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VHF Radio Range Problem

M

MazingTree

Jan 1, 1970
0
I suspect that my Marine VHF radio is a little lacking in range, even on the
25W setting.

It's an older style Navico, I only get about a 10 mile range out at sea,
Yacht to yacht, although I can just reach the Coast Guard from around the
Eddystone (about 15 miles to the coast) This woulnd't seem so bad, except
my brand new ICOM M31 portable gives exactly the same range, both
tramistting and receiving, and that's using it down at deck level, and at
only 5W output! whereas my Main boat VHF has an aerial on the top of the
mast.

Does anyone have any thoughts about what range I can expect yacht to yacht
on a 32 footer sailing boat with mast head antenna with 25 Watts.

I am considering purchasing the ICOM M421, do you think this is the best
bet, or could the aerial be faulty. I have checked all the deck level
connections and these seem OK.

Tips and hints welcome.

Cheers,

John
 
R

Richard

Jan 1, 1970
0
I had the same problem on my Pearson 303. I was told that the antenta wire
going up the mast had chaffed through and was shorting out. I replaced the
wire and now it works fine. It is the original radio from 1985 on the boat.
 
M

MazingTree

Jan 1, 1970
0
Ah that's encouraging. Another reply in UK.rec.sailing (didn't see the
electronics group!) concurs with this thought. I think I shall replace the
antenna and aerial, unless I can get the Vtronix Antenna apart to replace
just the cable. Sounds worth doing first anyway.

John
 
B

Bruce in Alaska

Jan 1, 1970
0
MazingTree said:
I suspect that my Marine VHF radio is a little lacking in range, even on the
25W setting.

It's an older style Navico, I only get about a 10 mile range out at sea,
Yacht to yacht, although I can just reach the Coast Guard from around the
Eddystone (about 15 miles to the coast) This woulnd't seem so bad, except
my brand new ICOM M31 portable gives exactly the same range, both
tramistting and receiving, and that's using it down at deck level, and at
only 5W output! whereas my Main boat VHF has an aerial on the top of the
mast.

Does anyone have any thoughts about what range I can expect yacht to yacht
on a 32 footer sailing boat with mast head antenna with 25 Watts.

I am considering purchasing the ICOM M421, do you think this is the best
bet, or could the aerial be faulty. I have checked all the deck level
connections and these seem OK.

Tips and hints welcome.

Cheers,

John

I would suspect the antenna and or coax cable in your case. Sounds like
a simple case of old tired coax, or detuned, ort failing antenna.
Here in the North Pacific, we usually are getting 50+ miles boat to
boat with 25 Watts and 10db antennas on 0ver 300 ton Coastal Freighters,
with some paths reaching out to 90+ miles. Of course your milage may
vary, as to Actual Tx Power, and Receiver Sensitivity, and Antenna
losses.


Bruce in alaska
 
S

Steve Lusardi

Jan 1, 1970
0
If your boat is fiberglass or wood, make certain you have a ground plane for
the antenna. The earth connection of your transceiver needs to connect to
large matt or screen on the hull which is connected electrically with the
water. Some boat builders bond the screen into the deck. As a check, borrow
a VHF base station antenna and see if it performs correctly. If it does, you
have found your problem. Now fixing it, is another matter.
Steve
 
K

krj

Jan 1, 1970
0
Used my VHF for a 1300 nm contact today.
krj

Steve said:
If your boat is fiberglass or wood, make certain you have a ground plane for
the antenna. The earth connection of your transceiver needs to connect to
large matt or screen on the hull which is connected electrically with the
water. Some boat builders bond the screen into the deck. As a check, borrow
a VHF base station antenna and see if it performs correctly. If it does, you
have found your problem. Now fixing it, is another matter.
Steve
 
L

Larry W4CSC

Jan 1, 1970
0
It's an older style Navico, I only get about a 10 mile range out at
sea, Yacht to yacht, although I can just reach the Coast Guard from
around the Eddystone (about 15 miles to the coast) This woulnd't seem
so bad, except my brand new ICOM M31 portable gives exactly the same
range, both tramistting and receiving, and that's using it down at
deck level, and at only 5W output! whereas my Main boat VHF has an
aerial on the top of the mast.

Ok, let's splurge and drop by Waste Marine for a Shakespeare VHF power/SWR
meter. It's a little white meter with a switch and adjustment control on
the front and two coax connectors, one on each side. $30. You'll need a
short coax jumper to go from the meter's transmitter connector to the VHF
transceiver. If you also buy two right-angle PL-259/SO-239 connectors to
make the coax jacks come out the back of it, instead of the side, you can
make a neat permanent installation of the meter on the panel next to the
radio so you KNOW it's actually transmitting and that the antenna is OK at
any time you don't get an answer.

