After having done a dozen of unsuccesful tries myself, one of which knocked my poor old dog down, I decided to bend the tree instead and found it was much easier than I thought it would be. Just be careful to not hold on to the tree and let it go. I wish I remembered that before, since it took all my lungs, 10 dogs from the local hunting club and a Bell helicopter from the local news to find and rescue me. I have no idea where my antenna finally ended up. I merely dare to listen to FM ever since ...and I bought a cat. Always be careful ! Thank you for your amazing and entertaining videos mate! 😊 This one was magic.
@RenoLaringo do not give up with the AM MW Broadcast band listening and antenna experimenting. We need you. I once connected a long wire roughly one hundred feet to 300 feet in length and Trans World Radio on 800 kHz BOOMING in from the island of Bonaire in the Caribbean. Surely a distance of several thousand miles. A real catch and exciting result that motivates for further experimentation with long wire antennas for the MW AM broadcast band and radios especially the one's that have connectors for an external antenna.🏁
@@paulgrodkowski5839 I will! Thank you for the encouragements and the nice words. I actually have a Grundig Satellit 1400 and I recently bought a smaller Tecsun PL660 for more outdoor use, but it fell on me on the second day. There was an antenna wire included and I tried it on both units (the connecter on the Grundig was obviously different but I tried anyway just by touching the retractable antenna with the tip of the wire antenna jack. The difference was huge which motivated me to further experiment with different lenght and setups. I’ve yet to understand all the basics behind sw radios and antennas. It’s quite intricate to say the least. I won’t let down. I’m’an old nostalgic fart and I really enjoy using old tech. Yet by watching hours of content about those old units, I’m pretty sure I will end up with some dsr radio at one point, though they don’t appeal me that much. I guess my old Grundig needs a capacitor restoration (or ???). The sounds gets distorted during the first minutes of use, and then settles on allright afterwards. This annoys me a bit as I know it must be damaged in some ways and I feel it should deserve some attention. I still have to find a radio tech around. I also wonder if I should try the Sony ICF 2001 maybe, cse it seems to be a very good radio, but I assume it would also need some tlc at some point Be safe and happy mate! Thank you for helping us out with this amazing hobby. And thank you for your response ! 👍 Greetings from Belgium !
I've been hanging wire in trees for decades, I've used bow and arrow with fishing reel mounted to the bow, potato guns, sling shots, but now for the last 10 years I use a spin caster fishing pole with a golf ball drilled through to tie the line, and can top 125' trees, and the ball won't get caught in the canopy coming down, and it's easier to see than fishing weights, then poke a hole in the end of the dacron cord to tie the line to, pull your dacron up, followed by wire, stranded # 10 or #12, make your way back to the house using other trees with a pulley to allow swaying of the trees, Palomar Engineering makes $4 pulleys that will last decades. Currently putting up a 567' for 160 meters along the edge of a forest here in Indiana. Most importantly, have fun!
What a Great Ideal, A fishing Pole, I thought abought using my 300-pound Cross bow, I made from a car leaf spring, But I'm afraid it will Break the line, and the arrow will stick in someone's homes, Or them, a cheap arrow sticks all the way in a railroad tie, Its powerful, But thanks for the Ideal
If you go with the bow and arrow, cut the tip off the arrow, put 8 or 10 bb's in the arrow so when the arrow turns to come back down, the bb's will roll forward to the plug, i always broke off a golf tee to plug it, to get the arrow to start coming back down, but i found the arrow can get caught in limbs, so i stayed with the fishing pole idea. Now i do know hams that have taken a .22 caliber hunting dog practice duck to get over 200' trees or higher, but im a believer in the KISS THEORY, keep it simple stupid!@@brianbloom1799
Back in the late 1950’s,we always had an am radio in my bedroom.My favorite was between 9:30pm until-.When I used the radio,I tuned into the rock and roll stations.Our town radio went off at 8:30pm,both stations,I got a fine tuned(delicate touch)to Randy’s Record Shop in Nashville,Tn.I lived on a mountain top, in Mount Airy,N.C. About 400 miles to the east.Great times!
Don't forget you can still do this at night. I've picked up 650AM out of Nashville up near Lake Erie in Ohio at night, well over 400 miles to my home from their antenna.
Hello from Alberta Canada! I must say I'm learning a lot about radios and antennas from your channel. I listen to my am station radio because it's the only way I get to listen to Dr Charles Stanley and other christian speakers.... Nice job!👍
So here's how it's gone today: I was Youtubing vids to figure out how to fix the battery compartment door of my tiny Sony ICF-SW100. Shortwave radio was my go-to English language connection when I was living in Bavaria in the late '90s. I was into SW in my teens in the late 80's also. It reminded me of how much I loved listening to weird back of beyond broadcasts from tiny rooms, the other side of the world before the internet. It left a lot to the imagination and a bit like if Robinson Crusoe had lived a couple of hundred years later and had a radio. Anyway, the research sent me down a rabbit hole, wondering if people still broadcast on SW. It's been an eye opener and I happened upon your channel just to understand the basics of it all again. I'm now hooked once more and have been going through your vids one after the other while I work. This is really good output man. Many thanks.
Can we really not tame and train squirrels to Carey the antenna wire up there ?😮
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I used old mains cable for my first wire antenna as I had it left over and I just stripped out the black (it was that old ). In a loft.. Main downside is lots of noise on longer bands. This, what you're doing is a proper antenna, I love it!
I remember saving money when I was 10 yoa to buy my first antenna kit. Back then I bought an archer kit at Radio Shack. Thirty years later I learned to fly using one. It's nice to tune in am stations listen and see where they are located. The ADF timed approach to or from a station is still being used today.
Few people play with this old-fashioned antenna anymore. Reminds me of 50 years ago when I was a child, making my own rock radio and setting up the antenna.
@ 07:45 : lol! I started doing that when I was ten (10) years old!...... Until I got older, I always just climbed to the top of the trees and tied the wires on. Now, I do it more like the way you do! Takes a while, but it is a lot safer! 😊
Tom, thank you so much for this most informative video with clear instructions. I definitely want to do this also! It is amazing what the radio was picking up for you!! My dream is to scan the AM dial and get a station on almost every channel. Thanks for all of your posts!
Great video and enjoyable to watch as your attempts to throw the line up in the tree was "real". I once needed a line high up in a tree so I used a straight bow and an arrow with a fishing line attached to the arrow. It worked great I just had to make sure no one was in the "drop zone". Back in the 50's the story goes that a relative of mine strung about an 80 foot AM antenna wire between pine trees at their lakeside cabin to pickup their favorite station 100 miles away. This was before they had an FM receiver and their AM radio would be a tube set with a multi-gang analog tuner. This was possibly done before the hydro "electric" grid was converted from 25 to 60 HZ and the local marina had a hut to store ice harvested from the lake in the winter and stored under sawdust to keep it through the summer to sell it to the cottagers for their ice boxes. With all the advances in technology some old ways to DX MW stations still have merit.
