I justy rebuilt a Diamond X500 not much there but copper wire. The
problem with it, was, in the "loading coil" the base has a pair of
caps tacked to the base coil. They are crappy solder joints and one
lead of one cap just poped off the solder where it was tacked on.
--- In Repeater-Builder@
dBi Ringo Ranger and the use of dBi I like it to a subterranean
isotropic radiator.
I think a Heathkit cantenna radiates better.
Nate Duehr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 2/20/07, Ron Wright, Skywarn Coodinator <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> When a Ringo-Ranger is adver
At 2/20/2007 21:51, you wrote:
>On 2/20/07, Ron Wright, Skywarn Coodinator <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > When a Ringo-Ranger is advertised in Ham magazines it has 6 db gain.
> > When advertised in commerical publications/catalogs it has 4.5 db
> > gain...same antenna, same part number.
>
>Even g
At 2/20/2007 05:39, you wrote:
>Could never understand why a Diamond long 18 ft dual band antenna has
>about 8 dbd on VHF/11 dbd on UHF when a commerical antenna like the
>Super Station Master or DB224 has 6 db. Think the commerical people
>know why, not, hi.
The Diamond specs are actually dBi,
On 2/20/07, Ron Wright, Skywarn Coodinator <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> When a Ringo-Ranger is advertised in Ham magazines it has 6 db gain.
> When advertised in commerical publications/catalogs it has 4.5 db
> gain...same antenna, same part number.
Even getting 4.5dB gain out of a Ringo Resistor
Eric,
I think the reason antenna manufactures use dbi over dbd is dbi is
higher...the higher the spec the more impressed is the customer.
Most Hams probably do not know how to read the spec reference, dbi or
dbd. They see db.
When a Ringo-Ranger is advertised in Ham magazines it has 6 db gai
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