|
Geeeze Loueeeze!
When I bought a Comant switch in the early nineties it was only
$300. Now I'll have to raise the hull insurance on my airplane.
Grayhawk
In a message dated 1/2/2012 10:17:21 A.M. Central Standard Time,
dave.saylor.aircrafters@gmail.com writes:
Dean,
It is possible to use a single comm antenna but it
takes something like this:
http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalog/avpages/comantswtich601.php
It's
not a very common installation and it's a lot more expensive than a second
antenna!
My layman's understanding is that transmissions from one radio
become over-powered receptions to the other radio. So most commonly, two
comms each use a dedicated antenna.
On a Legacy, the second antenna can
go aft of the primary. It needs to be centered a minimum of two antenna
lengths from the other comm antenna. That makes it a challenge to use a
straight antenna as it may hit the ground before the tail tie-down.
We've put an antenna in that area, and we may have ended up using a bent whip
like a Comant CI-122.
Nav antennas can be split without worry.
Dave Saylor AirCrafters 140 Aviation Way Watsonville, CA
95076 831-722-9141 Shop 831-750-0284 Cell
On Fri, Dec 30, 2011 at 9:07 AM, Dean Whiting <dean.whiting@gmail.com>
wrote:
I was looking for some advice about communication
antennas. The legacy is setup to have one com antenna. We want a
capable IFR airplane and I am hesitant to have one antenna with a diplexer
(or is it duplexer, I've seen it both ways) as a possible single point of
failure. Is this the method that most people are using? If you
mounted a 2nd com antenna, where did you place it? I searched the
archives and found someone else who asked the same question but I couldn't
find the answer. Any other input or advice on the subject would be
appreciated.
Dean
Whiting
-- For archives and unsub http://mail.lancaironline.net:81/lists/lml/List.html
|
|