you in there.
Thank you! Those jerks with long, thick, black, imposing, cable hanging low in the wind think they are all that. When the truth is, it is the power that drives the fire from your wire!
An antenna driven element requires something to work against. A dipole, for example, has a driven side and an rf grounded side that work together to transmit. A 1/4 wave cb vehicle antenna will require two components to work, the bit sticking up, and some sort of rf ground. If the vehicle has a metal body, then it is the rf ground. If the vehicle body work is non metalic, the coax will be the antenna rf ground, and it should then be then an appropriate length.
Great video, wish I had the property for a DX commander! I bought the Eurocom hf 360 from UK, will put it up this spring! Chow 73 JohnBoyUtah KJ7TBR 😎🇺🇸📡🎙
@@george-ev1dq If you, (out of your vehicle) connect, your 1/4 wave CB antenna, with it's factory 17.1" coax, to your radio, depending on it's proximity to its surroundings, its SWR should be close to 1:1. Why? As sold, the 1/4 wave antenna is a center fed coaxial dipole, with half of the coax as 1/4 wave stub. So rf travels along the coax (an electrical 1/4 wave length), meets the very high resistance of the end of the quarter wave stub and travels no further. The coax sheath is part of the antenna. A half wave length of coax repeats the impedance of the antenna connected to it. This would be 50 ohms in this case, and is why the coax length is 17.1 feet. Installing a CB antenna in a metal bodied vehicle, causes the antenna to now be a ground plane antenna, as the body of the vehicle is now the rf ground. This is why you trim the antenna length, to match it to the vehicle's body electrical characteristics. I hope this helps.
Just this past weekend I went through all of this, exactly, but all calculations made in feet (468 / freq in mhz) with my grandson. I have the Rig Expert AA-54, which graphs. We built a dipole, deliberately made the wire a few inches longer than calculated. The dip was offset just as you showed. We recalculated from there, cut 1.5" from each side, centered the dip right around Ch. 20. SWR was 1.5 on Ch. 1, 1.2 on Ch. 20, and 1.4 on Ch. 40. But he got to see all this first hand. A great lesson! He could not transmit... he had his Dad's CB, but could not find the microphone.
My grandson called me a few days ago. He tore the store room apart looking for the mic, no luck. I ordered him one which should be there any day. I've got him lined up for a ham cram, so maybe he'll get licensed.
There’s so many funny “rules and guidelines” when it comes to swr, feedlines and power. But one thing is definitely true and that’s if you let the smoke out, something stops working. It’s all about the smoke. 😂😂😂 KZ5Y
When I was into CB here in the US back in the 90's, I was told coax had to be cut in 3 foot intervals due to SWR. I didn't know any better, so when I bought my base antenna coax, it was 51 feet long. Fast forward to 2020 when I got my ham license, I'm thinking back to this coax and the 3 foot interval and it doesn't make sense, and I can't believe the malarkey that people I trusted spewed. Thanks, Cal. All the best. Cheers. KO4QOA
About 30 years back I was on the CB an moving over to ham. I was listening to some girl speaking about looking at two CB radios. An saying we got the other one as the swr was lower. I did try and explain how to measure it. And to re cal the forward 1st. It was like speaking to a goldfish. Telling her it looks lower as the output power is lower.
I can’t even begin to imagine what was wrong with my setup in the 70’s. it wasn’t grounded, the coax (RG8) was cut to length from the 60’ high wilson shooting star (4v 4h elements) antenna to the radio in the basement. the antenna was simply adjusted to the measurements in the instructions. i did have an archer swr meter but that’s nothing like having a rigexpert analyzer. I do remember getting shocked all the time if my hand was on the mic and I brushed up against the amp. I was just thrilled that my parents even allowed this monstrosity to be attached to the side of the house.
Um. Not being critical....but..... the biggest clue to your issue is summed up in one word from your post.....Amp The archer SWR meter is fine..even in todays tech, it's fine....not as fancy as other things out there, but still an accurate measure of the match between the radio and antenna...if used correctly
I agree with you. I have always tried to keep my coax runs as short as possible. Once you know loss per 100 ft, its easy to figure out your line losses. If the length of your coax affect your swr then something is wrong somewhere in the system and it's most likely your antenna. Nice explanation Callum 73's Gary KF6EWO
Brings to mind the phrase "the complex conjugate" when matching 50 ohm rigs to an antenna that is anything but a 50 ohm antenna, I have been doing this for many years.
@@paulm0hpd319 Hello Paul - catching up all the comments here, your call seems familiar, have I worked you on 80 meters before maybe you were mobile?? Jerry KC2UT here
First time that I have seen some of this info. Helped me realize that I was using the WRONG ANTENNA which gave me too high of SWR. The correct antenna has just been ordered.
Hahaha….I remember something about this argument for more than 40 years!!! Laughed then, and still laughing about it. As an RF expert (now retired), it simply and easily ID’s those that don’t have a fundamental understanding of…. Well, I don’t want to pour any salt on wounds, but you did a very nice job of letting the air out of a few balloons. And yes, I had 10 or 12 extra feet of RG-8 coiled up on the floor by the window where it went outside to the antenna. One friend just couldn’t stand that. Hahahaha. Good job!!! …as usual…
As an RF expert, what are your thoughts on CMC in regard to this one? After all, 18 feet is close to three quarters of a wavelength of 0.66 coaxial on at least one channel of the 27Mhz citizen's band.
You have not answered my question. You said that anyone that believes in this IDs them as not having any fundamental idea about RF theory, and you claim to be an RF expert. Did you forget your transmission line theory? Probably best you delete your post to save any further embarrassment.
@@arconeagain I'm not an expert. I don't trust anyone who says so. I'm a practical scientist. Call a professor at the local university if you want to speak to ao.eone about theory. Beware that I'm not alerted to comment threads so you won't probably receive another reply unless I'm lucky and happen to spot it.
@@DXCommanderHQ my comment was directed at your mate Roland, aka self proclaimed RF expert. It's truly amazing what you see, hear and read here. I mean, imagine a radio enthusiast saying they don't care about CMC. It was obviously a desperate bid in covering up a video blunder, your apostles might have followed the breadcrumb trail if they had a brain between the lot of them. Wait til I tell my mate about this one. He's a ham since god knows when, who takes great joy in watching fellow hams... well, just be hams. Remember this, it's called 'amateur' radio, for a reason.
Like yourself Callum I never could understand why operators wanted the one to one swr like it made all the difference...well explained and 100% correct....Top mam 73s Callum
Trying to explain this to a friend of mine who’s a trucker has been absolutely maddening 😂. I sent him this video, but I’m fighting his 40 years of “experience”. This myth is very firmly rooted in many of the CB “technicians” minds.
You tried! Imagine the problem though.. A DX Commander with multiple elements from say 80m through to 10m.. Now .. Guess how long the coax should be! LOL Actually, Tom (M0RMY) sent me his SWR curves.. It's on our website under FAQ.. That'll stump him!
Great video. In my younger days, on CB, everyone said you have to use 11 feet of coax on a 102 inch whip mobile antenna for everything to work right. Over a short period of time I figured out that was baloney! Thank you Cal! 73s ND4A
In the mid ‘70’ s rule of thumb was 11 feet 10 inches of 8u cable for 23 channels ! Had 40 ft. SWR was 1.1 across the spectrum ! 5/8 wave radio shack antenna and got out like a champ !
New to CB radio. Installed one in my vehicle and then a base in the home. This helped me understand SWR and answered a lot of questions I didn’t know to ask.
Your videos are not only informative but entertaining as well. Sometimes I get lost for hours watching them and when I do I always learn things. Thanks for doing what you do.
Lol, Cal. It reminds me of the 70,s when my oldest friend had a CB shop doing literally thousands of installs. Most people dont understand characteristic impedence any better now. Most vertical antennas have a characteristic impedence of about 37 ohms, not 50 ohms, so around a SWR of about 1.2. The mythical 18 foot coax came about from the Ford LTD sized land yatchs needing about that much coax to go from the radio under the dash to the 102in whip on the rear bumper. Many many times someone would install antennas in horrible places, like dual center loaded CB antennas behind the cab of a pickup or on the roof gutters on a Pinto, so either too close to the cab. Or too close together. So we would trim the coax to make the radio see a lower SWR. As you go along the traveling wave you can pick a length using the published velocity factor that will transform the impedence seen by the radio. IE: a 75 ohm antenna can be tuned to 50 ohms by using a 1/4 wave of 75 ohm. A transmission line that is terminated in some impedence Zl, that is different from the characteristic impedence Z0 will result in a wave being reflected from the termination back to the source. At the input to the line the reflected voltage adds to the incident voltage and the reflected current subtracts (because the wave is traveling in the opposite direction) from the incident current. The result is that the input impedence of the line (ratio of voltage to current) differs from the the characteristic impedence and for a line of length L is determined by a formula i cant post using my phone lol. Look up Quarter Wave Impedence Transformer in Wikipedia. There is a good explanation and the formula. You absolutely can transform the characteristic impedence of the line to match the input impedence of the system. Does it make a difference? Not really in this instance, the wave still sees an impedence mismatch at the 37 ohm antenna and sends energy bouncing back to the input, it just bounces back at a phase angle that lets the radio see closer to 50 ohms. Lets all remember that the 50 ohm standard was chosen as a compromise between the 37 ohms of an unbalanced vertical antenna and the roughly 73 ohms of a resonant dipole at 1/2 wave above ground.
The amount of arguments i've had on this point! One thing that can exacerbate it is if someone has a problem with common mode currents on the outside of the coax, It can upset swr measurements, And as common mode currents ARE on the outside of the braid they are not involved with the velocity factor. So you get the illusion that the coax length thing is true. Good explanation by the way, Can you imagine setting up a top band antenna in a vehicle if you had to use a half wave of coax, velocity factored or not!!! 73 de Mark
In this particular instance/example, that is, using 18ft of 66% velocity factor of coaxial feedline for a typical mobile installation, you'll find that you 'do' take the velocity factor into consideration.
Hi Callum,,Agree totally, that said with coax becoming an impedance transformer with an antenna feedpoint mismatch, the radio will see different impedances with different lengths, you spoke about half wave lengths repeating feedpoint impedance perhaps another video on feedline impedance transforming to completely eliminate the myths 👍
@@DXCommanderHQ I am sure you won't be out of your depth, I think it's a totally misunderstood subject that needs someone with a platform you have to help dispel the myths ,although you've mentioned most of where the myths have developed from every length with a feedpoint mismatch will show the radio a different impedance ,think more on this point may help with the understanding of the subject, also common mode current can cause issues with different lengths
You sounded like the much needed SWR-therapist for CB-guys. I know my uncle was also very picky about the channels to be used because the SWR was good there... 73!
