Furuno FS-1503 manual Mounting of Antenna, About antennas

Page 14

1.4 Mounting of Antenna

About antennas

The antenna plays the most important role in radio communication. If it cannot receive or transmit effectively because of improper installation, even the most sophisticated transceiver will be rendered useless.

There are various types of SSB antennas. The most commonly used are a long wire and a whip. Whatever antenna is to be used, the antenna coupler can tune a long wire or whip whose total length is 6 to 15 meters. Although a longer antenna is preferable when the radio is operated only on low frequencies, use this size of antenna to ensure stable automatic tuning on all bands.

A long wire antenna is inexpensive and in general provides better performance than a whip antenna, provided the vertical part is long enough.

A whip antenna is easier than a long wire antenna to install and provides good overall coverage of most SSB frequencies. In fact, if you don’t plan to venture more than 500 miles from shore and the ground system is excellent, a simple 7 m (23 feet) whip antenna will probably suffice. A whip is installed as high as possible (though height is not so critical as with VHF since SSB is frequency dependent, not range dependent), away from any nearby objects.

Mounting considerations

When selecting a mounting location, keep the following points in mind:

The length of the vertical portion should be longer than 4 meters, and the slant angle of that part should be within 10 degrees of vertical.

Separate the antenna as far away as possible from stays, metallic objects, direction finder antenna, Inmarsat antenna.

Locate the insulator away from funnels and masts.

If the antenna coupler is installed outdoors, use a lead-in insulator to make the connection. If necessary, use a high quality antenna switch and stand-off insulator.

If the antenna is connected directly to the coupler, use a strain insulator to prevent insulator fatigue.

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Image 14 Contents
Page B . N o . I M E 5 6 1 4 0 E Safety Instructions Table of Contents Equipment Lists Standard SetOptional Equipment FAW-6RP2ASystem Configuration FS-1503 System ConfigurationGeneral mounting considerations MountingMounting of Transceiver Unit Mounting on overhead, bulkhead or tabletopConsole mounting Mounting considerationsMounting of Antenna Coupler Mounting considerationsMounting the antenna coupler Mounting methodsHow to mount the antenna coupler Ground for non-metallic hull Ground SystemGround for metallic hull Grounding the transceiver unitMounting of Antenna About antennasTypical antenna installations Long wire antenna Whip antennaWiring RED BLKConnections inside the antenna coupler DSC Terminal DSC-60 Wiring of Optional EquipmentNbdp Terminal DP-6 Remarks on connectionNecessary parts Remote Station RB-500Distributor DB-120/DB-500 Unplug all connectors from TX/RX Board dismount the board Remote and Control BoardsBK Break-in Connection Telex Filter Bandpass FilterSW Regulator SW REG board PA/FIL BoardW4 Wire Assy W3 Wire Assy Dummy LoadFloating Ground Radiotelephone FS-5000, etc Connection of floating ground radiotelephoneVisual checks Installation CheckLnstallation Checks Supply voltageNoise User Channel RegistrationPerformance Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page
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