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CB Coxial cable

Discussion in 'Early CJ5 and CJ6 Tech' started by Don X, Jul 14, 2008.

  1. Posimoto

    Posimoto Hopeless JEEP Addict

    I don't know what length my CB coax is, but it's not 18' and I get a SWR of about 1.5 More than adequate for trail use. The "perfect location" for a CB antennae is at the highest point, dead center of your vehicle. From that point your signal radiates equally in all directions. That locations doesn't really work for a Jeep so I put mine over the spare tire.
     
  2. spud

    spud Nope..it's not finished!

    Damn Panzer, you gotta nice rig!!:drool:
     
  3. jpflat2a

    jpflat2a what's that noise?

    yes he does....
    but nobody has ever seen it up close
    cuz he never shows up anywhere
    :D:D

    I have my extra coax on top of the under seat tank (on topic)
     
  4. Howard Eisenhauer

    Howard Eisenhauer Administrator Staff Member

    I'm afraid thats another myth. Again, if the antenna is properly installed what you do with the coax really doesn't matter, the signal flow is all inside between the center conductor & the inside of the shield, anything on the outside of the shield such as another coil or metal won't affect the signal/VSWR.

    If it wasn't properly installed *ANYTHING* you do with the coax apart from cutting it to the exact correct electrical length & running it in a straight line well away from anything metallic will have nasty effects on your VSWR.

    H.
     
  5. Howard Eisenhauer

    Howard Eisenhauer Administrator Staff Member

    They are on a Durango if you're moving :)

    H.
     
  6. timgr

    timgr We stand on the shoulders of giants. 2022 Sponsor

    The shield will isolate the center conductor from EMF and capacitive coupling in theory. However, braided shielding does not provide 100% isolation - look at the specs for the cable. IIRC you get something like 50-80% isolation with a braided shield, and somewhat better with foil or foil plus braid.

    If you really want to explore this topic, I'd recommend this book
    [​IMG]
    http://www.amazon.com/Noise-Reducti...=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1216223546&sr=1-1

    I own it and have read it, but I'd have to refer to it to for any specific points. If you build gadgets to use in the MRI room (I have) you must pay attention to rf isolation and environmental noise.

    Not picking on Howard specificallaly, but I'm saying you can't make a blanket statement like "cable routing doesn't matter" - it does. The type of cable matters. The length of cable matters. The orientation of the antenna matters - some are designed to work above a ground plane (like mounted on a cowl) and some are meant for free air mounting. There is a lot to antenna design. You need to tune and match the antenna with it mounted in place.

    I'd say buy a quality antenna and mount it according to the instructions. Use the best quality cable and connectors you can buy, and route the shortest cable with the most free air around it as possible. Pay close attention to the quality of your connector mountings, grounds, and seal up the CB box with copper tape. Solder the copper tape to the CB case as many places as you can. Give your CB clean power - Corcom style filters work well, and shield the power leads between the filter and the CB case. Not sure how much of this is needed, but I think all of it will help.
     
  7. drexotic

    drexotic Happy now?!?!?

    Lots of very good information in this thread!

    Thanks Guys !!!
     
  8. Zoomer

    Zoomer eJeeper (walking)

    Ott's the man when it comes to noise reduction, I took the class over 15 years ago. His book resides on the shelf above my desk at work.

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Jul 16, 2008