I used to feed it with odd multiples of electrical quarter wave. For the simple reason to have a low voltage feed point limiting arcs. High voltage nodes were aproximately detected with a small neon light on a stick😀 That was many many years ago 😂
Arcing? Well, unless you are running seriously high power, I wouldn't worry about that. I mean kilowatts - and the first thing to go would be the connectors, flash over of insulation etc.. BUT unless you actually measured the velocity factor, you would probably be wasting your time.
That's funny because I got a coax a week ago just got into CB's and then my coax broke in my door (was just testing everything) I ended up pinching and breaking it and then a friend tested it and said I had horrible swr and I seen the break and just recrimped my lines, I ended up hooking it back up and noone knew I shortened it to like 8.5 foot. He checked my swr again and boom it was awsome 1.1 -1.2 and everyone said it shouldn't work after I fixed it but it works great lol 😄
I don't understand the animosity to CB with some radio hams, radio is radio, it's all good fun. I used your calculator to tune my Signature 9, I built it and cut according to the chart, but I wanted the CW end of the bands, I adjusted the length the calculator gave me and it was spot on the desired frequency, saved me hours of mucking about with an analyser and side cutters.
Wow been on and off CB for 45 years, and all I've ever heard is it's all about the length.of your coax, and it's never been a problem with me anyway.but just at the end of your video you said,if I got some extra wire I would coil it up anyway . which has only just clicked that you coil up the ARIEL, bottom ,middle or its on the top , so the moral of the story is it don't matter.thank you very much . DX COMMANDER.ALAN IN LUTON 💯👍
Truckers are smart, but they do not really understand radios and antennas very well. The CB companies and other industries industry has long taken advantage of their relative ignorance of scientific things to sell them snake oil of various sorts from radar jammers to anti glare interior cab lights to fuel line magnets. Are two antennas better than one...etc
Thank you. I feel better about shorting the one in my truck. Built a homemade pvc/copper ground plane for the garage from mower junky to match 38lsb. Now I have a kenwood 490 and can go all over the place. The auto tuner is Awsome for that. Even learning a bit about fm on 26.805.
Most cb antenna, where the vehicle has a fiber glass body, must use the coax shield as part of the antenna's radiating element, like one side of a center fed dipole for example. If the vehicle body is metal, then the metal body would provide the driven element something to work against, and coax length would be irrelevant . If one could drive around with a ground plane antenna, like the example in the video, coax length would also be irrelevant. Thanks for sharing.
A mistake I've seen CB'ers make is that they get hyper worried about SWR. As you've stated, there's not much actual difference in performance between a 1:1 SWR and a 2:1 SWR. I've seen people think that there's a huge power gain if they get a 1.2:1 SWR down to 1:1. That they're gaining a ton of performance. I've seen people change out a 50 foot length of RG-8 or RG-213 for a lossy 100 foot length of RG-58 because then their SWR reads 1:1. With only 4 watts of transmit power they're losing performance both transmitting and receiving. Using the lowest loss and shortest run of coax and tuning the antenna for a reasonable SWR is best. Thanks for your video! 73 de AF7FP.
CB'ers do seem obsessed with getting as low as possible SWR. I wrote these figures down a while back. SWR % POWER OUT 1.0 100 1.1 99.8 1.2 99.2 1.3 98.3 1.5 96 2.0 88.9 3.0 Not Good 75 I aim for under 2, 1.5 better. 1.5 and below is great. All QRP here, 5 Watts or less so still 4.8 Watts at 1.5. G4GHB.
Hi Callum, it struck me today the best argument about not cutting coax to length. To anybody new reading here, think about this! An SWR meter is not an isolator. The aerial side is not somehow independent of the input side. It is a fancy connector with a meter just like any coax coupler making two cables into one. Cutting a cable just adds to the other one through the meter. A waste of time cutting it. As we amateurs say, there's no point in trimming coax inch by inch to a specific length. G4GHB.
I've been enjoying radio of many forms for nearly 3 decades. When conditions are right, I have more fun on CB. Amateur has exponentially more things to do and frequencies to enjoy, but I just have more fun on 11 meter - when conditions are right.
My last real CB setup had a quarter wave antenna centered on top of a commercial van. The antenna and coax were tuned with a $25 000 Vector Voltmeter I happened to have at work. A stock JC penny 40 channel SSB radio could talk from Oklahoma City to Oslo like it was down the block. Now, you can get a vector analyzer for $60. There's no excuse for running around with a miss matched rig and antenna.
I would like to add for the CB'ists that when you run a really long way to your antenna, RG58 is better than RG213, as it gives you a much lower SWR at your transceivers side 😂 - and bringing the antenna down right above ground gives even a better SWR (and saves the worms from getting a cold) 😜 Oh, yes, thinking of all those myths takes me back to my early 90s CB years. Thank you for the memories! 😊
As a newly licensed ham I once installed a 150 foot run of RG8 going up the tower to my 440 MHz beam. I checked the SWR after install and found it was a good 1.2:1 all the way across the band. Then I noticed I had forgotten to connect the other end to the antenna and it was just hanging open at the top of the tower.
I’ve always thought that 18 foot coax idea was bunk. After doing a lot of research into shortwave radio and scanners, and building antennas for them, I was always scratching my head at the whole 18 foot thing. It just didn’t make any sense. Now I know. Thanks for clearing that up. And yes, ALWAYS use the best quality coax intended for your application. I know that good coax is very expensive, but it is what it is.
You now 'know' from one guy's opinion on YT? The same guy that basically opened with, 'I'm not an expert on transmission line theory'? C'mon mate, surely you have the ability to think and reason for yourself.
It is nonsense. The RSGB Handbook nowhere mentions cutting coax to specific lengths for a particular aerial, either in the modern one or one I have from 1974 with a couple in between. They baffle people with figures. It sounds good. I remember in a pub way back someone saying, "You're only a radio amateur but he's a CB'er". I was speechless. Overnight CB'ers became experts in radio where it took me some studying to get my licence. Perhaps I should have taken up CB, I'd obviously know more overnight! 73, G4GHB.
@@bill-2018The driven element of an antenna requires an rf ground to work against. With most antenna the rf ground is built into it, like a center fed dipole for example. Where the rf ground component is build into the antenna, coax length is irrelevant. With a mobile antenna, the rf ground is the vehicle body, unless it's none metalic, and then the coax shield will become the rf ground, including whatever else is available. va3hr va3pet
@@petertyrrell6690 I've used a gamma match and delta match for driven elements. Yes a badly bonded coax to the vehicle can cause problems and the coax acts as a counterpoise earth. 73, G4GHB.
This myth about coax length also circulated in America. Some people even crammed all that coax into their cars. I was working in a Radio Shack back then and amazed the clientele with soldered connections rather than just twisting the wires together!
Back in the day I drove a truck when CB was big. When I wanted something done I’d go to a tech and ask them about coax length. If they started talking about the myth I’d leave. Seemed like a good way to find somebody that I could trust to fiddle my gear. 😁
I called President and asked them about cable length and was told it does not matter. I ordered a RigExpert AA650 Zoom and a bunch of antennas and cables and will do my own testing. What is right is what works. I have solar panels on my van roof and need to find out if they are affecting my antennas also.
Back in my CB days (just before the FCC gave up on it) I was fortunate to have a couple of local hams that helped with fixing up the radio I had at the time (23 channel Cobra 138 with Siltronix vfo, AND had an extra crystal board for 10 meters!! Got it dirt cheap, too!), and giving advice on radio in general (like if you think you NEED a linear, put your antenna up another 40 feet) Now that I'm a ham, I can't seem to find ANY "friendly hams" to help (local, anyway, nearest club is 40 miles away and haven't contacted their contact after WEEKS) and the ham bands are about as bad as CB now!!! Have a radio and antenna (gave up looking for radios online, everyone seems to want almost as much for their junk as a NEW radio, got a closet full of them as proof, so I bought new) just need to get the antenna up and the radio on the air!! Great video!! DE KE8NFK
The millions of conversations I've had explaining to people that what they say is some kind of nonsense would have been simpler had I known there was such a myth! Thanks for making me realize where it came from.
Used the ARRL antenna book to build a magmount that way around '77. The vertical is a hand wound helical about 5' tall that comes apart midway for storage. And since rare earth magnets weren't available, used two aircraft radar magnetron magnets to hold it down. Leave those in place for 24 hours and it takes both hands to unstick them. All hand tuned, no "stinger" necessary and the swr meter sits there and says "what's swr?".
The only time I take coax length into account is when I'm using multiple antennas and I'm taking phase into account. Or if I want to play around with circular polarisation with a cross Yagi. I do prefer to use ladder feed on base antennas because of the loss efficiency. Plus of course I can make a non resonant antenna outperform a resonant antenna ;-)
Dealing with plotted curves works the same way in photography. Moving the gray scale around to achieve the properly printed print on paper. Subject matter is another entirely different matter. The way you explain it hit a DUH nerve and becomes so simple. The confusion and terror has wafted away like a fart in fast sports car.
in the 90s I also heard many theories on conductive but non-magnetic antennas and supports, I saw the coax cable cut for cb in multiples of half a wave, calculated on channel 20, also calculating the speed factor of the cable and a speed of light of 198,000 Kmh why not in free space where it is calculated at 300K, all for a CB with 4W, anyway RG213 is the minimum to use. Thank you🙂
I'm not sure what you're saying on how they calculated the length, but why not a half wavelength or more? This way you can actually see the impedance of the antenna when you plug in your analyser. As for 213 minimum, that's just ridiculous. In a mobile setting? Quality RG58 is fine, and far more practical. The difference in losses is negligible, and couldn't possibly be detected on a receiving meter. That's about the stupidest thing I've read on YT in quite some time. Where do you people get off?
@@arconeagain There was talk of fixed and non-mobile installations, try to stay on topic and not daydream, in the channel I have never seen road tractors, trucks, boats or cars, and usually for a 5/8 antenna between descent from the mast and section to get to the CB there they are more than 20 meters, yes the RG58 is fine in a car or truck, I brought back a theory from the 90s, dear wise man !
@@winterburan well maybe be less vague with your comments. I still don't understand what you're saying about the length calculation. What's wrong with the 198 if they're using a usual mil spec RG213 or 58?
I’ve installed different lengths of coax mainly RG8X RG400, RG142 or RG58A/U between the antennas and radios from 12’ to 50’ and it depends on how far the antenna is from the radio and never had any issues but as long as the antenna is tuned.