Great info Tom...beginners are starving for simple explanations and instruction for SWL antennas. I also use a UnUn with my random wire antennas. The transformer keeps the coax from becoming part of the antenna. I also found over the years a UnUn or Balun helps reject electrical noise. So Hams have said this is not true...but I've tested it over and over. Ok not to ramble on Thanks for the video. 73s Brian
You are absolutely correct about the beginners. Only now ,at age 46, am I suddenly becoming passionate about radios and learning about frequencies and wave bands. I feel so extremely stupid ,but I’m in this until the end.🙏🏻
That antenna sounds really great on twenty meters, Tom. Great video with accurate information and a pleasant presentation. As another commenter said, watching your video was actually quite relaxing. Keep 'em comin'! 73 de K5SFC
I love your set up, and the 9:1 unun base mount idea, I have wound 9:1 impedance ununs out of the newer ferrites and the older red iron powder cores. Yet I like to keep all metals away from them, if I were to "use one to transmit with" and would suggest a wooden or PVC rod and using plastic zip ties perhaps to mount it with. And you are right, keeping the wire to the ground rod short as possible is a great idea. Yet you are "not transmitting" so it should work just as well as you have done it. Transmitters are thrown off by metals near the 9:1 inductance coil inside the white case. (The steel pipe and the two metal clamps for instance.) And if you chose to make the unun yourself, any size Ferrite torroid core should work as well as a larger one made for transmitting with a higher powered transmitter. The torroid size core and wire size mainly depends on how much power it can handle "when transmitting." "Listeners only" can use much smaller ones. Even tiny cores as big as a penny. Using enameled wire savaged from an old clock motor. Or some other enameled wire scavenged from a busted vacuum cleaner or fan motor. Even a broken wall wart transformer has good enamel coated wire in it. (Bare copper wire won't work). yet insulated wire does work. You make them with ten turns around the core for each wire like this; www.dxzone.com/images/pics/2015/07/09/20150709214527-e3457b38.jpg And if You leave out the round core, it is wired like this with ten turns of wire each, around the core. (He didn't count the turns in this drawing It's a schematic or electrical drawing): m0ukd.com/static/homebrew/Magnetic_Long_Wire_UnUn/9to1_schematic.jpg Modern Ferrite cores have no color code so they always black in color. And as you are "not transmitting", a smaller "red" color coded, iron powder torroid would also work between 1 to 30 MHz . These iron powder round torriods cores were used before the modern ferrite toroid came out. And if you have nothing else available, the straight rod from an old transistor AM radio antenna can be used. It's wired the same as the second drawing looks around the rod with ten turns of each of the three wires And those with bigger transmitters, had to use bigger cores and bigger wire. Transmitters also needed an antenna tuner to set the SWR with. Receivers do not need them. Each iron powder color coded core was for a certain frequency band of use, yet not all manufacturers used this color code, but most did. i.stack.imgur.com/OMT98.jpg
JUST QUICKLY. Hey there Radio dog and other radio friends. I watch the video about using an 80 foot random wire for SW and AM broadcast band. How interesting!!! I am really motivated once again but even more this time after watching this video. Over a span of many years I experimented a few times with a long wire antenna for reception on the MW broadcast band. Interestingly, I observed the results and differences of using the long wire versus a built in antenna of the receiver or radio that I was connecting to the long wire. Well I started to loose motivation because with my experiences it seemed that the whole idea of an after market long wire connecting yielded weaker signals than the built in loop or ferrite bar antenna and I started to wonder why I even bother messing around and reading and learning about technical stuff about radios and antennas. I sort of started to sort of feel that the built in antenna that the radio is made with works best and that it is sort of inferior using an external antenna for MW. Now however after watching several of Radio dog videos I have a whole new and very motivated perspective to continue with my experimenting with long wire antennas for the MW broadcast band and radios that have the MW broadcast band to which I can connect them to to improve reception and when I mean improve reception I mean higher signal strengths, more stations to be heard across the MW band and lower noise floor and no inter mod or distortion. My guess it is the application of the 9:1 balun that can really do the trick. That is one ingredient that I did not use in my previous projects and will remember to use in my future endeavors. 🏁
Now this is a very informative video, the way TH-cam was intended. Excellent Tom. Sound exactly like me when things don't go exactly right at 9minutes. ;)
Tom..was so impressed with this video, I ordered the exact same un/un along with your recommended 80ft of wire and installed it from the peak of my house out to a tree, connected the ground lug to my house ground with the electrical/phone/cable common ground...ran 20 ft of rg 58 and connected to my Tecsun PL 880...what a difference compared to my single attic wire direct to the receiver...No more noise and unbelievable signals on 160 thru 10 meters...Thanks for presenting such a great video with great closeup views of everything.
Great job Tom. I'm as newbie as they come but I'm learning a lot from you and your channel. Someday I would like to go ahead and get my basic ham radio license. Much appreciated, keep up the good work.
Attempting to throw the line up into the tree was the most entertaining part for me. If you attempt it again, get it spinning faster, maybe with a slightly longer cord, but make sure you release it when it's naturally on it's upswing, otherwise all the force generated in the spin is being lost - especially if you step forward and let it go. Do you golf? Think of the downswing from the golf club and how important it is to follow through. If your downswing stopped at the bottom of the arc, and you then just stepped forward and pushed the club at the ball, not much would happen. That's kind of what you were doing. My dad worked in communications in the R.C.N. in the 1950's, by the time I came along he had flipped that into a full-on Ham radio hobby. We had antennas all over the place. I helped him climb TV towers, roofs, trees & crawled around inside an attic about 3 feet high. There was even a metal post set in concrete in the middle of the front yard , which was one of the support lines for some monstrosity that towered from the top of the house. He only fell off the roof once. My mother didn't understand, nor was she impressed by any of it. If I thought I'd get away with staining up something like this in my yard, I would. I'm just thinking about getting a small radio, maybe to take camping, to see what I can pick up. If I like it, I'll find something a bit better. So a smaller, more portable antenna would be something I can use.
Hi Tom. I have strung almost 2 dozen dipoles for Amateur and SWL and a sling shot with light weight fishing line and a weight attached works really well. You get better precision and height. Nice video. Best 73
I would like to thank you on this very great informative video, you did a lot more than experts It's a great thing to see video on how to improve the SW antenna Thanks Best Wishes from Kuwait
Dear friend Tom, I must say that your videos about the antenna build bringing me a lot of joy and fun, nice to see and also an inspiration to do some things better on my longwire, if the weather is better in europe. Thank you for sharing, best wishes from Klaus PS: in addition it gaves me motivation to try any US-Stations on mediumwave.
After a day of watching YT videos with people loudly demonstrating whatever they are reviewing, etc., this was a VERY VERY relaxing video and I learned as well. I did watch it three times. Great work.
I tried this for getting " vivid Bharati" and Ceylon broadcasting corporation short wave stations in the year 1965. At that time there was no entertainment radio systems in Keralal, India.❤️
Congratulations...excellent antenna...I used mono/single 3,5mm cable. We Live in a 8.storey at 12 storey apartman block. Altitute of the apartment is 900m. I wrapped/rotated the cable around and out of the 8.storey. I took full result by way of this method. It provides strong signals. For medium wave I cant find ant DIY solution. For MW I use Tecsun circular antenna. Your radios are excellent, especially Panasonic.
