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#1 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Pasadena, CA USA
Posts: 21
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Since you brought it up, I had an FM antenna question in another area of the board that was getting the crickets treatment.
Single lead from radio to folded dipole So here is the question again for the experts in the TV area: My daughter's Sony clock-radio-CD-player has a single wire coming out the back for an FM antenna. We are in a poor reception area and I can easily build a folded dipole with balun. Question is: how to attach the two leads of the balun to a radio with only one antenna wire? |
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#2 | |
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Veteran
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Somewhere in Delaware on the flat side
Posts: 7,011
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Quote:
Just attach a longer single lead wire to it, and position that wire for the best reception.
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My builds/plans (not the latest models) are located here. |
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#3 |
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OTA Forum Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: North Delta, BC (96Av x 116St)
Posts: 23,338
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Isn't it a case of one side being the chassis ground and the other being the length of wire? Just a guess. If that is so, you could attach one connector from a balun to the chassis/board's ground and the other in lieu of the wire, but I caution about such an oversimplification due to unknown impedance values, etc.
One option might be to have a great FM antenna up on the roof eventually feeding a length of bare conductor equal to the length of the radio's wire, side-by-side with almost no room between them, and then just hope that you get a good re-radiating effect. |
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#4 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 1,600
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Well, I would drill the back of the case to mount a female 75-ohm coax jack
and then cut back and connect the single wire to the center connector and find a SIGNAL GROUND to connect to the coax jack's shield/ground tab. The easiest place might be soldering a short wire to the circuit board's copper ground plane close to where the single wire antenna connects....or even better, to a handy component wire where it connects to the ground plane. BUT, I'm an experienced Engineer who will double check to make sure that the manufacturer didn't use a "HOT" chassis (very rare in modern equipment) with AC ground voltage leakage possibly appearing on the "signal ground", in which case I would make both connections via [minimum] 1 nF (1000 pf) capacitors (two each). Since RF inputs are in the 50-75 ohm range, there shouldn't be any need for a balun....but I would check the input circuitry just to make sure.... If you don't have experience modifying electronic equipment, find a friend..... |
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Pasadena, CA USA
Posts: 21
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Thanks for the feedback.
So, holl_ands: If no balun, then I just strip some RG6 and solder directly onto the folded dipole feedpoint? Seems like heresy after all my experience with DIY TV antennas. |
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#6 |
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Veteran
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: San Diego, CA
Posts: 1,600
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Clarification: In the mod I described above where I postulated mounting
a female 75-ohm coax connector on the radio's rear panel, a 75-ohm coax would be run to the location of your FM Antenna (e.g. Folded Dipole or whatever), which would require a 75-to-300 ohm Balun when connected to the coax cable since it is a typical 300-ohm impedance antenna..... |
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#7 |
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OTA Forum Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: North Delta, BC (96Av x 116St)
Posts: 23,338
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On a day when we are reminiscing about Heathkit I just want to add that soldering onto today's tiny circuit boards is quite finicky, so be careful.
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