I've been looking at this for a few years. The problem with mobile antennas is that they are using the vehicle for a counter poise. If it's a poor ground, the outer shielding of the coax will be the counter poise. Cutting it short or coiling it up will change the value of that counter poise. KO4UGN
What do you consider a poor ground? some of my best results, mobile, have been with a mag mount as near to the middle of the car, so the outer shield has no connection to ground? I think a lot of confusion with anything antenna related is that as people who have a good knowledge of electronics we forget that radio is electro-magnetic :) (I may have misunderstood but I agree if you are driving a fibreglass car, that would provide a poor ground for radio)
@@robrs2000 A magnetic mount is nice. I use one on my pickup. It came with a long cable attached. But, I think it's designed to use the vehicle as a ground plane. As I understand it, the RF doesn't see the base as an open, but passes through easily to the ground side of the coax. That works well on a steel roof top. When you buy an antenna at the truck stop, it's usually made to mount on the mirror and it's packaged for the rocket scientists that relocate the freight across the interstate system. The bodies of the modern tractors that they pilot are made of plastic, fiberglass and aluminum. They hang an antenna on the mirror mount and it needs a counterpoise. I've actually added a counterpoise on my rig, but it didn't change much because I had already run a ground wire from the mount all the way to the chassis. I have a 1:1.6 SWR with no tuner. I use a tuner, though because I slip into spare trucks, sometimes that haven't had as much thought put into their antennas. And my coax is much shorter than the eighteen feet recommended by antenna manufactures.
@@eyeinidas Yes, I thought at the end of my reply that you may be talking plastic cab type situation. I have always wondered, with a big trailer if there is any millage in a wire antenna down the length of the trailer, probably not very convenient if you are always swapping trailers :)
@@robrs2000 It would be fun to try. I also pull these old steel tanker trailers. I want to mount an antenna on that thing and see what kind of range I get. It would require a longer cable to reach. I don't think I would loose to much on HF running a little long all the way back to the trailer midpoint.
A half wave end fed antenna with a 49:1 unun without a counterpoise andr RF choke will use the coax shield as the other half of the antenna and thus the length of the coax will affect the SWR.
I always did the opposite for swr and antenna length. If it's lower on 1 than on 40 the antenna wants to be shorter. If lower on 40 than on 1 the antenna wants to be longer. The swr is pointing the direction the antenna needs to be adjusted.
It's very simple, coax length depends on two conditions, 1) if the antenna has a load match inductor at the base, the 2 PL259 contacts produce a closed circuit 2) no inductor, the 2 PL259 contacts produce an open circuit, , , So condition 2 has to have a coax that has a critical length !!
@@DXCommanderHQ Hmmmm, , the velocity factor does not effect length or frequency, 300 / 27.555 = 10.887mtr / .66 = 16.495mtr : 300 / 16.495mtr = 18.197mhz, , , so is it 27.555 or 18.197, of cource it is still bloody 27.555 ha ha, i have found it is allways good to have an objective opinion, i find i learn more !!, , , i do like your video's tho, they get me thinking, , ,
I run 9ft or 12 ft of rg213 coax works good on a t680 semi truck just put right antenna on truck and get good swr and range using a rigexpert antenna analyzer i like ones with white center insulator of the pl259 connector never liked the purple or yellow one cause was told white ones handle more heat to not melt when running high power through it
Reflected power is always additive and is not wasted as heat. The trick is to get reflected power 180° out of phase or as close as you can get to 180° out of phase. With the copper losses, and with the velocity factor of the feedline, you have to get the length just right before you can get the phase just right to have additive power on each reflection. It is possible, but you can only get really lucky before all power is additive. All feedlines of any kind are different from any manufacturer in copper losses, velocity factor, and reflective structures the feedline passes close to. In what was said in the video here, you just have to trust to luck !!
Long ago I found length of coax from radio to ant doesnt matter. RG8 for longer runs tho. Back in 1972 I installed a homemade halfwave antenna 20' up an oak tree. Ran RG8 10' down and 12 ' over to my awning, another~ 20' to a front window then about 8' in to my base station (Realistic Navaho). Roughly 50 ft total. I was about 2mi as the crow flies NE from the junction of Rte 301 and Rt4, elev ~60'. I could talk with truckers on 301 almost 18 miles both N & S and 4 E & W.. (with a 1/4 on the trunk of my convertible - SWR on19 1.3 - barely 4mi.) Part of a small net, we helped traffic much as possible during bad weather. Gone are those days and they cut the oak tree down in '81 after storm damage. ☹☹ BTW in closing. Now a days where I live (with limited height available) I find that a full 1/4 vertical fiberglas with a short ~4' car roof top ant makes a fair 1/2 wave dipole. PS Id like to hear if someone tries TWO of those short loaded antennas joined as a dipole. 73's to all from a very OM.
Callum i think the biggest problem cb experts have is they are taught and use commercially manufactured antennas. Antenna performance depends on a lot more than manufacturers statistics. Like you I build my own antennas. Matched to their feedline i rarely have over a 1: 1 swr As an example my 20 meter homebrew dipole at 32 feet above the ground. Gets me some great coverage as i live in a valley. My furthest calls to date is half way around the world on 5 watts ssb( from pennsylvania usa to France, Scotland, and Russia) There is a lot more to antennas than just swr! I dont fault the cb experts because they may not have had the proper education. I highly recommend they get the arrl antenna guides and handbooks. Love all you videos!! 73 Ted Kc3tec
Mate, keep going on with references and information to CB. Afterall, I think most would have come from CB roots and interests and if it inspires others to further their interests then it can only be a good thing for the hobby. I for one play on the cretin's and Free band and enjoy it immensely and I have to say from my experience that it is nothing like it was in the 70-90's. But I am gathering up my knowledge to go sit my STD license soon. There's an awful lot of Hams that get on the "Cretins Band, Childrens Band, Chickens Band" as its shouted out behind the scenes and don't or won't admit to it but they do. BTW, you have reinforced my perception of SWR and feed lines and antenna theory not just this video, but all the other videos you do and hang out waiting for your future videos. It's great that some of the horseshit out there is being called out for what it is. Now if I can only educate a mate of mine, I'd be happy, but I don't think there is any changing some people.
Yeah.. Actually I would say that in the MAJORITY of cases (certainly in the last 5-10 years) the snobbery of ham radio ops agains CB is now in reverse. It seems to be *SOME* CB ops who think the ham radio community are from some different planet and we all grow vegetables or discuss the latest doctors appointments. Most - correction - ALL of my mates on ham radio don't have an issue with 27MHz. Includes me..
Also - how often are antennas actually the true 50 ohms at resonance in the real world?, ie how high above ground is the antenna?, is it close to other wires? what about that 40 feet of roof gutter sitting less than 1/2 wavelength away underneath the antenna etc . . . . Anyways - all good stuff Cal! Another great video...... Current project here is a coax fed 3 wavelength per side 10 meter Vee beam looking northeast towards Europe, the Vee is up about 40 feet (the legs of which are each approx 100 feet long)..... It is un-terminated so am getting good results also in reverse to the south-west... So far is good results on 10/12/15 meters, though the ups and downs in propagation keep it more than interesting, not to mention the local snow and ice storms in the midst of the current project hihi ! Is nice to have one antenna with gain for more than one band and two directions. WWV on 25 MHz is super loud on this antenna
I have never seen a vertical under 45 Ohms (even with 1,000 feet of 32 x radials. And I have never seen a tuned dipole out of spec by more than around 80 ohms. Therefore, I'm a 1.5:1 man myself.
Re the 100ft per leg Vee Beam here, I have now added an "ugly choke" at the feed point, 10 turns Rg6 on a 7 inch form, and then to a 1:6 Type 31 transformer to the 2 vee wires, and is working noticeable better! I Tx here at semi QRP 50 watts. My 25 MHz WWV reception here went from S9 +10 to S9+20 with most recent feed-point mods.... Am being heard quite well I believe... Is nice to TX 14-30 MHz in style once again....
What a Brilliantly 'Simple' vidclip .... Loved it.... Like the way that you 'Call a Spade a F.... Shovel ', No messing around ..... :-) :-) :-) Best to You and Yours and All 'Radio Hacks' out there.... Cheers from ChCh, NZ WR 2451 / KK 2451
@@DXCommanderHQ Thanks for the Reply Callum .... OK .... "WR" .... = World Radio 'Group', ..... and "KK" ... = Kiwi and Kangaroo 'South Pacific' .... A more 'Local' CB Radio Group... Thanks for the 'Attic Antenna' vidclip .... Also a Very informative and entertaining vidclip ..... Best to You and Yours from Christchurch, New Zealand
Following on from your comment about a dirty balun using the excess coax. If you use a length of coax that is an odd number of quarter wavelengths (adjusted for velocity factor), then this will also act as a really good attenuator for common mode current running on the outside of the coax. I wish I had known this when I was a CB operator. One advantage of becoming a licensed amateur radio operator is that you get to learn all this stuff through the courses for the exam, and the support and knowledge of the guys in the local radio club. Keep up the good work, Callum. I look forward to your nets on Fridays. 73, David - M0NMI.
You have the answer! For example, a quarter wave antenna has a low common mode input impedance. By employing 3/4 wavelength of coax, you transform this impedance. And as my earlier post read, coax with a velocity factor of 0.66 at 27.055 (truckie ch) will be almost exactly 18ft long (1.38mm short). So it is not a myth at all! One very good reason to minimise CMC in the car is for noise suppression.
You know you could still be a cb operator and apply what you learned. It's not too late . CB radio still has a place for you! Dxing is legal to do now and the skip is rolling. 73s
Turns out David Blake has the answer, and I am very keen to see a response to this. I've done some research and a little refreshing, and it looks like this is not a myth at all. I'd like to think I was halfway there. This is a common topic of ridicule on forums, in particular, Amateur. It's up there with patch lead lengths, and there are quite a few comments here making fun of it, and CBers in general. From what I can tell, 18ft of RG-58 coaxial on a design frequency, acts as a common mode input impedance transformer. That is, from low to high. It so happens that a 3/4 wavelength, taking in the velocity factor, lands right on the truckie channel (27.055). As I said previously, just 1.378mm under 18ft. If Mr Blake is correct, and the information I read is right, who's laughing at who now?
What do you mean? You responded to David by saying you don't really care about CMC. No point being deflective over a valid subject, one you raised, and I really believe this is the reason for 18ft. You stated at the beginning of this presentation that you're no expert on transmission lines, and then in the next breath state that it's all a myth, and laugh about it. Your theory or so called proof is really quite flimsy and vague, and not really pertaining to the subject at all. I think David and I have it. This theory and practice is also importantly employed in circuit and PCB design as common mode gets into everything. Noise suppression in a vehicle makes perfect sense, but that's just one reason. Don't forget that CMC works both ways too, you will likely transmit spurious emissions. So when the FCC approved for hundreds of thousands of moving transmitters for the public throughout the country, you want the best practice possible with installations. This theory likely coming from early broadcast and military practice, not HAMS.
@@DXCommanderHQ like I said in another comment, I will do a practical on it at some stage. Not just for this scenario, I want to do various tests with CMC and choke placement. For example, how far from the feedpoint of certain antennas. Just got to build a CMC meter.