It looks like you put up a really good SWL antenna! Your video brings back memories for me when as a young boy when I use to tie some copper wire onto a small rock while throwing the rock and wire over the tallest branch that I could find that I could reach! Thanks for a very good SWL tutorial antenna video! Here's wishing you great DXing & 73's!
Thanks. Just the info I needed to get better SW reception for my little ETON Elite750 receiver. BTW, Dacron stretches fares than nylon when wet so it's a better cord plus it's more UV resistant as well..
I remember listening to SW radio back in the 1970s and it was alot of fun! There were quite a few channels to tune to. BBC, VOA, Radio Nederlands, and even from Seychelles! But now with most stations moving to internet, scouring for the remaining few channels is a bit depressing, to say the least!
Hello, Radiodog! I learned a great deal from you by watching your video and I wanted to thank you for making the effort and sharing it with the world. I've been wanting to sling up my own permanent antenna for several years now. Trouble is that I live in a retirement community and while we have nice, fat redwood trees out back, I don't own those trees and we all have to share the community space. We also have many neighbors who live to gossip and mind other people's business for them. In short, I worry that my work would be taken down in very little time, so I hesitate to do that work. Meanwhile, I continue slinging temporary antenna fixes and then take them down after a few hours. It's tedious. I also continue looking for more semi-permanent venues where I can erect a quality wire antenna and not having to worry all the time about tampering.
You are blessed with a great area to put a wire out. I am quite jealous. Good Video from start to finish. You could expand into VLF frequencies by using earth spike antenna using the ground as your antenna. Good luck from across the pond.
My attic looks like a mad scientist's lair. It is a giant coil of wire I made out of old extension cable. I have eight turns surrounding the edges of my attic. I did not use the transformer. I just made a manual tuner and adjust it to hear the most signal. I have been told that I can use the wire to transmit. But since I have no license to transmit, I am happy just listening.
Great stuff. Really a pisser that Radio Shack is gone. Can't find anything around anymore. Thanks big time for the links to put it all together. Radio Shack does need a return to the biz. They had the stuff for the jobs.
Staple some cheap insulated wire to the wood in your attic. hook one end to your receiver leave the other end free in the attic. A good secret antenna.
Thanks for the great video. I miss my old "long wire" antenna I had at my last house. I'm planning to install one at my new place. I think the ground wire is almost as important as the wire itself. It helps reduce noise if done correctly. I'm looking for a grounding rod and then I can do my installation. Let us know what other radios you plan to use, and do some long distance DX'ing.
I’m going to watch this again Tom. I am new to doing all this and before the whole sh$t-house goes up in flames…I’m going to have tons of DX-ing fun!👍🏻🕯⭐️
So if I am running my random wire into coax to bring it into the house I should have the UnUn but if running just the random wire to say, my patio or deck for outdoor listening, or directly to a window were my radio usually is (alligator clip to telescoping antenna w/no coax) I can do without the UnUn ?
Zebco reel, a one ounce sinker, a sling shot to propel. The #20 pound line. Over a limb with the 1 ounce sinker. Attach the wire with insulator pull up up and away.
First time I’ve heard a TH-camr explain UnUn. Thank you. As a new guy to SWL I always wondered every time I heard someone use it. Sounded like a made up word.
Thanks for doing this video, I stumbled Apon it and enjoyed it.Very nice tip. I know there may be other ways of doing this, but I wanted you to know that I enjoyed your video. I want to set up my own antenna myself soon and start enjoying my radio also. I love my radios. I have a lot of fun with my radios. Hope you have a nice day.
Radiodog ... I used to use a fishing rod with a half ounce to one ounce weight and throw it over the top of tall trees then pull my antenna wire up. It all depends on location of course. I`ve also just used a long pole to push the wire up onto lower tree limbs and up into tall bushes. I strung out two 250-300 ft wires (at least over head high) in opposite directions once and connected them to a homemade coil of 24 awg magnet wire (no ground) and I could easily get stations out past 300 miles during the day. In NW Louisiana I could hear New Orleans, Houston, Dallas and Oklahoma City like locals and some stations were readable much farther away. At the time I didn`t pay much attention trying to identify the weaker stations but was simply trying to get more stations during the day. I do remember going from three stations during the day (using quality radios) to 48. I didn`t really know what I was doing. I simply accidentally discovered that a crystal radio I made boosted AM signals on my radio and started experimenting. So I made a 100 turn coil of 24 awg magnet wire on a paper towel tube and connected it to the wires and placed it near the radio. I used the fishing rod to get a wire up into the top of a large tree then parked our old truck under it and connected the wire to the radio antenna to DX on the AM radio. It worked well.
Tom Jones : Yeah, I have made those coils like that too!.....Also, if you buy 500 feet of wire on a spool, just leave a couple of hundred feet on the spool and set the spool by the radio! That works real well, too. (Run the 300 feet [that you have unwound] outside and up in the air!) (Hook the ground wire to end of the wire that is left on the spool!) 😊
Thanks for the video. Could you talk about how you made the connection in the house? I assume the center conductor of the coax is going to the tip of your 3.5mm jack but is the jacket of the coax going to the other part of the 3.5mm jack? Also I assume the jacket is connected to the ground outside on the other end? Maybe this is done inside of the un un thing you have where I can't see it? I have a really long wire up right now, like 250 ft or so but I want to get rid of the noise it picks up when it comes into the house.
Well hello tom. I wish i had your back yard but i dont. I do have a 60 foot e comm 2 ant which serves the purpose and dont have much to interfear so i guess i do ok. Im up of the top of an apartment bldg. With a clear shot to the river and beyond. That was a great catch by the way and i would log that one in a minute. Ok well im just jealous but good for you. Ron. Z. Pgh. Pa.
I just got a simple (but pricey) MFJ HF/Shortwave loop antenna. Kills all the noise that an antenna like this won't. When he turned on his radio near the end, I about cringed from all of that nasty static! Good SW listening is quiet SW listening. The one I have is made for the outside but I just have it in my room. I can't have antennas at all outside where I live.
I tried using that method to put a line in a tree. It didn't work very well for me. Casting with a fishing pole or a slingshot would probably be more precise.
23:30 Sounds like that woman is talking about the coronavirus, and I just noticed the date of your upload, I'm guessing things were about to get interesting for you not much later! Very nice antenna. Why is it called "random wire"? Isn't this just a type of long wire?
Man, picking up something on almost every channel on AM was pretty impressive. Does the angle and direction of the wire matter much? If I were to do this, the highest point would about a third of the length in where I have a large tree.
i'll be mounting a long end fed wire about 30ft in the next few days, not got the biggest garden i'm using scaffolding poles, video coming obviously lol, not as good but check it out
Thanks for the instructive and useful video. You've just got a new subscriber. Videos about antennas for SWL aren't common, so I'm glad I've found this one. I have two questions: - unless I missed it, you don't tell exactly how long this antenna is. You mention 80ft = 24.38m at some point, so I guess that's it? - what do you do with the grounding wire? just lay it on the ground or actually ground it by connecting its end to some kind of copper rod plugged into the soil? Many thanks in advance if you can take a minute to reply to these questions. 73, Alain
One of these days I`m gonna buy a cheap spool of very thin magnet wire and stretch out a 1000+ ft antenna through the woods. It won`t last but I`ll bet I could temporarily pull in some serious DX on AM.