Use is simple. To check the antenna out, put the meter switch in the SET
position, key the transmitter on some channel in the middle of the band
(NOT CHANNEL 16!) and rotate the little adjustment control until the meter
is at the SET mark at full scale. Now, switch to SWR position and read the
SWR scale on the meter, while still holding the transmitter keyed. A
perfect antenna, which rarely exists, will show no movement of the needle
off the 1 on the SWR scale, indicating no reflected power back from the
antenna. All the power is going out on the air. Any reading on SWR below
2:1 (the 2 on the SWR scale) is fine. 2:1 means you're losing 10% of your
power back from the antenna. At the antenna it's worse than that but noone
can really tell the difference out on the horizon between 25W and 15W. If
the SWR is higher than 2:1, especially if it goes way up off the SWR scale,
which only goes halfway up at 3:1, the antenna or the cable is
TOAST...probably from a lightning hit or broken coaxial cable.

Worst case....SWR sucks over 3:1....what now?......

Now we get out the bosun's chair and have the galley slaves haul us, and
our SWR meter, up the mast to the antenna. Move the jumper coax cable from
the transmitter jack to the antenna jack as up at the top it will be
jumpering the meter to the antenna. Unplug the coax cable off the antenna,
after the galley slaves secure the line to a cleat, please, and connect it
to the transmitter jack on our meter. Connect the open end of the jumper
coax to the antenna. Move a galley slave to the radio and have him/her
turn it on. Repeat the SWR set and measurement procedure above. If you
have to significantly move the SET control from the position you had it at
the transceiver end of the coax....or.....if you get little or no reading
at all....the coax is TOAST. Replace it and start measuring again.

Ok, what if we get good power level up the coax? Switch to SWR position
and read the SWR under the antenna, now. It would normally be a little
higher than what you'd measure at the transceiver on a good antenna because
the reflected power that makes the SWR position run is attenuated by the
cable when we measured it back at the radio. That'd be normal. Again, the
SWR here should be less than 2:1. If it's high, the antenna is toast! Go
to your favorite marine "discount" dealer and order a Metz Manta 6 VHF
antenna, not that piece of plastic crap with COAX RUNNING OUT OF THE
PLASTIC they'll invariably try to pawn off on your. The Metz is guaranteed
for life. They'll send you a new one if you ever tear up this one. It's
the best antenna for sailboat masts....damned near indestructable. it
comes with a right-angle stainless bracket to mount it to the mast if your
current one isn't compatible.
http://www.metzcommunication.com/manta6.htm
You won't need the handrail mount. Mounted on the handrail sucks.
ALTITUDE IS OUR FRIEND ON VHF!
Does anyone have any thoughts about what range I can expect yacht to
yacht on a 32 footer sailing boat with mast head antenna with 25
Watts.

Daytime, normal weather....50' mast to 50' mast...probably 15 miles...a
little over the visual horizon from the top of the mast. VHF is line-of-
sight to the radio horizon. Mathematically it's:
http://continuouswave.com/whaler/reference/VHF.html

As you can see from that, the major concern is "path loss" and antenna
height. The 3dB Metz gives you double whatever power is at the end of the
cable atop the mast in Effective Radiated Power (ERP) The 6dB antenna is
too tall to make sense up there...easily destroyed plastic.

I am considering purchasing the ICOM M421, do you think this is the
best bet, or could the aerial be faulty. I have checked all the deck
level connections and these seem OK.

Before we spend hundreds on a new radio, let's get the antenna checked out
with the cheap meter, first. If the SWR is reasonable, under 2:1, when you
test it at the radio, THEN we'll flip the switch to POWER mode and read the
handy little wattmeter, which is "fairly accurate" at LOW SWR READINGS,
being most accurate at 1:1 with no reflected power. Check the 25W high
power and 1 watt low power in this meter mode. As the SWR increases, this
reading increases, so don't get way excited if it reads 30 watts at 2:1
SWR. It was calibrated into a perfect dummy load at the factory.

Now, of course, if you're reading ZERO and can't get the meter to SET in
SWR mode....then we've got a bad transmitter. Your choice to repair or
replace. If it's old, dump it.
They stopped making my beloved M-59 the jetboat jumping waves couldn't
destroy...dammit. Lionheart has an M-602 on the mainmast Metz and an M-59
on the mizzen lower down. Captain Geoffrey likes the way the M-602 matches
the M-802 HF panel...(c; There's no difference in the range of the big
expensive 602 and the old M-59 I can tell. M-59 has new clothes. They
call it the M-302, now. If you don't need the extra toys of the M-402,
like remote Commander mic, etc., it has the same radio operation.

Any Icom is fine. M-127s, the Radio Of The Year back in 2000 and before,
is a great radio. They're still available, but discontinued, now. Gotta
keep cranking up those model numbers, you know!

As the range webpage shows, 10 miles is pretty fair, boat 2 boat on VHF.
The investment in the little SWR/Power meter will help you find out the
true health of the radio/antenna/cable combo....Everyone should buy one.
 