When I first heard about 18ft, I just assumed it was a 3/4 wave matching for a 1/4 wave whip with a poor ground plane which would be >50 Ohm (6ft being too short for most applications) and that the general public misunderstood that as 1/2 wavelength. In theory 6, 18, 30 ft should act as a matcher.
@@DXCommanderHQ My canvas top 6x6 Pinzgauer has always been a challenge for CB. I haven't touched the setup in a couple years (before I owned a VNA). I got pretty good results with 6ft of coax. I was considering adding radial wires under the canvas. The off road club I belong to is migrating to GMRS anyway. There are a couple amatures in the group but we did not want to make a technician license a barrier to entry. Anyway I love your channel and am learning so much and more importantly unlearning some misinformation.
Good video, back in the 80s we didnt care about the length of the Coax, it was more important to get the SWR down as far as we could, now i dont live in the Uk have moved to Australia they are anal about Coax and how long it should be, i still go on about the SWR and coax is as long as it needs to be to set up a base station, and as long as the SWR is as low as it can go thats good enough for me. Can you do a video on the Clarifier, i call them 12 O'clock here as they will not use to clarifier to tune in a station that may be off frequency, we know not all test equipment is not equal and there is going to be a slight difference, you go out for a radio check and all you get back is, Your Off Frequency, and thats it, instead of saying drop down a couple and getting the other station to get back on they ignore you. Just subscribed and given you a big thumbs up from this expat 60+ yr old Teddy Boy...
Hey hello. Yes, I think you also dropped me an email.. I have no idea what people don't want to use the RIT knob. I do all the time. Some gear is off by a whisker. We should just use it..
Stick a dummy load on any length of coax you will get a 1 to 1, so any length does not matter, its the tuning to 50ohm's of the antenna on the coax line.
This has always been a disputed topic. I talk 11 meter, so I talk CB on a ham radio (President HR2510), plus a pile of vintage ssb cb radios. The dispute is the jumper coax length between the transmitter/amp/external swr-power output meter...
@@DXCommanderHQ yea, some say at least 3 feet of coax between transceiver and amp, some say 6-9 feet, and there's even a guy that has 18 feet coiled up behind the desk. I'm currently only running 2 feet of coax and it seems to work fine... your thoughts on this?
If the swr changes with different coax length, that means the shield of that coax is hot with RF and in fact radiating. Those who direct feed dipoles with no balun may experience this, or shoddy designs of verticals may experience this. Callum is spot on about coax length in a properly working antenna system. The length of the line shouldn't matter except excess adds loss.
That's often the case with mobile radios installed in cars and trucks because the don't have a good rf ground or radials for a counterpoise. Cars and trucks are made out of plastic and fiberglass, these days. Lol
The length of the line doesn't matter if you have a good match. It DOES matter if you have a poor match, because there are standing waves on the line. Where you measure makes a difference when you have a poor match because of what the VSWR meter actually measures - voltage. This is why some people believe changing the coax length fixes bad SWR when all it does is fool your meter.
@@stargazer7644 exactly this. Well matched no problem. Bad match will give different SWR at different points along the coax depending on the wavelength.
Your right about CB people becoming hams, when I was a kid in 1964 I bought a CB wanting to be a ham but learning code was too much for me at the time.✋73's🎙 KD9OAM🎧📻📡
Good advice as always Call. I extended my first mobile CB antenna with a paperclip to get the SWR right, as I got the USA on the low power (4 Watts I think) that my CB had it worked well! Coax is one of the most misunderstood parts of our radio set up. As an M7 I have to work at getting everything as efficient as possible, something the Tech holders in the States miss out on, as they can just turn up the power to overcome any losses in there set up. 73 Jim M7BXT
Good but could have spent more time around what happens when the antenna is not 50 ohms You mentioned it briefly. The other day I was building a 1/4 wave vertical with 4x 1/4 horizontal radials. The SWR would not behave. All radials and the vertical were telescopic so it was easy to make adjustments but it took time. The 1st breakthrough was when I added around 75cm of coax and the swr came right down. Then I swapped that out for a 1:1 UNUN which helped heaps. Suddenly the antenna started to behave and tuning became as one would expect. I will put the antenna on the vna and see what the impedance really is then perhaps I can add a cheeky capacitor.. It's mainly as an experiment but I knew someone once who had something similar and it worked amazingly well. I'm currently building another 2x verticals. One is a copy of a Maco V5000 or v58 but with copper ring, I took the top parts from a Sirio GPE, ordered some more tubing and some aluminium rings. I tapped into to them and as a prototype I added the 5.6M telescopic antenna and set them to around 1/4 wave. The other antenna is the base of the sireo with the lower section replaced with 50cm of new tube just up from the loading coil then aluminium threaded tube riveted in the top of that to take another of those 5.6M telescopic antenna. Like this I can set it up for portable super fast. Just the 3 radials a small mast and presto. It's not too heavy either so should go well on about 6M of glass fibre spiderbeam mast and a car wheel base..
Frankly, the antenna you described SHOULD have been 50 ohms in the first place.. See my latest video. And describing what happens when the antenna is NOT 50 ohms is way beyond the scope of coax lengths for CB. It's more "science" based which would be ham radio specific.. But anyway, have fun. PS - ruclips.net/video/dMB6l6kByEg/видео.html
@@DXCommanderHQ The 1/4 wave with 4x 1/4 wave verticals would have been around 50 ohms if the radials were descending at 45 degrees but with my test they were at 90 degrees and there was no mast to compensate. I used a plastic mast to see the true tune of the antenna. I now plan to add an induction ring between the radials and the driven vertical and possible a trombone cap design within the middle there. Regarding the other antenna I built. The copy of the Maco V5000. It works amazingly well. In one day I had contacts across the globe from Latvia to Canada From Usa to Brazil and also Gibraltar amongst many more.
I also want to add mate that they use the coax quite often to tune the system. Some of the amplifiers they make have such bad tuning they use the coax to trick the radio into a proper load. I’m sure they will be along to argue with you mate. Cheers.
@@DXCommanderHQ it's not wrong Callum it's just another way to provide a conjugate match to the transmitter to produce its maximum power into the system, reflections by Walt Maxwell covers this subject at great length
@@DXCommanderHQ using feedline as an impedance transformer is not wrong what's wrong is not understanding that feedlines become impedance transformers with a mismatch
Thanks for the explanation. Can you explain a bit further why lengthening and shortening my antenna when I’m tuning has a dramatic effect on my SWR but the length of the coax doesn’t matter please?
Because the antenna is like the string in a piano however the coax are just the keys you hit it with. Coax length doesn't matter. Bloody good question!
So in 2018 my wife passed me down from the loft my ham international CB radio from the 1970s and I switched it on and it bloomin well worked! Put a vertical up and there was two people on in our area. All I was interested in was DX so I went on SSB and got a few contacts into Italy. A really nice lady used to come and chat with us local guys and she went on about how I should get my licence. . . So I did. I was watching your channel as well and thought that it was a natural progression. What a difference. . . I am so pleased with the hobby and the fun that I am having. I don't know why CB is a touchy subject on the ham radio as it was the first form of social media for us before the internet.
I was actually taken to the crew room of our life boat station when I casually mentioned that I was interested in taking the exam and the guy who I was introduced to nearly collapsed when I told him that I was going on 11meters SSB. . . . He said that I would have to go to the local club for 3 years before being put through the course, so I did it with Essex ham. Ha Ha. Keep the videos coming.
Kind regards Simon.
Hey Simon.. BRILLIANT story :)
I wish you made this 16 years ago hahah. I acquired my first cb radio and was so misled and fear-mongered about SWR and blowing up my radio that i barely used the thing. I was not in amateur radio at the time and youtube wasnt all that flooded with trustworthy information at the time. I cant tell how many forums and articles i read that touched on this topic and i was still lost. Thanks for removing the mystery of radio and providing accurate information!
Ah cool!
I don't understand, did you not have an SWR meter, or one built into the radio? Why not just think for yourself, and if unsure, research anywhere else online instead of now trusting YT?
@Jeremy Frances I dont understand your inability to comprehend plain English. Do you not know how to read? Was anything I said incoherent? Did you not watch the video? My point was that as a totally new and having no mentor or guidance at the time other than online research, I found minimal trustworthy sources. All CBer's have to worry about is SWR and have they all these crazy theories and schemes for their illegal rigs. I never said I trusted YT, but I trust Callum because he's transparent and actually runs a radio business. Who else should be trusted instead, you? Crawl back under your rock bud. It's much safer for you in there.
It is NOT the length of your coax that matters….. it is how you use it! 😂
Keep telling yourself that if it makes you feel better :)
Thank you! Those jerks with long, thick, black, imposing, cable hanging low in the wind think they are all that. When the truth is, it is the power that drives the fire from your wire!
Mine's thicker?
@@indridcold8433 RG/58 is rated at only 400 watts. RG/8 is rated at 1,500+ watts.
The correct length of coax is the distance from the antenna to the radio. Period.
An antenna driven element requires something to work against. A dipole, for example, has a driven side and an rf grounded side that work together to transmit. A 1/4 wave cb vehicle antenna will require two components to work, the bit sticking up, and some sort of rf ground.
If the vehicle has a metal body, then it is the rf ground. If the vehicle body work is non metalic, the coax will be the antenna rf ground, and it should then be then an appropriate length.
Great video, wish I had the property for a DX commander! I bought the Eurocom hf 360 from UK, will put it up this spring! Chow 73 JohnBoyUtah KJ7TBR 😎🇺🇸📡🎙
@@petertyrrell6690 BOLLOCKS
@@george-ev1dq If you, (out of your vehicle) connect, your 1/4 wave CB antenna, with it's factory 17.1" coax, to your radio, depending on it's proximity to its surroundings, its SWR should be close to 1:1. Why? As sold, the 1/4 wave antenna is a center fed coaxial dipole, with half of the coax as 1/4 wave stub. So rf travels along the coax (an electrical 1/4 wave length), meets the very high resistance of the end of the quarter wave stub and travels no further. The coax sheath is part of the antenna.
A half wave length of coax repeats the impedance of the antenna connected to it. This would be 50 ohms in this case, and is why the coax length is 17.1 feet.
Installing a CB antenna in a metal bodied vehicle, causes the antenna to now be a ground plane antenna, as the body of the vehicle is now the rf ground. This is why you trim the antenna length, to match it to the vehicle's body electrical characteristics.
I hope this helps.
@@petertyrrell6690 Nope, co-ax length is a myth
Satisfying to watch., You're a master.
In 10 minutes painted a picture that taken me years to wrap my head around..
Just this past weekend I went through all of this, exactly, but all calculations made in feet (468 / freq in mhz) with my grandson. I have the Rig Expert AA-54, which graphs. We built a dipole, deliberately made the wire a few inches longer than calculated. The dip was offset just as you showed. We recalculated from there, cut 1.5" from each side, centered the dip right around Ch. 20. SWR was 1.5 on Ch. 1, 1.2 on Ch. 20, and 1.4 on Ch. 40. But he got to see all this first hand. A great lesson! He could not transmit... he had his Dad's CB, but could not find the microphone.