Tom Jones : I have never tried over 300 feet. But, I think that, after the first 100 feet, each additional 100 feet doesn't add that much signal! After 100 feet, you would get more improvement by raising the wire higher! Get it up 30 feet if you can! Then, make sure your ground pipe is deep in the ground. Drive it down two (2) feet or more into the ground and file clean the place where you are going to attach the wire to where it is shiny! Get the wire up high and get it grounded correctly and you will do well. A correct ground on your antenna will pull down a lot of signal! Ten gauge House wire (# 10) works the best for picking up signal and, once you get it up there, it will last for many years and you never have to mess with it again! Mine has been up there over 30 years and still works well! I only have to re-file the ground pipe every few years! 😊 (Note : Make sure that there is nothing under the ground where you are going to put the pipe! Since childhood, I have probably put 50 or more ground pipes down for different stuff and never had a problem. But a few years ago, I got careless and ended up hitting a small gas pipe that had to be replaced. So, be careful and know where all your water and gas pipes are!)
@@Radiodog Well on AM the full wavelength of a wire antenna for 1000 on the dial (1 mhz) is about 1000 feet. The formula for full wave length is 1006 divided by the frequency in mhz. I`ve been researching BOG antennas (beverage on ground) and they`re often much longer than the standard wavelength for the frequency. My dream is to string out an antenna one mile long and see what happens. LOL!
@@spiritofecstasy8525 I`ve been studying about proper ground rods. The last time I tried it was with a rusty iron pipe that wasn`t very long and it didn`t work. Next time I`ll do it right. We have bad lightning storms here so I`m scared to get an antenna up really high. LOL! Lightning toasted the last long wire I made from a big spool of wire a friend gave me and it was only about 7 feet above the ground. But lightning won`t stop me. I`m looking for super reception.
@@tomjones239 Yeah, you have to file that rust off of the place where you are going to wrap the wire. Wrap it around about four times and if you have a clamp, put the clamp over the wire and tighten it down. If you do not have a clamp, wrap it four times and then twist it real tight, where it doesn't move! Usually you do not need to take the rust off of the rest of the pipe, but just off the area where the wire is attached. Of course, use a new pipe if you have it. If you do not have an iron pipe, you can use copper pipe for it. But, of course you cannot drive the copper pipe down. You would have to dig a two foot hole with post hole diggers, then insert then copper pipe, and then fill in the hole around it! 😊
Very interesting Tom. When using a fixed long wire for medium wave are you restricted with what you can receive given that MW signals are very directional? When using the internal ferrite or a loop antenna it's necessary to rotate the antenna for best reception. I don't have the space you have so I'm currently using the popular MLA-30 loop antenna positioned next to my window indoors. Performs very well on SW.
It's hard to say to what extent the directionality of the wire is limiting. I reoriented the antenna from its original configuration (from basically north-south to east-west) and I've noticed some fringe stations that I haven't noticed before, and yes, I'm sure some stations no longer audible. Somewhere along the line I read that slopers are more omni-directional than horizontals, so that's what I was aiming for. Thanks for the comment!
@@Radiodog That interesting. I didn't realise that. Slightly different topic regarding the 909X. As you've found it's fairly poor using the whip but really excels with a decent external antenna. I gather this design was intentional by Sangean as the whip was designed around FM. Anyway my bigger loop antenna (from Cross Country Wireless) overloads all of my portables including the Tecsun S-8800. The one exception is the 909X. It handles it just fine. For a portable it has a very robust front end.
@@Radio_Activity : You can always construct an "L" antenna, i.e., 50 feet North to South and then turn the wire and take it 50 feet East to West!...….If your portables will not handle the antenna, do not connect the wire directly to the radio! Connect it to a coil wound around a 12 inch to 18 inch PVC pipe or broom handle. Wind 50 feet to 100 feet of 16, 12, or 10 gage wire around the pipe or broom type handle. Connect the antenna wire to one end of the coil and a ground wire to the other end of the coil! Then, just set the portables near the coil and find the right distance from the coil. Try placing the coil closest to the radio tuner first! 😊
Hi Tom. I've enjoyed watching your video. However, I need you to clarify something for me: In your video you connect the balun to your receiver using coax. As far as I can tell, the Sangean receiver has only a jack connection for an external antenna. I'm obviously missing something here. Perhaps you can clarify? Thanks.
Thanks for the comment. Basically, I use an adapter at the end of the coax, connected to a 3' audio cable that terminates into a mono plug to the radio. I find that audio cable works rather well as a kind of "light duty" coax.
Glad to see someone actually installing the 9:1 transformer at ground level where it belongs.
Actually the 9:1 can be placed anywhere along the feedline, what is not mentioned is using a line isolator with the un un.
After having done a dozen of unsuccesful tries myself, one of which knocked my poor old dog down, I decided to bend the tree instead and found it was much easier than I thought it would be. Just be careful to not hold on to the tree and let it go. I wish I remembered that before, since it took all my lungs, 10 dogs from the local hunting club and a Bell helicopter from the local news to find and rescue me. I have no idea where my antenna finally ended up. I merely dare to listen to FM ever since ...and I bought a cat. Always be careful !
Thank you for your amazing and entertaining videos mate! 😊 This one was magic.
@RenoLaringo do not give up with the AM MW Broadcast band listening and antenna experimenting. We need you. I once connected a long wire roughly one hundred feet to 300 feet in length and Trans World Radio on 800 kHz BOOMING in from the island of Bonaire in the Caribbean. Surely a distance of several thousand miles. A real catch and exciting result that motivates for further experimentation with long wire antennas for the MW AM broadcast band and radios especially the one's that have connectors for an external antenna.🏁
@@paulgrodkowski5839 I will! Thank you for the encouragements and the nice words. I actually have a Grundig Satellit 1400 and I recently bought a smaller Tecsun PL660 for more outdoor use, but it fell on me on the second day. There was an antenna wire included and I tried it on both units (the connecter on the Grundig was obviously different but I tried anyway just by touching the retractable antenna with the tip of the wire antenna jack. The difference was huge which motivated me to further experiment with different lenght and setups. I’ve yet to understand all the basics behind sw radios and antennas. It’s quite intricate to say the least. I won’t let down. I’m’an old nostalgic fart and I really enjoy using old tech. Yet by watching hours of content about those old units, I’m pretty sure I will end up with some dsr radio at one point, though they don’t appeal me that much. I guess my old Grundig needs a capacitor restoration (or ???). The sounds gets distorted during the first minutes of use, and then settles on allright afterwards. This annoys me a bit as I know it must be damaged in some ways and I feel it should deserve some attention. I still have to find a radio tech around. I also wonder if I should try the Sony ICF 2001 maybe, cse it seems to be a very good radio, but I assume it would also need some tlc at some point
Be safe and happy mate! Thank you for helping us out with this amazing hobby. And thank you for your response ! 👍
Greetings from Belgium !
