Return-Path: Received: from www01.netaddress.usa.net ([204.68.24.21]) by truman.olsusa.com (Post.Office MTA v3.1.2 release (PO203-101c) ID# 0-44819U2500L250S0) with SMTP id AAA26433 for ; Mon, 9 Nov 1998 15:03:42 -0500 Received: (qmail 5192 invoked by uid 60001); 9 Nov 1998 20:03:56 -0000 Message-ID: <19981109200356.5191.qmail@www01.netaddress.usa.net> Date: Mon, 09 Nov 1998 20:03:56 From: Dan Schaefer To: lancair.list@olsusa.com Subject: antennas, home made X-Mailing-List: lancair.list@olsusa.com Mime-Version: 1.0 <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> << Lancair Builders' Mail List >> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<--->>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> >> Regarding Angier Ames' comment about building and locating his MB antenna, go for it! While I am a big fan of Bob Nuckolls, of Aeroelectric Connections, you should also get the info about designing antennas from RST Engineering. According to Marv, they still have the antenna kits available, and if you follow the instructions (quite simple, really) you can make some very good ones. As I've mentioned in a previous post, I built my Nav/Localizer, MB, GS and Transponder antennas from RST kits. Primarily because I wanted to build as many of the things that went into N235SP and because I wasn't impressed with the stuff that was available on the market. For the antennas mentioned above, they are easy to design with the info from RST and, in my opinion, they perform notably better than any used on certificated spam-cans that I've flown. The Nav antenna was built into the horizontal stab (of course, mine's glass, not carbon), the MB ant. is in the fuselage tail cone (though if I remember, the forward end does extend all the way up into the baggage area, the GS ant. is in the right wing-tip and the Txpndr ant. is in the left wing-tip. In the vernacular of the antenna wonks I work with here at Boeing, these antennas are all "Hot" - meaning very good. If you can fit it in, for your Com antenna(s) I highly recommend a Bob Archer unit - they are also "Hot" and have very low VSWR (a measure of "goodness" for transmitting antennas) - although they DO kinda look like a crumpled-up piece of Aluminum foil you'd throw out after a long day of barbequeing. I haven't tried it, but for your Com 2, if you can't fit a second Archer unit into your tail-cone, I'd try a splitter-coupler so both can use the same antenna. I doubt the inherent losses in a coupler would create much of a problem for these antennas. Anyway, Angier, have fun! Dan Schaefer N235SP ____________________________________________________________________ Get free e-mail and a permanent address at http://www.netaddress.com/?N=1