Ah!
My grandson called me a few days ago. He tore the store room apart looking for the mic, no luck. I ordered him one which should be there any day. I've got him lined up for a ham cram, so maybe he'll get licensed.
There’s so many funny “rules and guidelines” when it comes to swr, feedlines and power. But one thing is definitely true and that’s if you let the smoke out, something stops working. It’s all about the smoke. 😂😂😂 KZ5Y
When I was into CB here in the US back in the 90's, I was told coax had to be cut in 3 foot intervals due to SWR. I didn't know any better, so when I bought my base antenna coax, it was 51 feet long. Fast forward to 2020 when I got my ham license, I'm thinking back to this coax and the 3 foot interval and it doesn't make sense, and I can't believe the malarkey that people I trusted spewed. Thanks, Cal. All the best. Cheers. KO4QOA
i know.. We all fell for it!
About 30 years back I was on the CB an moving over to ham. I was listening to some girl speaking about looking at two CB radios. An saying we got the other one as the swr was lower. I did try and explain how to measure it. And to re cal the forward 1st. It was like speaking to a goldfish. Telling her it looks lower as the output power is lower.
Speaking to a goldfish! LOL
I can’t even begin to imagine what was wrong with my setup in the 70’s. it wasn’t grounded, the coax (RG8) was cut to length from the 60’ high wilson shooting star (4v 4h elements) antenna to the radio in the basement. the antenna was simply adjusted to the measurements in the instructions. i did have an archer swr meter but that’s nothing like having a rigexpert analyzer. I do remember getting shocked all the time if my hand was on the mic and I brushed up against the amp. I was just thrilled that my parents even allowed this monstrosity to be attached to the side of the house.
Brilliant!
Um. Not being critical....but..... the biggest clue to your issue is summed up in one word from your post.....Amp
The archer SWR meter is fine..even in todays tech, it's fine....not as fancy as other things out there, but still an accurate measure of the match between the radio and antenna...if used correctly
I agree with you. I have always tried to keep my coax runs as short as possible.
Once you know loss per 100 ft, its easy to figure out your line losses. If the length
of your coax affect your swr then something is wrong somewhere in the system
and it's most likely your antenna. Nice explanation Callum 73's Gary KF6EWO
That's it!
I agree, if the antenna is right, the coax can be any length. Coils and common mode chokes can be a good thing, if you have excess.
Brings to mind the phrase "the complex conjugate" when matching 50 ohm rigs to an antenna that is anything but a 50 ohm antenna, I have been doing this for many years.
EXACTLY!!!! think this has been overlooked here
@@paulm0hpd319 Hello Paul - catching up all the comments here, your call seems familiar, have I worked you on 80 meters before maybe you were mobile?? Jerry KC2UT here
@@jerrym1183 possibly ,mainly mobile upto recently
First time that I have seen some of this info. Helped me realize that I was using the WRONG ANTENNA which gave me too high of SWR. The correct antenna has just been ordered.
Hahaha….I remember something about this argument for more than 40 years!!! Laughed then, and still laughing about it. As an RF expert (now retired), it simply and easily ID’s those that don’t have a fundamental understanding of…. Well, I don’t want to pour any salt on wounds, but you did a very nice job of letting the air out of a few balloons. And yes, I had 10 or 12 extra feet of RG-8 coiled up on the floor by the window where it went outside to the antenna. One friend just couldn’t stand that. Hahahaha. Good job!!! …as usual…
Hey Roland.. I find it difficult to speak "English" sometimes!
As an RF expert, what are your thoughts on CMC in regard to this one? After all, 18 feet is close to three quarters of a wavelength of 0.66 coaxial on at least one channel of the 27Mhz citizen's band.
You have not answered my question. You said that anyone that believes in this IDs them as not having any fundamental idea about RF theory, and you claim to be an RF expert. Did you forget your transmission line theory? Probably best you delete your post to save any further embarrassment.
@@arconeagain I'm not an expert. I don't trust anyone who says so. I'm a practical scientist. Call a professor at the local university if you want to speak to ao.eone about theory. Beware that I'm not alerted to comment threads so you won't probably receive another reply unless I'm lucky and happen to spot it.
@@DXCommanderHQ my comment was directed at your mate Roland, aka self proclaimed RF expert. It's truly amazing what you see, hear and read here. I mean, imagine a radio enthusiast saying they don't care about CMC. It was obviously a desperate bid in covering up a video blunder, your apostles might have followed the breadcrumb trail if they had a brain between the lot of them. Wait til I tell my mate about this one. He's a ham since god knows when, who takes great joy in watching fellow hams... well, just be hams. Remember this, it's called 'amateur' radio, for a reason.
Like yourself Callum I never could understand why operators wanted the one to one swr like it made all the difference...well explained and 100% correct....Top mam 73s Callum
Ah thanks Alan!
Trying to explain this to a friend of mine who’s a trucker has been absolutely maddening 😂. I sent him this video, but I’m fighting his 40 years of “experience”. This myth is very firmly rooted in many of the CB “technicians” minds.
You tried! Imagine the problem though.. A DX Commander with multiple elements from say 80m through to 10m.. Now .. Guess how long the coax should be! LOL Actually, Tom (M0RMY) sent me his SWR curves.. It's on our website under FAQ.. That'll stump him!
Great video. In my younger days, on CB, everyone said you have to use 11 feet of coax on a 102 inch whip mobile antenna for everything to work right. Over a short period of time I figured out that was baloney! Thank you Cal! 73s ND4A
got to love the old 102in whip cb 1/4 wave... looks crazy but it works... like 80 bucks to set one up now. i have done moved on to vhf/uhf kd5rch
In the mid ‘70’ s rule of thumb was 11 feet 10 inches of 8u cable for 23 channels ! Had 40 ft. SWR was 1.1 across the spectrum ! 5/8 wave radio shack antenna and got out like a champ !
New to CB radio. Installed one in my vehicle and then a base in the home.
This helped me understand SWR and answered a lot of questions I didn’t know to ask.
Brilliant!
Your videos are not only informative but entertaining as well. Sometimes I get lost for hours watching them and when I do I always learn things. Thanks for doing what you do.
Awe, thanks friend!
Lol, Cal. It reminds me of the 70,s when my oldest friend had a CB shop doing literally thousands of installs. Most people dont understand characteristic impedence any better now. Most vertical antennas have a characteristic impedence of about 37 ohms, not 50 ohms, so around a SWR of about 1.2. The mythical 18 foot coax came about from the Ford LTD sized land yatchs needing about that much coax to go from the radio under the dash to the 102in whip on the rear bumper. Many many times someone would install antennas in horrible places, like dual center loaded CB antennas behind the cab of a pickup or on the roof gutters on a Pinto, so either too close to the cab. Or too close together. So we would trim the coax to make the radio see a lower SWR. As you go along the traveling wave you can pick a length using the published velocity factor that will transform the impedence seen by the radio. IE: a 75 ohm antenna can be tuned to 50 ohms by using a 1/4 wave of 75 ohm. A transmission line that is terminated in some impedence Zl, that is different from the characteristic impedence Z0 will result in a wave being reflected from the termination back to the source. At the input to the line the reflected voltage adds to the incident voltage and the reflected current subtracts (because the wave is traveling in the opposite direction) from the incident current. The result is that the input impedence of the line (ratio of voltage to current) differs from the the characteristic impedence and for a line of length L is determined by a formula i cant post using my phone lol. Look up Quarter Wave Impedence Transformer in Wikipedia. There is a good explanation and the formula. You absolutely can transform the characteristic impedence of the line to match the input impedence of the system. Does it make a difference? Not really in this instance, the wave still sees an impedence mismatch at the 37 ohm antenna and sends energy bouncing back to the input, it just bounces back at a phase angle that lets the radio see closer to 50 ohms.
Lets all remember that the 50 ohm standard was chosen as a compromise between the 37 ohms of an unbalanced vertical antenna and the roughly 73 ohms of a resonant dipole at 1/2 wave above ground.
Well, you know even my 12.4 installation with 1,000 feet of 32 radials only measured 45 ohms.. I can't get it any lower...!
You’ve cleared up a few things on antennas, SWR and coax length! Thank you from VE3NMW.
Great to hear!
The amount of arguments i've had on this point! One thing that can exacerbate it is if someone has a problem with common mode currents on the outside of the coax, It can upset swr measurements, And as common mode currents ARE on the outside of the braid they are not involved with the velocity factor. So you get the illusion that the coax length thing is true. Good explanation by the way, Can you imagine setting up a top band antenna in a vehicle if you had to use a half wave of coax, velocity factored or not!!! 73 de Mark
HAHA
In this particular instance/example, that is, using 18ft of 66% velocity factor of coaxial feedline for a typical mobile installation, you'll find that you 'do' take the velocity factor into consideration.
Hi Callum,,Agree totally, that said with coax becoming an impedance transformer with an antenna feedpoint mismatch, the radio will see different impedances with different lengths, you spoke about half wave lengths repeating feedpoint impedance perhaps another video on feedline impedance transforming to completely eliminate the myths 👍
Hmmm. I wonder if I might become out of my depth..!
@@DXCommanderHQ I am sure you won't be out of your depth, I think it's a totally misunderstood subject that needs someone with a platform you have to help dispel the myths ,although you've mentioned most of where the myths have developed from every length with a feedpoint mismatch will show the radio a different impedance ,think more on this point may help with the understanding of the subject, also common mode current can cause issues with different lengths
@@DXCommanderHQ lets have coax shoot out,,and but the myth and theorys to the test.,,,would be intresting results.
You sounded like the much needed SWR-therapist for CB-guys. I know my uncle was also very picky about the channels to be used because the SWR was good there... 73!
Yeah Anton, I was schooled in SWR the moment I bought my radio! Like it was SO BLOOMIN IMPORTANT!!
The text from that company did not simply state SWR, it stated SWR readings. See if you can figure it out.
I used to feed it with odd multiples of electrical quarter wave. For the simple reason to have a low voltage feed point limiting arcs. High voltage nodes were aproximately detected with a small neon light on a stick😀
That was many many years ago 😂
Arcing? Well, unless you are running seriously high power, I wouldn't worry about that. I mean kilowatts - and the first thing to go would be the connectors, flash over of insulation etc.. BUT unless you actually measured the velocity factor, you would probably be wasting your time.