I've been hanging wire in trees for decades, I've used bow and arrow with fishing reel mounted to the bow, potato guns, sling shots, but now for the last 10 years I use a spin caster fishing pole with a golf ball drilled through to tie the line, and can top 125' trees, and the ball won't get caught in the canopy coming down, and it's easier to see than fishing weights, then poke a hole in the end of the dacron cord to tie the line to, pull your dacron up, followed by wire, stranded # 10 or #12, make your way back to the house using other trees with a pulley to allow swaying of the trees, Palomar Engineering makes $4 pulleys that will last decades. Currently putting up a 567' for 160 meters along the edge of a forest here in Indiana. Most importantly, have fun!
What a Great Ideal, A fishing Pole, I thought abought using my 300-pound Cross bow, I made from a car leaf spring, But I'm afraid it will Break the line, and the arrow will stick in someone's homes, Or them, a cheap arrow sticks all the way in a railroad tie, Its powerful, But thanks for the Ideal
If you go with the bow and arrow, cut the tip off the arrow, put 8 or 10 bb's in the arrow so when the arrow turns to come back down, the bb's will roll forward to the plug, i always broke off a golf tee to plug it, to get the arrow to start coming back down, but i found the arrow can get caught in limbs, so i stayed with the fishing pole idea. Now i do know hams that have taken a .22 caliber hunting dog practice duck to get over 200' trees or higher, but im a believer in the KISS THEORY, keep it simple stupid!@@brianbloom1799
Back in the late 1950’s,we always had an am radio in my bedroom.My favorite was between 9:30pm until-.When I used the radio,I tuned into the rock and roll stations.Our town radio went off at 8:30pm,both stations,I got a fine tuned(delicate touch)to Randy’s Record Shop in Nashville,Tn.I lived on a mountain top, in Mount Airy,N.C. About 400 miles to the east.Great times!
Don't forget you can still do this at night. I've picked up 650AM out of Nashville up near Lake Erie in Ohio at night, well over 400 miles to my home from their antenna.
WPAQ and WSYD- Both have FM signals now also.
Hello from Alberta Canada!
I must say I'm learning a lot about radios and antennas from your channel.
I listen to my am station radio because it's the only way I get to listen to Dr Charles Stanley and other christian speakers....
Nice job!👍
So here's how it's gone today: I was Youtubing vids to figure out how to fix the battery compartment door of my tiny Sony ICF-SW100. Shortwave radio was my go-to English language connection when I was living in Bavaria in the late '90s. I was into SW in my teens in the late 80's also. It reminded me of how much I loved listening to weird back of beyond broadcasts from tiny rooms, the other side of the world before the internet. It left a lot to the imagination and a bit like if Robinson Crusoe had lived a couple of hundred years later and had a radio.
Anyway, the research sent me down a rabbit hole, wondering if people still broadcast on SW. It's been an eye opener and I happened upon your channel just to understand the basics of it all again. I'm now hooked once more and have been going through your vids one after the other while I work. This is really good output man. Many thanks.
Neighbor's wife; "....honey, I TOLD you he was crazy.... Now he's fishing for squirrels.".
;-). Ha 😃
Deep fried squirrel 🐿️ taste mighty good!🍻
Sometimes the most crazy or the most sane😂😂
😂
Can we really not tame and train squirrels to Carey the antenna wire up there ?😮
I used old mains cable for my first wire antenna as I had it left over and I just stripped out the black (it was that old ). In a loft.. Main downside is lots of noise on longer bands. This, what you're doing is a proper antenna, I love it!
I remember saving money when I was 10 yoa to buy my first antenna kit. Back then I bought an archer kit at Radio Shack. Thirty years later I learned to fly using one. It's nice to tune in am stations listen and see where they are located. The ADF timed approach to or from a station is still being used today.
Few people play with this old-fashioned antenna anymore. Reminds me of 50 years ago when I was a child, making my own rock radio and setting up the antenna.
@ 07:45 : lol! I started doing that when I was ten (10) years old!...... Until I got older, I always just climbed to the top of the trees and tied the wires on. Now, I do it more like the way you do! Takes a while, but it is a lot safer! 😊
Tom, thank you so much for this most informative video with clear instructions. I definitely want to do this also! It is amazing what the radio was picking up for you!! My dream is to scan the AM dial and get a station on almost every channel. Thanks for all of your posts!
Great video and enjoyable to watch as your attempts to throw the line up in the tree was "real". I once needed a line high up in a tree so I used a straight bow and an arrow with a fishing line attached to the arrow. It worked great I just had to make sure no one was in the "drop zone". Back in the 50's the story goes that a relative of mine strung about an 80 foot AM antenna wire between pine trees at their lakeside cabin to pickup their favorite station 100 miles away. This was before they had an FM receiver and their AM radio would be a tube set with a multi-gang analog tuner. This was possibly done before the hydro "electric" grid was converted from 25 to 60 HZ and the local marina had a hut to store ice harvested from the lake in the winter and stored under sawdust to keep it through the summer to sell it to the cottagers for their ice boxes. With all the advances in technology some old ways to DX MW stations still have merit.
Great info Tom...beginners are starving for simple explanations and instruction for SWL antennas. I also use a UnUn with my random wire antennas. The transformer keeps the coax from becoming part of the antenna. I also found over the years a UnUn or Balun helps reject electrical noise. So Hams have said this is not true...but I've tested it over and over. Ok not to ramble on Thanks for the video. 73s Brian
I feel much more like a beginner than an expert. Thanks.
You are absolutely correct about the beginners. Only now ,at age 46, am I suddenly becoming passionate about radios and learning about frequencies and wave bands. I feel so extremely stupid ,but I’m in this until the end.🙏🏻
That antenna sounds really great on twenty meters, Tom. Great video with accurate information and a pleasant presentation. As another commenter said, watching your video was actually quite relaxing. Keep 'em comin'!
73 de K5SFC
I love your set up, and the 9:1 unun base mount idea, I have wound 9:1 impedance ununs out of the newer ferrites and the older red iron powder cores. Yet I like to keep all metals away from them, if I were to "use one to transmit with" and would suggest a wooden or PVC rod and using plastic zip ties perhaps to mount it with. And you are right, keeping the wire to the ground rod short as possible is a great idea.
Yet you are "not transmitting" so it should work just as well as you have done it. Transmitters are thrown off by metals near the 9:1 inductance coil inside the white case. (The steel pipe and the two metal clamps for instance.)
And if you chose to make the unun yourself, any size Ferrite torroid core should work as well as a larger one made for transmitting with a higher powered transmitter. The torroid size core and wire size mainly depends on how much power it can handle "when transmitting."
"Listeners only" can use much smaller ones. Even tiny cores as big as a penny. Using enameled wire savaged from an old clock motor. Or some other enameled wire scavenged from a busted vacuum cleaner or fan motor. Even a broken wall wart transformer has good enamel coated wire in it. (Bare copper wire won't work). yet insulated wire does work.
