jakej
Well-Known Member
FWIW - I've been trying to help various people with the topic issues of 'spikes' when transmitting. Now the obvious cause is RF, but why ?
All the installations I've done (including fitting the Com antenna) do not have a problem (except 1 composite aircraft) but a customer with an RV now does have issues although it was working ok for 6 months. He had spiking when first flights began however he did some antenna bonding work and all seemed ok until just recently.
Yesterday the the light bulb came on - he fitted the antenna, not me. There are only 4 screws & nuts, how hard is that to do ? This is a reasonable question I think, but the answer is not necessarily straightforward.
So, IMO, this is what should be done when fitting a manufactured antenna eg Comant --- clean up the inside of skin where the attaching screw are, use thin star washers under the head of the screws and between nut and fuselage skin. Then, after it's all assembled, spray some corrosion proofing product to protect the bare areas. Do not remove paint from between antenna & skin, this is also the manufacturers advice.
Composite aircraft - do a SWR check of the antenna AFTER is is fitted, fiberglassing the antenna to fuselage will detune it so an SWR check must be done insitu &, in both cases above, use a low loss 50 Ohm cable eg RG400 - RG58/59 can/will give you heartache.
The above assumes you do not have any high current cables bundled with the rest of the wiring & all grounds and coax crimps are good ie the obvious things
Hopefully the 'fix' is as simple as described, there is no more that I can add at this point.
Jake J
All the installations I've done (including fitting the Com antenna) do not have a problem (except 1 composite aircraft) but a customer with an RV now does have issues although it was working ok for 6 months. He had spiking when first flights began however he did some antenna bonding work and all seemed ok until just recently.
Yesterday the the light bulb came on - he fitted the antenna, not me. There are only 4 screws & nuts, how hard is that to do ? This is a reasonable question I think, but the answer is not necessarily straightforward.
So, IMO, this is what should be done when fitting a manufactured antenna eg Comant --- clean up the inside of skin where the attaching screw are, use thin star washers under the head of the screws and between nut and fuselage skin. Then, after it's all assembled, spray some corrosion proofing product to protect the bare areas. Do not remove paint from between antenna & skin, this is also the manufacturers advice.
Composite aircraft - do a SWR check of the antenna AFTER is is fitted, fiberglassing the antenna to fuselage will detune it so an SWR check must be done insitu &, in both cases above, use a low loss 50 Ohm cable eg RG400 - RG58/59 can/will give you heartache.
The above assumes you do not have any high current cables bundled with the rest of the wiring & all grounds and coax crimps are good ie the obvious things
Hopefully the 'fix' is as simple as described, there is no more that I can add at this point.
Jake J