That's funny because I got a coax a week ago just got into CB's and then my coax broke in my door (was just testing everything) I ended up pinching and breaking it and then a friend tested it and said I had horrible swr and I seen the break and just recrimped my lines, I ended up hooking it back up and noone knew I shortened it to like 8.5 foot. He checked my swr again and boom it was awsome 1.1 -1.2 and everyone said it shouldn't work after I fixed it but it works great lol 😄
HAHA. You proved them wrong! :)
I don't understand the animosity to CB with some radio hams, radio is radio, it's all good fun. I used your calculator to tune my Signature 9, I built it and cut according to the chart, but I wanted the CW end of the bands, I adjusted the length the calculator gave me and it was spot on the desired frequency, saved me hours of mucking about with an analyser and side cutters.
>> "radio is radio, it's all good fun" - well said Ron :)
Ditto, we have to break the stigma. We are all on the same boat just with different sized paddles.
Thank you for explaining it in simple terms
Glad it was helpful!
Wow been on and off CB for 45 years, and all I've ever heard is it's all about the length.of your coax, and it's never been a problem with me anyway.but just at the end of your video you said,if I got some extra wire I would coil it up anyway . which has only just clicked that you coil up the ARIEL, bottom ,middle or its on the top , so the moral of the story is it don't matter.thank you very much . DX COMMANDER.ALAN IN LUTON 💯👍
YES SIR! Finally :)
Truckers are smart, but they do not really understand radios and antennas very well. The CB companies and other industries industry has long taken advantage of their relative ignorance of scientific things to sell them snake oil of various sorts from radar jammers to anti glare interior cab lights to fuel line magnets. Are two antennas better than one...etc
Depends if you want a voltage peak or current peak on the end of your coax. Half wave or full wave determines that.
Bob Ross of CB! Learned a lot, thank you!
Thank you. I feel better about shorting the one in my truck. Built a homemade pvc/copper ground plane for the garage from mower junky to match 38lsb. Now I have a kenwood 490 and can go all over the place. The auto tuner is Awsome for that. Even learning a bit about fm on 26.805.
Great idea!
"I can't drink your poison", that's great.
You talk about CB, I guess it applies to any transmision line on any band.
Yes Sir.
I was told this in the 80s, cut my coax in full and half wave lengths and have been laughing ever since.
This so you can look at your antenna impedance from the shack.
Most cb antenna, where the vehicle has a fiber glass body, must use the coax shield as part of the antenna's radiating element, like one side of a center fed dipole for example.
If the vehicle body is metal, then the metal body would provide the driven element something to work against, and coax length would be irrelevant .
If one could drive around with a ground plane antenna, like the example in the video, coax length would also be irrelevant.
Thanks for sharing.
A mistake I've seen CB'ers make is that they get hyper worried about SWR. As you've stated, there's not much actual difference in performance between a 1:1 SWR and a 2:1 SWR. I've seen people think that there's a huge power gain if they get a 1.2:1 SWR down to 1:1. That they're gaining a ton of performance. I've seen people change out a 50 foot length of RG-8 or RG-213 for a lossy 100 foot length of RG-58 because then their SWR reads 1:1. With only 4 watts of transmit power they're losing performance both transmitting and receiving. Using the lowest loss and shortest run of coax and tuning the antenna for a reasonable SWR is best. Thanks for your video! 73 de AF7FP.
All good points!
CB'ers do seem obsessed with getting as low as possible SWR. I wrote these figures down a while back.
SWR % POWER OUT
1.0 100
1.1 99.8
1.2 99.2
1.3 98.3
1.5 96
2.0 88.9
3.0 Not Good 75
I aim for under 2, 1.5 better. 1.5 and below is great. All QRP here, 5 Watts or less so still 4.8 Watts at 1.5.
G4GHB.
CB'ers can also use impedance matchers we HF hams use. CB is between 10 and 12m.
You give me hope to understand what I used to know when I was younger. lol
Hi Callum, it struck me today the best argument about not cutting coax to length.
To anybody new reading here, think about this!
An SWR meter is not an isolator. The aerial side is not somehow independent of the input side.
It is a fancy connector with a meter just like any coax coupler making two cables into one. Cutting a cable just adds to the other one through the meter. A waste of time cutting it.
As we amateurs say, there's no point in trimming coax inch by inch to a specific length.
G4GHB.
Good point.
I was found the correct length was enough to reach from the radio to the antenna plus a bit extra to make in easier to connect
I've been enjoying radio of many forms for nearly 3 decades. When conditions are right, I have more fun on CB. Amateur has exponentially more things to do and frequencies to enjoy, but I just have more fun on 11 meter - when conditions are right.
Ha yes it’s the good old “I swapped RG58 for RG8 and my station has been transformed” myth!
Groans! LOL
@@DXCommanderHQ hahahaaa 😂
My last real CB setup had a quarter wave antenna centered on top of a commercial van. The antenna and coax were tuned with a $25 000 Vector Voltmeter I happened to have at work.
A stock JC penny 40 channel SSB radio could talk from Oklahoma City to Oslo like it was down the block.
Now, you can get a vector analyzer for $60.
There's no excuse for running around with a miss matched rig and antenna.
Please don't tell me you actually cut the coax specifically for the match? 50 ohms is 50 ohms :)
Half of the fun is experimenting.
Thanks Callum!
Yeah.. great!
Fantastic as always Callum! 73
I would like to add for the CB'ists that when you run a really long way to your antenna, RG58 is better than RG213, as it gives you a much lower SWR at your transceivers side 😂 - and bringing the antenna down right above ground gives even a better SWR (and saves the worms from getting a cold) 😜 Oh, yes, thinking of all those myths takes me back to my early 90s CB years. Thank you for the memories! 😊
As a newly licensed ham I once installed a 150 foot run of RG8 going up the tower to my 440 MHz beam. I checked the SWR after install and found it was a good 1.2:1 all the way across the band. Then I noticed I had forgotten to connect the other end to the antenna and it was just hanging open at the top of the tower.
HAHA!
@star gazer - that's SO FUNNY!
@@stargazer7644 Ham Radio is your Career? That’s really strange?😵💫🎙
@@1OFGODSOWN lol yeah I guess so. Words are hard.
I’ve always thought that 18 foot coax idea was bunk. After doing a lot of research into shortwave radio and scanners, and building antennas for them, I was always scratching my head at the whole 18 foot thing. It just didn’t make any sense. Now I know. Thanks for clearing that up. And yes, ALWAYS use the best quality coax intended for your application. I know that good coax is very expensive, but it is what it is.
You now 'know' from one guy's opinion on YT? The same guy that basically opened with, 'I'm not an expert on transmission line theory'? C'mon mate, surely you have the ability to think and reason for yourself.
It is nonsense. The RSGB Handbook nowhere mentions cutting coax to specific lengths for a particular aerial, either in the modern one or one I have from 1974 with a couple in between.
They baffle people with figures. It sounds good.
I remember in a pub way back someone saying, "You're only a radio amateur but he's a CB'er". I was speechless. Overnight CB'ers became experts in radio where it took me some studying to get my licence.
Perhaps I should have taken up CB, I'd obviously know more overnight!
73, G4GHB.
@@bill-2018The driven element of an antenna requires an rf ground to work against. With most antenna the rf ground is built into it, like a center fed dipole for example. Where the rf ground component is build into the antenna, coax length is irrelevant.
With a mobile antenna, the rf ground is the vehicle body, unless it's none metalic, and then the coax shield will become the rf ground, including whatever else is available.
va3hr va3pet
@@petertyrrell6690 I've used a gamma match and delta match for driven elements.
Yes a badly bonded coax to the vehicle can cause problems and the coax acts as a counterpoise earth.
73, G4GHB.
This myth about coax length also circulated in America. Some people even crammed all that coax into their cars. I was working in a Radio Shack back then and amazed the clientele with soldered connections rather than just twisting the wires together!
Amazing.
good to know. btw a francis cb antennae makes the purfect am/fm talk stick.
Back in the day I drove a truck when CB was big. When I wanted something done I’d go to a tech and ask them about coax length. If they started talking about the myth I’d leave. Seemed like a good way to find somebody that I could trust to fiddle my gear. 😁
Good tip!
My favorite YT channel. Cal, you are the man! Waving from my tech bench. 73👋🏻
Waves back!
There's a lot of people out there tricking themselves, and their SWR meters with a pair of wire cutters and a roll of coax!
I called President and asked them about cable length and was told it does not matter. I ordered a RigExpert AA650 Zoom and a bunch of antennas and cables and will do my own testing. What is right is what works. I have solar panels on my van roof and need to find out if they are affecting my antennas also.
Back in my CB days (just before the FCC gave up on it) I was fortunate to have a couple of local hams that helped with fixing up the radio I had at the time (23 channel Cobra 138 with Siltronix vfo, AND had an extra crystal board for 10 meters!! Got it dirt cheap, too!), and giving advice on radio in general (like if you think you NEED a linear, put your antenna up another 40 feet)
Now that I'm a ham, I can't seem to find ANY "friendly hams" to help (local, anyway, nearest club is 40 miles away and haven't contacted their contact after WEEKS) and the ham bands are about as bad as CB now!!! Have a radio and antenna (gave up looking for radios online, everyone seems to want almost as much for their junk as a NEW radio, got a closet full of them as proof, so I bought new) just need to get the antenna up and the radio on the air!!
Great video!!
DE KE8NFK
Friendly hams.. I don't find that. Most people seem happy to help from what I hear.
The millions of conversations I've had explaining to people that what they say is some kind of nonsense would have been simpler had I known there was such a myth! Thanks for making me realize where it came from.
Yes, OK ! :)
Coax length is very important it must be at least long enough to reach between the radio and the antenna.😊
Good point!
Used the ARRL antenna book to build a magmount that way around '77. The vertical is a hand wound helical about 5' tall that comes apart midway for storage. And since rare earth magnets weren't available, used two aircraft radar magnetron magnets to hold it down. Leave those in place for 24 hours and it takes both hands to unstick them. All hand tuned, no "stinger" necessary and the swr meter sits there and says "what's swr?".
The only time I take coax length into account is when I'm using multiple antennas and I'm taking phase into account. Or if I want to play around with circular polarisation with a cross Yagi. I do prefer to use ladder feed on base antennas because of the loss efficiency. Plus of course I can make a non resonant antenna outperform a resonant antenna ;-)
Dealing with plotted curves works the same way in photography. Moving the gray scale around to achieve the properly printed print on paper. Subject matter is another entirely different matter. The way you explain it hit a DUH nerve and becomes so simple. The confusion and terror has wafted away like a fart in fast sports car.
Yes, it's quite simple really..
Enjoy your radio and get on the air that's all that's matters.
Have a good day Callum
Motters M7TRS 73 👍🏻
Very true!
in the 90s I also heard many theories on conductive but non-magnetic antennas and supports, I saw the coax cable cut for cb in multiples of half a wave, calculated on channel 20, also calculating the speed factor of the cable and a speed of light of 198,000 Kmh why not in free space where it is calculated at 300K, all for a CB with 4W, anyway RG213 is the minimum to use. Thank you🙂
Haha!