You make them with ten turns around the core for each wire like this; www.dxzone.com/images/pics/2015/07/09/20150709214527-e3457b38.jpg
And if You leave out the round core, it is wired like this with ten turns of wire each, around the core. (He didn't count the turns in this drawing It's a schematic or electrical drawing): m0ukd.com/static/homebrew/Magnetic_Long_Wire_UnUn/9to1_schematic.jpg
Modern Ferrite cores have no color code so they always black in color.
And as you are "not transmitting", a smaller "red" color coded, iron powder torroid would also work between 1 to 30 MHz . These iron powder round torriods cores were used before the modern ferrite toroid came out.
And if you have nothing else available, the straight rod from an old transistor AM radio antenna can be used. It's wired the same as the second drawing looks around the rod with ten turns of each of the three wires
And those with bigger transmitters, had to use bigger cores and bigger wire. Transmitters also needed an antenna tuner to set the SWR with. Receivers do not need them.
Each iron powder color coded core was for a certain frequency band of use, yet not all manufacturers used this color code, but most did. i.stack.imgur.com/OMT98.jpg
JUST QUICKLY. Hey there Radio dog and other radio friends. I watch the video about using an 80 foot random wire for SW and AM broadcast band. How interesting!!! I am really motivated once again but even more this time after watching this video. Over a span of many years I experimented a few times with a long wire antenna for reception on the MW broadcast band. Interestingly, I observed the results and differences of using the long wire versus a built in antenna of the receiver or radio that I was connecting to the long wire. Well I started to loose motivation because with my experiences it seemed that the whole idea of an after market long wire connecting yielded weaker signals than the built in loop or ferrite bar antenna and I started to wonder why I even bother messing around and reading and learning about technical stuff about radios and antennas. I sort of started to sort of feel that the built in antenna that the radio is made with works best and that it is sort of inferior using an external antenna for MW. Now however after watching several of Radio dog videos I have a whole new and very motivated perspective to continue with my experimenting with long wire antennas for the MW broadcast band and radios that have the MW broadcast band to which I can connect them to to improve reception and when I mean improve reception I mean higher signal strengths, more stations to be heard across the MW band and lower noise floor and no inter mod or distortion. My guess it is the application of the 9:1 balun that can really do the trick. That is one ingredient that I did not use in my previous projects and will remember to use in my future endeavors. 🏁
Now, can use a Drone to set even higher. Great information; I am new also.
Now this is a very informative video, the way TH-cam was intended. Excellent Tom. Sound exactly like me when things don't go exactly right at 9minutes. ;)
Tom..was so impressed with this video, I ordered the exact same un/un along with your recommended 80ft of wire and installed it from the peak of my house out to a tree, connected the ground lug to my house ground with the electrical/phone/cable common ground...ran 20 ft of rg 58 and connected to my Tecsun PL 880...what a difference compared to my single attic wire direct to the receiver...No more noise and unbelievable signals on 160 thru 10 meters...Thanks for presenting such a great video with great closeup views of everything.
How'd it do on the AM band
@21:40 song from bollywood movie Ashiqui , Good video my appreciations and regard from India🇮🇳
What station do you think it is?
You did yours up right. Mine is about 20ft high on a make shift pole and made from 10 gauge electric fence wire. Does surprisingly good.
Great job Tom. I'm as newbie as they come but I'm learning a lot from you and your channel. Someday I would like to go ahead and get my basic ham radio license. Much appreciated, keep up the good work.
Attempting to throw the line up into the tree was the most entertaining part for me.
If you attempt it again, get it spinning faster, maybe with a slightly longer cord, but make sure you release it when it's naturally on it's upswing, otherwise all the force generated in the spin is being lost - especially if you step forward and let it go.
Do you golf? Think of the downswing from the golf club and how important it is to follow through. If your downswing stopped at the bottom of the arc, and you then just stepped forward and pushed the club at the ball, not much would happen. That's kind of what you were doing.
My dad worked in communications in the R.C.N. in the 1950's, by the time I came along he had flipped that into a full-on Ham radio hobby.
We had antennas all over the place. I helped him climb TV towers, roofs, trees & crawled around inside an attic about 3 feet high. There was even a metal post set in concrete in the middle of the front yard , which was one of the support lines for some monstrosity that towered from the top of the house. He only fell off the roof once. My mother didn't understand, nor was she impressed by any of it.
If I thought I'd get away with staining up something like this in my yard, I would.
I'm just thinking about getting a small radio, maybe to take camping, to see what I can pick up. If I like it, I'll find something a bit better.
So a smaller, more portable antenna would be something I can use.
Hi Tom.
I have strung almost 2 dozen dipoles for Amateur and SWL and a sling shot with light weight fishing line and a weight attached works really well. You get better precision and height. Nice video. Best 73
LOL, IF you know how to cast accurately! A knack I never mastered as a kid, much to my fisherman father's frustration. 🙄
I would like to thank you on this very great informative video, you did a lot more than experts
It's a great thing to see video on how to improve the SW antenna
Thanks
Best Wishes from Kuwait
Dear friend Tom, I must say that your videos about the antenna build bringing me a lot of joy and fun, nice to see and also an inspiration to do some things better on my longwire, if the weather is better in europe. Thank you for sharing, best wishes from Klaus PS: in addition it gaves me motivation to try any US-Stations on mediumwave.
After a day of watching YT videos with people loudly demonstrating whatever they are reviewing, etc., this was a VERY VERY relaxing video and I learned as well. I did watch it three times. Great work.
Great job, Tom ... nice install ...you made it fun to watch ..... antennas are a lot of fun to experiment . Simpler the better
Like that you take your time & are not yelling at me like a used car salesman.
Great learning so much about short wave etc..
I tried this for getting " vivid Bharati" and Ceylon broadcasting corporation short wave stations in the year 1965. At that time there was no entertainment radio systems in Keralal, India.❤️
This brought back memories, I did this years ago, I was always messing about with antennas, chad some good reults too.
I’ve discovered that running the entire wire across the ground works the best for me
Same here seem to keep the noise down.
The wire is on the ground??
Congratulations...excellent antenna...I used mono/single 3,5mm cable. We Live in a 8.storey at 12 storey apartman block. Altitute of the apartment is 900m. I wrapped/rotated the cable around and out of the 8.storey. I took full result by way of this method. It provides strong signals. For medium wave I cant find ant DIY solution. For MW I use Tecsun circular antenna. Your radios are excellent, especially Panasonic.
It looks like you put up a really good SWL antenna! Your video brings back memories for me when as a young boy when I use to tie some copper wire onto a small rock while throwing the rock and wire over the tallest branch that I could find that I could reach! Thanks for a very good SWL tutorial antenna video! Here's wishing you great DXing & 73's!
Thanks. Just the info I needed to get better SW reception for my little ETON Elite750 receiver.
BTW, Dacron stretches fares than nylon when wet so it's a better cord plus it's more UV resistant as well..
I remember listening to SW radio back in the 1970s and it was alot of fun! There were quite a few channels to tune to. BBC, VOA, Radio Nederlands, and even from Seychelles! But now with most stations moving to internet, scouring for the remaining few channels is a bit depressing, to say the least!