L

Larry W4CSC

Jan 1, 1970
0
If your boat is fiberglass or wood, make certain you have a ground
plane for the antenna. The earth connection of your transceiver needs
to connect to large matt or screen on the hull which is connected
electrically with the water. Some boat builders bond the screen into
the deck. As a check, borrow a VHF base station antenna and see if it
performs correctly. If it does, you have found your problem. Now
fixing it, is another matter. Steve

The end-fed halfwave antennas, such as the Metz Manta-6 do not require any
ground or groundplane at all. The antenna rod, itself, is a total 1/2
wavelength dipole, but fed from the bottom end. No ground is necessary.

http://www.metzcommunication.com/manta6.htm
Guaranteed for life....
 
M

MazingTree

Jan 1, 1970
0
The Antenna system is a Vtronix Great Hawk, the one with the Wind indicator
built into it. Since I first posted, I have spoken with their technical
man, and he was very helpful, and explained that it's fitted with a special
solderless connection to enable the cable to be unscrewed and checked. from
my description to him, it sounds like the aerial has been up the mast for a
long time though, so I may swap the antenna anyway, whilst I am up the mast.
He says it is possible after a very extended period of time for the antenna
to become faulty due corrosion and possibly water ingress.

John
 
M

MazingTree

Jan 1, 1970
0
Yes I am sure you are correct, according to the Vtronix Hawk information,
this is an end fed dipole, and so needs no ground.

John
 
M

MazingTree

Jan 1, 1970
0
Excellent post - Thanks. I think I follow it all, and it makes logical
sense. I had searched for some time for a Meter to mesaure output power,
but must have been using the wrong terminology because I couldn't find
anything.

My Antenna, is a Vtronix Great Hawk, which appear to be very popular over
here in the UK, and appears well made, with a special solderless cable
fitting, and appears to be well engineered. It also houses the windex, so I
may stick with this type. Price is similar to the Metz it would appear.

I wonder if you SWR meter can be purchased from the UK. I'm off to find out
now!

thanks,

John
 
M

MazingTree

Jan 1, 1970
0
Larry,

Would have the URL for Waste Marine, I can't see this listed in Google?
I wonder if you have a typo, it seems an odd name for a company selling
marine equipment :)

Cheers,

John
 
K

Kees Verruijt

Jan 1, 1970
0
MazingTree said:
Larry,

Would have the URL for Waste Marine, I can't see this listed in Google?
I wonder if you have a typo, it seems an odd name for a company selling
marine equipment :)

Cheers,

John

Hi John,

Waste Marine is a common pun on a very big company in the USA with
_many_ stores called West Marine. Their website can be found at

http://www.westmarine.com/

Of course, on our side of the Atlantic we've never heard of the bloody
outfit...

Vriendelijke groeten,
Kees
 
K

Kees Verruijt

Jan 1, 1970
0
MazingTree said:
I wonder if you SWR meter can be purchased from the UK. I'm off to find out
now!

John,

Type "swr meter vhf site:uk" and up they pop. Most of them seem radio
ham oriented, but I was quickly able to find one that's GBP 29.95, which
sounds reasonable.

-- Kees
 
K

Kees Verruijt

Jan 1, 1970
0
Kees said:
John,

Type "swr meter vhf site:uk" and up they pop. Most of them seem radio
ham oriented, but I was quickly able to find one that's GBP 29.95, which
sounds reasonable.

-- Kees

Oops, that should have read ''Type "swr meter vhf site:uk" into Google''
of course...

-- Kees
 
L

Larry W4CSC

Jan 1, 1970
0
I wonder if you SWR meter can be purchased from the UK. I'm off to
find out now!

thanks,

John

Sorry I didn't notice you were in the UK, John. If you know any ham radio
operators, they'll know, too, where to purchase a similar VHF SWR meter.
 
L

Larry W4CSC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Type "swr meter vhf site:uk" and up they pop. Most of them seem radio
ham oriented, but I was quickly able to find one that's GBP 29.95, which
sounds reasonable.

Just make sure they are for the 156 Mhz range in their specs. Many ham
radio SWR meters are only for frequencies below 30 Mhz...the HF band.
 
L

Larry W4CSC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Would have the URL for Waste Marine, I can't see this listed in Google?
I wonder if you have a typo, it seems an odd name for a company selling
marine equipment :)

Shakespeare manufactures marine antennas in the US. Go to Google and
search for:

Shakespeare ART-2 Antenna Radio Tester

There are lots of dealers. I looked at Shakespeare's website and see they
have a new model out, the ART-3, but have never seen one. The ART-2 has
been out for many years. It's all you need.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Shakespeare+ART-
2+Antenna+Radio+Tester&btnG=Google+Search

The PDF catalog is at:
http://www.shakespeare-marine.com/catalog/fullline.pdf
Click on "Radio Accessories" in the control panel of the Adobe Acrobat
Reader. It's the 2nd unit down on the left.
 
L

Larry W4CSC

Jan 1, 1970
0
Of course, on our side of the Atlantic we've never heard of the bloody
outfit...

Sorry for causing the confusion. You haven't missed anything having never
been in an overpriced West Marine store.
 
L

Larry W4CSC

Jan 1, 1970
0
solderless connection to enable the cable to be unscrewed and checked

I don't like it. Solderless usually means corroded within 5 miles of the
sea.
 
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