I'm not sure what you're saying on how they calculated the length, but why not a half wavelength or more? This way you can actually see the impedance of the antenna when you plug in your analyser. As for 213 minimum, that's just ridiculous. In a mobile setting? Quality RG58 is fine, and far more practical. The difference in losses is negligible, and couldn't possibly be detected on a receiving meter. That's about the stupidest thing I've read on YT in quite some time. Where do you people get off?
@@arconeagain There was talk of fixed and non-mobile installations, try to stay on topic and not daydream, in the channel I have never seen road tractors, trucks, boats or cars, and usually for a 5/8 antenna between descent from the mast and section to get to the CB there they are more than 20 meters, yes the RG58 is fine in a car or truck, I brought back a theory from the 90s, dear wise man !
@@winterburan well maybe be less vague with your comments. I still don't understand what you're saying about the length calculation. What's wrong with the 198 if they're using a usual mil spec RG213 or 58?
I’ve installed different lengths of coax mainly RG8X RG400, RG142 or RG58A/U between the antennas and radios from 12’ to 50’ and it depends on how far the antenna is from the radio and never had any issues but as long as the antenna is tuned.
You got it.
I've been looking at this for a few years. The problem with mobile antennas is that they are using the vehicle for a counter poise. If it's a poor ground, the outer shielding of the coax will be the counter poise. Cutting it short or coiling it up will change the value of that counter poise. KO4UGN
What do you consider a poor ground? some of my best results, mobile, have been with a mag mount as near to the middle of the car, so the outer shield has no connection to ground? I think a lot of confusion with anything antenna related is that as people who have a good knowledge of electronics we forget that radio is electro-magnetic :) (I may have misunderstood but I agree if you are driving a fibreglass car, that would provide a poor ground for radio)
@@robrs2000 A magnetic mount is nice. I use one on my pickup. It came with a long cable attached. But, I think it's designed to use the vehicle as a ground plane. As I understand it, the RF doesn't see the base as an open, but passes through easily to the ground side of the coax. That works well on a steel roof top.
When you buy an antenna at the truck stop, it's usually made to mount on the mirror and it's packaged for the rocket scientists that relocate the freight across the interstate system. The bodies of the modern tractors that they pilot are made of plastic, fiberglass and aluminum. They hang an antenna on the mirror mount and it needs a counterpoise. I've actually added a counterpoise on my rig, but it didn't change much because I had already run a ground wire from the mount all the way to the chassis. I have a 1:1.6 SWR with no tuner. I use a tuner, though because I slip into spare trucks, sometimes that haven't had as much thought put into their antennas. And my coax is much shorter than the eighteen feet recommended by antenna manufactures.
@@eyeinidas Yes, I thought at the end of my reply that you may be talking plastic cab type situation. I have always wondered, with a big trailer if there is any millage in a wire antenna down the length of the trailer, probably not very convenient if you are always swapping trailers :)
@@robrs2000 It would be fun to try. I also pull these old steel tanker trailers. I want to mount an antenna on that thing and see what kind of range I get. It would require a longer cable to reach. I don't think I would loose to much on HF running a little long all the way back to the trailer midpoint.
I got into 11 meter SSB, even had a four element Quad. Finally transitioned to amateur radio about 2010. 73.WW5MB
Yeah, I had a PDL2 - great antenna!
I came from CB, a friend of my dad's got me interested and he was a CB operator before getting his ticket.
Nice!
A half wave end fed antenna with a 49:1 unun without a counterpoise andr RF choke will use the coax shield as the other half of the antenna and thus the length of the coax will affect the SWR.
It will because the coax is part of the antenna.. When it's NOT part of the antenna (most 50 ohm systems), length doesn't matter.. Just loss.
I always did the opposite for swr and antenna length. If it's lower on 1 than on 40 the antenna wants to be shorter. If lower on 40 than on 1 the antenna wants to be longer. The swr is pointing the direction the antenna needs to be adjusted.
What's funny, I bought some coax a while ago for sdr and wondered why the hell it was sold in 18 ft lengths.... Makes more sense now!
Ah!!
It's very simple, coax length depends on two conditions, 1) if the antenna has a load match inductor at the base, the 2 PL259 contacts produce a closed circuit 2) no inductor, the 2 PL259 contacts produce an open circuit, , ,
So condition 2 has to have a coax that has a critical length !!
And that would improve your signal... Yeah OK.
@@DXCommanderHQ The way you describe it, by magic, the transmitter corrects the phase along the coax to antenna, , , Yeah OK !!
@@DXCommanderHQ Hmmmm, , the velocity factor does not effect length or frequency, 300 / 27.555 = 10.887mtr / .66 = 16.495mtr : 300 / 16.495mtr = 18.197mhz, , , so is it 27.555 or 18.197, of cource it is still bloody 27.555
ha ha, i have found it is allways good to have an objective opinion, i find i learn more !!, , , i do like your video's tho, they get me thinking, , ,
I run 9ft or 12 ft of rg213 coax works good on a t680 semi truck just put right antenna on truck and get good swr and range using a rigexpert antenna analyzer i like ones with white center insulator of the pl259 connector never liked the purple or yellow one cause was told white ones handle more heat to not melt when running high power through it
Excellent and helpful video. I hear so many myths associated with this subject.
Reflected power is always additive and is not wasted as heat. The trick is to get reflected power 180° out of phase or as close as you can get to 180° out of phase. With the copper losses, and with the velocity factor of the feedline, you have to get the length just right before you can get the phase just right to have additive power on each reflection. It is possible, but you can only get really lucky before all power is additive. All feedlines of any kind are different from any manufacturer in copper losses, velocity factor, and reflective structures the feedline passes close to. In what was said in the video here, you just have to trust to luck !!
Or give up and install a flux capacitor.
Long ago I found length of coax from radio to ant doesnt matter. RG8 for longer runs tho.
Back in 1972 I installed a homemade halfwave antenna 20' up an oak tree. Ran RG8 10' down and 12 ' over to my awning, another~ 20' to a front window then about 8' in to my base station (Realistic Navaho). Roughly 50 ft total.
I was about 2mi as the crow flies NE from the junction of Rte 301 and Rt4, elev ~60'.
I could talk with truckers on 301 almost 18 miles both N & S and 4 E & W.. (with a 1/4 on the trunk of my convertible - SWR on19 1.3 - barely 4mi.)
Part of a small net, we helped traffic much as possible during bad weather. Gone are those days and they cut the oak tree down in '81 after storm damage. ☹☹
BTW in closing. Now a days where I live (with limited height available) I find that a full 1/4 vertical fiberglas with a short ~4' car roof top ant makes a fair 1/2 wave dipole.
PS Id like to hear if someone tries TWO of those short loaded antennas joined as a dipole.
73's to all from a very OM.
Callum i think the biggest problem cb experts have is they are taught and use commercially manufactured antennas.
Antenna performance depends on a lot more than manufacturers statistics.
Like you I build my own antennas.
Matched to their feedline i rarely have over a 1: 1 swr
As an example my 20 meter homebrew dipole at 32 feet above the ground. Gets me some great coverage as i live in a valley.
My furthest calls to date is half way around the world on 5 watts ssb( from pennsylvania usa to France, Scotland, and Russia)
There is a lot more to antennas than just swr!
I dont fault the cb experts because they may not have had the proper education.
I highly recommend they get the arrl antenna guides and handbooks.
Love all you videos!!
73 Ted Kc3tec
Good point.
Mate, keep going on with references and information to CB.
Afterall, I think most would have come from CB roots and interests and if it inspires others to further their interests then it can only be a good thing for the hobby.
I for one play on the cretin's and Free band and enjoy it immensely and I have to say from my experience that it is nothing like it was in the 70-90's.
But I am gathering up my knowledge to go sit my STD license soon.
There's an awful lot of Hams that get on the "Cretins Band, Childrens Band, Chickens Band" as its shouted out behind the scenes and don't or won't admit to it but they do.
BTW, you have reinforced my perception of SWR and feed lines and antenna theory not just this video, but all the other videos you do and hang out waiting for your future videos.
It's great that some of the horseshit out there is being called out for what it is.
Now if I can only educate a mate of mine, I'd be happy, but I don't think there is any changing some people.
Yeah.. Actually I would say that in the MAJORITY of cases (certainly in the last 5-10 years) the snobbery of ham radio ops agains CB is now in reverse. It seems to be *SOME* CB ops who think the ham radio community are from some different planet and we all grow vegetables or discuss the latest doctors appointments. Most - correction - ALL of my mates on ham radio don't have an issue with 27MHz. Includes me..
There is so much more to transmission line theory than SWR. So what makes you think this is about SWR?
Also - how often are antennas actually the true 50 ohms at resonance in the real world?, ie how high above ground is the antenna?, is it close to other wires? what about that 40 feet of roof gutter sitting less than 1/2 wavelength away underneath the antenna etc . . . .
Anyways - all good stuff Cal! Another great video...... Current project here is a coax fed 3 wavelength per side 10 meter Vee beam looking northeast towards Europe, the Vee is up about 40 feet (the legs of which are each approx 100 feet long)..... It is un-terminated so am getting good results also in reverse to the south-west... So far is good results on 10/12/15 meters, though the ups and downs in propagation keep it more than interesting, not to mention the local snow and ice storms in the midst of the current project hihi ! Is nice to have one antenna with gain for more than one band and two directions. WWV on 25 MHz is super loud on this antenna
They're at 50 ohms every time you have a perfect 1:1 match. That is to say, once in a while.
I have never seen a vertical under 45 Ohms (even with 1,000 feet of 32 x radials. And I have never seen a tuned dipole out of spec by more than around 80 ohms. Therefore, I'm a 1.5:1 man myself.
Re the 100ft per leg Vee Beam here, I have now added an "ugly choke" at the feed point, 10 turns Rg6 on a 7 inch form, and then to a 1:6 Type 31 transformer to the 2 vee wires, and is working noticeable better! I Tx here at semi QRP 50 watts. My 25 MHz WWV reception here went from S9 +10 to S9+20 with most recent feed-point mods.... Am being heard quite well I believe... Is nice to TX 14-30 MHz in style once again....
What a Brilliantly 'Simple' vidclip .... Loved it.... Like the way that you 'Call a Spade a F.... Shovel ', No messing around ..... :-) :-) :-) Best to You and Yours and All 'Radio Hacks' out there.... Cheers from ChCh, NZ WR 2451 / KK 2451
Glad you enjoyed it - I don't recognise your handle in the comments. Maybe you are new to me.. Welcome!!
@@DXCommanderHQ Thanks for the Reply Callum .... OK .... "WR" .... = World Radio 'Group', ..... and "KK" ... = Kiwi and Kangaroo 'South Pacific' .... A more 'Local' CB Radio Group... Thanks for the 'Attic Antenna' vidclip .... Also a Very informative and entertaining vidclip ..... Best to You and Yours from Christchurch, New Zealand
Fantastic information and fantastic video
Following on from your comment about a dirty balun using the excess coax. If you use a length of coax that is an odd number of quarter wavelengths (adjusted for velocity factor), then this will also act as a really good attenuator for common mode current running on the outside of the coax. I wish I had known this when I was a CB operator.