Hello, Radiodog! I learned a great deal from you by watching your video and I wanted to thank you for making the effort and sharing it with the world.
I've been wanting to sling up my own permanent antenna for several years now. Trouble is that I live in a retirement community and while we have nice, fat redwood trees out back, I don't own those trees and we all have to share the community space. We also have many neighbors who live to gossip and mind other people's business for them. In short, I worry that my work would be taken down in very little time, so I hesitate to do that work. Meanwhile, I continue slinging temporary antenna fixes and then take them down after a few hours. It's tedious. I also continue looking for more semi-permanent venues where I can erect a quality wire antenna and not having to worry all the time about tampering.
What a great How To Video! Thank you for sharing
Very enjoyable to watch, listen and learn. Thank you.
i love SW so much and i'm now starting to get more MW and it's getting exciting
You are blessed with a great area to put a wire out. I am quite jealous. Good Video from start to finish. You could expand into VLF frequencies by using earth spike antenna using the ground as your antenna. Good luck from across the pond.
Great Job, Tom, thank you for motivating me to do the same.
Can you comment on how useful the 9:1 Un-Un is to a AM radio listner ?
I have the same receiver and have been wanting to install a long-wire antenna. Thank you for the instruction! I think I can do this.
ThankYou Radiodog for sharing your experience I have a similar project coming up in a tighter area.
Great video -- Learned a lot about this simple antenna .. I remember doing this years ago with a Sony 2010 .. going to get back into SWL
My attic looks like a mad scientist's lair. It is a giant coil of wire I made out of old extension cable. I have eight turns surrounding the edges of my attic. I did not use the transformer. I just made a manual tuner and adjust it to hear the most signal. I have been told that I can use the wire to transmit. But since I have no license to transmit, I am happy just listening.
I realize that I made this sort of antenna for my old customers. Mostly inside attics though. I suppose I might make a video.
@David0lyle JUST QUICKLY, when you make a video of this sort of antenna that you make for your customers keep me in mind I will be happy to watch it!🏁
Thanks for making and sharing this video...I learned a lot from it.
Great stuff. Really a pisser that Radio Shack is gone. Can't find anything around anymore. Thanks big time for the links to put it all together. Radio Shack does need a return to the biz. They had the stuff for the jobs.
Good job! You make it look easy. 73 De ZS5DG in South Africa.
With a drone you can drag line over the very tops of trees. Start with fishing line and then use that to drag paracord over the branches.
Staple some cheap insulated wire to the wood in your attic. hook one end to your receiver leave the other end free in the attic. A good secret antenna.
Thanks for the great video. I miss my old "long wire" antenna I had at my last house. I'm planning to install one at my new place. I think the ground wire is almost as important as the wire itself. It helps reduce noise if done correctly. I'm looking for a grounding rod and then I can do my installation. Let us know what other radios you plan to use, and do some long distance DX'ing.
I’m going to watch this again Tom. I am new to doing all this and before the whole sh$t-house goes up in flames…I’m going to have tons of DX-ing fun!👍🏻🕯⭐️
So if I am running my random wire into coax to bring it into the house I should have the UnUn but if running just the random wire to say, my patio or deck for outdoor listening, or directly to a window were my radio usually is (alligator clip to telescoping antenna w/no coax) I can do without the UnUn ?
I live in Hawaii and when I done this I got mostly programming from Asia,Russia and some from the Middle East.
Zebco reel, a one ounce sinker, a sling shot to propel. The #20 pound line. Over a limb with the 1 ounce sinker. Attach the wire with insulator pull up up and away.
a sling shot or wrist rocket can do the job pretty well too.
@@markbajek2541 you got it doc. Nothing fancy, but to save climb, and fall off tree as I'm a 70 year old.
That is a very nice looking radio - thanks for the vid, cheers, Keith
Cool! Sensacional! Parabéns pelo local sem interferências de RF.
First time I’ve heard a TH-camr explain UnUn. Thank you. As a new guy to SWL I always wondered every time I heard someone use it. Sounded like a made up word.
Great video, it gave me some ideas for my long line, thanks alot.
Thank you Tom.🙏🏻🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Thanks for doing this video, I stumbled Apon it and enjoyed it.Very nice tip. I know there may be other ways of doing this, but I wanted you to know that I enjoyed your video. I want to set up my own antenna myself soon and start enjoying my radio also. I love my radios. I have a lot of fun with my radios. Hope you have a nice day.
Radiodog ... I used to use a fishing rod with a half ounce to one ounce weight and throw it over the top of tall trees then pull my antenna wire up. It all depends on location of course. I`ve also just used a long pole to push the wire up onto lower tree limbs and up into tall bushes. I strung out two 250-300 ft wires (at least over head high) in opposite directions once and connected them to a homemade coil of 24 awg magnet wire (no ground) and I could easily get stations out past 300 miles during the day.
In NW Louisiana I could hear New Orleans, Houston, Dallas and Oklahoma City like locals and some stations were readable much farther away. At the time I didn`t pay much attention trying to identify the weaker stations but was simply trying to get more stations during the day. I do remember going from three stations during the day (using quality radios) to 48. I didn`t really know what I was doing. I simply accidentally discovered that a crystal radio I made boosted AM signals on my radio and started experimenting. So I made a 100 turn coil of 24 awg magnet wire on a paper towel tube and connected it to the wires and placed it near the radio.
I used the fishing rod to get a wire up into the top of a large tree then parked our old truck under it and connected the wire to the radio antenna to DX on the AM radio. It worked well.
Tom Jones : Yeah, I have made those coils like that too!.....Also, if you buy 500 feet of wire on a spool, just leave a couple of hundred feet on the spool and set the spool by the radio! That works real well, too. (Run the 300 feet [that you have unwound] outside and up in the air!) (Hook the ground wire to end of the wire that is left on the spool!) 😊
Hi from Dubai, nice video Tom.
Very informative. Thank you.
Thank you Tom, I am a beginner.
Thanks for sharing, interesting and informative!
Very useful information 👌
This video was very helpful. Thank you.
Well done 👍👍👍
Really enjoyed this thanks!
I like the simple setup.
Thanks for the video. Could you talk about how you made the connection in the house? I assume the center conductor of the coax is going to the tip of your 3.5mm jack but is the jacket of the coax going to the other part of the 3.5mm jack? Also I assume the jacket is connected to the ground outside on the other end? Maybe this is done inside of the un un thing you have where I can't see it? I have a really long wire up right now, like 250 ft or so but I want to get rid of the noise it picks up when it comes into the house.
You can pull one end and then the other end of an outdoor wire antenna down out of visual range when times are tough.
Nice! I bet you'd really enjoy running that antenna thru a good SDR dongle onto a computer to interface/control.
Well hello tom. I wish i had your back yard but i dont. I do have a 60 foot e comm 2 ant which serves the purpose and dont have much to interfear so i guess i do ok. Im up of the top of an apartment bldg. With a clear shot to the river and beyond. That was a great catch by the way and i would log that one in a minute. Ok well im just jealous but good for you. Ron. Z. Pgh. Pa.