One advantage of becoming a licensed amateur radio operator is that you get to learn all this stuff through the courses for the exam, and the support and knowledge of the guys in the local radio club.
Keep up the good work, Callum. I look forward to your nets on Fridays. 73, David - M0NMI.
Yeah nice! (although I've never cared about common modes myself..)
You have the answer! For example, a quarter wave antenna has a low common mode input impedance. By employing 3/4 wavelength of coax, you transform this impedance. And as my earlier post read, coax with a velocity factor of 0.66 at 27.055 (truckie ch) will be almost exactly 18ft long (1.38mm short). So it is not a myth at all! One very good reason to minimise CMC in the car is for noise suppression.
Use any length of coax and put a ferrite ring on to stop CMC. I've been doing it for years.
G4GHB.
You know you could still be a cb operator and apply what you learned. It's not too late . CB radio still has a place for you! Dxing is legal to do now and the skip is rolling. 73s
Turns out David Blake has the answer, and I am very keen to see a response to this. I've done some research and a little refreshing, and it looks like this is not a myth at all. I'd like to think I was halfway there. This is a common topic of ridicule on forums, in particular, Amateur. It's up there with patch lead lengths, and there are quite a few comments here making fun of it, and CBers in general. From what I can tell, 18ft of RG-58 coaxial on a design frequency, acts as a common mode input impedance transformer. That is, from low to high. It so happens that a 3/4 wavelength, taking in the velocity factor, lands right on the truckie channel (27.055). As I said previously, just 1.378mm under 18ft. If Mr Blake is correct, and the information I read is right, who's laughing at who now?
Pass :)
What do you mean? You responded to David by saying you don't really care about CMC. No point being deflective over a valid subject, one you raised, and I really believe this is the reason for 18ft. You stated at the beginning of this presentation that you're no expert on transmission lines, and then in the next breath state that it's all a myth, and laugh about it. Your theory or so called proof is really quite flimsy and vague, and not really pertaining to the subject at all. I think David and I have it. This theory and practice is also importantly employed in circuit and PCB design as common mode gets into everything. Noise suppression in a vehicle makes perfect sense, but that's just one reason. Don't forget that CMC works both ways too, you will likely transmit spurious emissions. So when the FCC approved for hundreds of thousands of moving transmitters for the public throughout the country, you want the best practice possible with installations. This theory likely coming from early broadcast and military practice, not HAMS.
Jeremy, I'm SO SORRY but I genuinely don't have time for debate but I value your thinking.
@@DXCommanderHQ like I said in another comment, I will do a practical on it at some stage. Not just for this scenario, I want to do various tests with CMC and choke placement. For example, how far from the feedpoint of certain antennas. Just got to build a CMC meter.
@@arconeagain Good idea!!
When I first heard about 18ft, I just assumed it was a 3/4 wave matching for a 1/4 wave whip with a poor ground plane which would be >50 Ohm (6ft being too short for most applications) and that the general public misunderstood that as 1/2 wavelength. In theory 6, 18, 30 ft should act as a matcher.
But you don't need any mathing, assuming you have close to 50 ohms anyway.. Guess you know that. Shorter is best.
@@DXCommanderHQ My canvas top 6x6 Pinzgauer has always been a challenge for CB. I haven't touched the setup in a couple years (before I owned a VNA). I got pretty good results with 6ft of coax. I was considering adding radial wires under the canvas. The off road club I belong to is migrating to GMRS anyway. There are a couple amatures in the group but we did not want to make a technician license a barrier to entry. Anyway I love your channel and am learning so much and more importantly unlearning some misinformation.
You are spot on. BUT, I wanna see you play those drums!!
Me too.. I did do a cover of Comfortable Numb once.. ruclips.net/video/5VS1nwhAlkM/видео.html
Keep providing great antennas and great information. You are and invaluable service to the whole radio community (cb included) thanks Callum
Much appreciated!
Good video, back in the 80s we didnt care about the length of the Coax, it was more important to get the SWR down as far as we could, now i dont live in the Uk have moved to Australia they are anal about Coax and how long it should be, i still go on about the SWR and coax is as long as it needs to be to set up a base station, and as long as the SWR is as low as it can go thats good enough for me.
Can you do a video on the Clarifier, i call them 12 O'clock here as they will not use to clarifier to tune in a station that may be off frequency, we know not all test equipment is not equal and there is going to be a slight difference, you go out for a radio check and all you get back is, Your Off Frequency, and thats it, instead of saying drop down a couple and getting the other station to get back on they ignore you.
Just subscribed and given you a big thumbs up from this expat 60+ yr old Teddy Boy...
Hey hello. Yes, I think you also dropped me an email.. I have no idea what people don't want to use the RIT knob. I do all the time. Some gear is off by a whisker. We should just use it..
How long? Long enough to reach the antenna 🤣
Logical.... Thank for the bit of wisdom appreciate it.
Bloody brilliant!
Stick a dummy load on any length of coax you will get a 1 to 1, so any length does not matter, its the tuning to 50ohm's of the antenna on the coax line.
This has always been a disputed topic. I talk 11 meter, so I talk CB on a ham radio (President HR2510), plus a pile of vintage ssb cb radios. The dispute is the jumper coax length between the transmitter/amp/external swr-power output meter...
Oh my! Really? The patch lead? Yes OK - if that's a hint, I can also make a quick one about that too..
@@DXCommanderHQ yea, some say at least 3 feet of coax between transceiver and amp, some say 6-9 feet, and there's even a guy that has 18 feet coiled up behind the desk. I'm currently only running 2 feet of coax and it seems to work fine... your thoughts on this?
(sorry for late reply on this) I've made a video.. Hang on for the release!
If the swr changes with different coax length, that means the shield of that coax is hot with RF and in fact radiating. Those who direct feed dipoles with no balun may experience this, or shoddy designs of verticals may experience this. Callum is spot on about coax length in a properly working antenna system. The length of the line shouldn't matter except excess adds loss.
That's often the case with mobile radios installed in cars and trucks because the don't have a good rf ground or radials for a counterpoise. Cars and trucks are made out of plastic and fiberglass, these days. Lol
The length of the line doesn't matter if you have a good match. It DOES matter if you have a poor match, because there are standing waves on the line. Where you measure makes a difference when you have a poor match because of what the VSWR meter actually measures - voltage. This is why some people believe changing the coax length fixes bad SWR when all it does is fool your meter.
@@stargazer7644 exactly this. Well matched no problem. Bad match will give different SWR at different points along the coax depending on the wavelength.
@@stargazer7644 it's not fooling your meter it's measuring the impedance at that point
@@paulm0hpd319 exactly. Otherwise, how do they expect matching stubs to work?
Thanks forvhelp on coax length
Any time!
Your right about CB people becoming hams, when I was a kid in 1964 I bought a CB wanting to be a ham but learning code was too much for me at the time.✋73's🎙 KD9OAM🎧📻📡
Wonder what they’d do with a doublet?
Good advice as always Call. I extended my first mobile CB antenna with a paperclip to get the SWR right, as I got the USA on the low power (4 Watts I think) that my CB had it worked well! Coax is one of the most misunderstood parts of our radio set up. As an M7 I have to work at getting everything as efficient as possible, something the Tech holders in the States miss out on, as they can just turn up the power to overcome any losses in there set up. 73 Jim M7BXT
Right on!
Well done.
Good but could have spent more time around what happens when the antenna is not 50 ohms You mentioned it briefly. The other day I was building a 1/4 wave vertical with 4x 1/4 horizontal radials. The SWR would not behave. All radials and the vertical were telescopic so it was easy to make adjustments but it took time. The 1st breakthrough was when I added around 75cm of coax and the swr came right down. Then I swapped that out for a 1:1 UNUN which helped heaps. Suddenly the antenna started to behave and tuning became as one would expect. I will put the antenna on the vna and see what the impedance really is then perhaps I can add a cheeky capacitor.. It's mainly as an experiment but I knew someone once who had something similar and it worked amazingly well. I'm currently building another 2x verticals. One is a copy of a Maco V5000 or v58 but with copper ring, I took the top parts from a Sirio GPE, ordered some more tubing and some aluminium rings. I tapped into to them and as a prototype I added the 5.6M telescopic antenna and set them to around 1/4 wave. The other antenna is the base of the sireo with the lower section replaced with 50cm of new tube just up from the loading coil then aluminium threaded tube riveted in the top of that to take another of those 5.6M telescopic antenna. Like this I can set it up for portable super fast. Just the 3 radials a small mast and presto. It's not too heavy either so should go well on about 6M of glass fibre spiderbeam mast and a car wheel base..
Frankly, the antenna you described SHOULD have been 50 ohms in the first place.. See my latest video. And describing what happens when the antenna is NOT 50 ohms is way beyond the scope of coax lengths for CB. It's more "science" based which would be ham radio specific.. But anyway, have fun. PS - ruclips.net/video/dMB6l6kByEg/видео.html
@@DXCommanderHQ The 1/4 wave with 4x 1/4 wave verticals would have been around 50 ohms if the radials were descending at 45 degrees but with my test they were at 90 degrees and there was no mast to compensate. I used a plastic mast to see the true tune of the antenna.
I now plan to add an induction ring between the radials and the driven vertical and possible a trombone cap design within the middle there.
Regarding the other antenna I built. The copy of the Maco V5000. It works amazingly well. In one day I had contacts across the globe from Latvia to Canada From Usa to Brazil and also Gibraltar amongst many more.
Sir, I just found your channel today and thank you for the very understandable explanations! You help me to learn very quickly. Stay healthy! 73+55
Bless you. Thanks for the flowers!
I also want to add mate that they use the coax quite often to tune the system. Some of the amplifiers they make have such bad tuning they use the coax to trick the radio into a proper load. I’m sure they will be along to argue with you mate. Cheers.
I'm sure too. It's still wrong!
@@DXCommanderHQ it's not wrong Callum it's just another way to provide a conjugate match to the transmitter to produce its maximum power into the system, reflections by Walt Maxwell covers this subject at great length
It's "wrong". Absolutely wrong.. You can make a tower out of soft spaghetti - that's wrong too.
@@DXCommanderHQ using feedline as an impedance transformer is not wrong what's wrong is not understanding that feedlines become impedance transformers with a mismatch
Another great video. Cheers Cal
Glad you enjoyed it Paul!
Thanks for the explanation. Can you explain a bit further why lengthening and shortening my antenna when I’m tuning has a dramatic effect on my SWR but the length of the coax doesn’t matter please?
Because the antenna is like the string in a piano however the coax are just the keys you hit it with. Coax length doesn't matter. Bloody good question!