Good listening!
Maybe I missed something, but what does the high tree end of the wire look like? What holds it in the tree?
Wrist rocket with fishing weight & line. Pull up lightweight rope followed by antenna wire. Will get that antenna way up there.
Hi, bought some Rca speaker wire and using that as my rope antenna....got an inexpensive 219 12 dollar radio...see if I get better reception, thxs
Appreciate the info sir subscribed👍
I just got a simple (but pricey) MFJ HF/Shortwave loop antenna. Kills all the noise that an antenna like this won't. When he turned on his radio near the end, I about cringed from all of that nasty static! Good SW listening is quiet SW listening. The one I have is made for the outside but I just have it in my room. I can't have antennas at all outside where I live.
I tried using that method to put a line in a tree. It didn't work very well for me.
Casting with a fishing pole or a slingshot would probably be more precise.
You're doing it wrong! :-) Just kidding . . . I enjoyed watching you install your antenna. Thanks. AA8VA
Well done that man!
There are many videos on random wire antennas. What no one shows are clever ways to get the coax into the house where the radio is.
Thanks for this!
Love this channel
23:30 Sounds like that woman is talking about the coronavirus, and I just noticed the date of your upload, I'm guessing things were about to get interesting for you not much later! Very nice antenna. Why is it called "random wire"? Isn't this just a type of long wire?
Man, picking up something on almost every channel on AM was pretty impressive. Does the angle and direction of the wire matter much? If I were to do this, the highest point would about a third of the length in where I have a large tree.
i'll be mounting a long end fed wire about 30ft in the next few days, not got the biggest garden i'm using scaffolding poles, video coming obviously lol, not as good but check it out
Thanks for the instructive and useful video. You've just got a new subscriber.
Videos about antennas for SWL aren't common, so I'm glad I've found this one.
I have two questions:
- unless I missed it, you don't tell exactly how long this antenna is. You mention 80ft = 24.38m at some point, so I guess that's it?
- what do you do with the grounding wire? just lay it on the ground or actually ground it by connecting its end to some kind of copper rod plugged into the soil?
Many thanks in advance if you can take a minute to reply to these questions.
73, Alain
One of these days I`m gonna buy a cheap spool of very thin magnet wire and stretch out a 1000+ ft antenna through the woods. It won`t last but I`ll bet I could temporarily pull in some serious DX on AM.
Thanks for the comment! Seriously, I was thinking the same thing. I might turn that into a video soon! Probably not 1000'...maybe 200'?
Tom Jones : I have never tried over 300 feet. But, I think that, after the first 100 feet, each additional 100 feet doesn't add that much signal! After 100 feet, you would get more improvement by raising the wire higher! Get it up 30 feet if you can! Then, make sure your ground pipe is deep in the ground. Drive it down two (2) feet or more into the ground and file clean the place where you are going to attach the wire to where it is shiny! Get the wire up high and get it grounded correctly and you will do well. A correct ground on your antenna will pull down a lot of signal! Ten gauge House wire (# 10) works the best for picking up signal and, once you get it up there, it will last for many years and you never have to mess with it again! Mine has been up there over 30 years and still works well! I only have to re-file the ground pipe every few years! 😊 (Note : Make sure that there is nothing under the ground where you are going to put the pipe! Since childhood, I have probably put 50 or more ground pipes down for different stuff and never had a problem. But a few years ago, I got careless and ended up hitting a small gas pipe that had to be replaced. So, be careful and know where all your water and gas pipes are!)
@@Radiodog Well on AM the full wavelength of a wire antenna for 1000 on the dial (1 mhz) is about 1000 feet. The formula for full wave length is 1006 divided by the frequency in mhz. I`ve been researching BOG antennas (beverage on ground) and they`re often much longer than the standard wavelength for the frequency. My dream is to string out an antenna one mile long and see what happens. LOL!
@@spiritofecstasy8525 I`ve been studying about proper ground rods. The last time I tried it was with a rusty iron pipe that wasn`t very long and it didn`t work. Next time I`ll do it right. We have bad lightning storms here so I`m scared to get an antenna up really high. LOL! Lightning toasted the last long wire I made from a big spool of wire a friend gave me and it was only about 7 feet above the ground. But lightning won`t stop me. I`m looking for super reception.
@@tomjones239 Yeah, you have to file that rust off of the place where you are going to wrap the wire. Wrap it around about four times and if you have a clamp, put the clamp over the wire and tighten it down. If you do not have a clamp, wrap it four times and then twist it real tight, where it doesn't move! Usually you do not need to take the rust off of the rest of the pipe, but just off the area where the wire is attached. Of course, use a new pipe if you have it. If you do not have an iron pipe, you can use copper pipe for it. But, of course you cannot drive the copper pipe down. You would have to dig a two foot hole with post hole diggers, then insert then copper pipe, and then fill in the hole around it! 😊
Bought myself a drone and some fishing line, easy quick and up to the top of the tree
Wow, how easy, I'm getting ready to purchase a SW radio, this is very good any recommendations great!
Very interesting Tom. When using a fixed long wire for medium wave are you restricted with what you can receive given that MW signals are very directional? When using the internal ferrite or a loop antenna it's necessary to rotate the antenna for best reception. I don't have the space you have so I'm currently using the popular MLA-30 loop antenna positioned next to my window indoors. Performs very well on SW.
It's hard to say to what extent the directionality of the wire is limiting. I reoriented the antenna from its original configuration (from basically north-south to east-west) and I've noticed some fringe stations that I haven't noticed before, and yes, I'm sure some stations no longer audible. Somewhere along the line I read that slopers are more omni-directional than horizontals, so that's what I was aiming for. Thanks for the comment!
@@Radiodog That interesting. I didn't realise that. Slightly different topic regarding the 909X. As you've found it's fairly poor using the whip but really excels with a decent external antenna. I gather this design was intentional by Sangean as the whip was designed around FM. Anyway my bigger loop antenna (from Cross Country Wireless) overloads all of my portables including the Tecsun S-8800. The one exception is the 909X. It handles it just fine. For a portable it has a very robust front end.
@@Radio_Activity : You can always construct an "L" antenna, i.e., 50 feet North to South and then turn the wire and take it 50 feet East to West!...….If your portables will not handle the antenna, do not connect the wire directly to the radio! Connect it to a coil wound around a 12 inch to 18 inch PVC pipe or broom handle. Wind 50 feet to 100 feet of 16, 12, or 10 gage wire around the pipe or broom type handle. Connect the antenna wire to one end of the coil and a ground wire to the other end of the coil! Then, just set the portables near the coil and find the right distance from the coil. Try placing the coil closest to the radio tuner first! 😊
Hi Tom. I've enjoyed watching your video. However, I need you to clarify something for me: In your video you connect the balun to your receiver using coax. As far as I can tell, the Sangean receiver has only a jack connection for an external antenna. I'm obviously missing something here. Perhaps you can clarify? Thanks.
Thanks for the comment. Basically, I use an adapter at the end of the coax, connected to a 3' audio cable that terminates into a mono plug to the radio. I find that audio cable works rather well as a kind of "light duty" coax.