GreggInFL Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago How close to 462/467 must an antenna be to function? I have access to the antenna shown nearby. A friend ran into it and says, "Worthless label. 154/430Mhz. Made in China. About 6 feet tall. 58 cable with a BNC connector. Free to a good home." I'd use it (if it can work with GMRS) on a 15-20' mast with a DB25-G (25W) in a flat, wooded area. I'm not talking 5 x 9 perfection, just adequate to be heard and understood over a short distance, say < three miles. I know, I know, "Try it and find out." I hesitate to try it because 1) it might not work for GMRS and 2) as an apparent dual-band it might lure me into becoming a ham. What say the crowd? Quote
mb523 Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago You want your antenna to match the frequencies you're transmitting on as closely as possible. 154/430Mhz is the common VHF/UHF split for a dual band HAM antenna. It won't have good SWR on GMRS since it isn't tuned for the 462/467 range needed for GMRS. It may work, but it won't work well. You want to look for a GMRS specific antenna like this one: Quote
OffRoaderX Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago 43 minutes ago, GreggInFL said: How close to 462/467 must an antenna be to function? I have access to the antenna shown nearby. A friend ran into it and says, "Worthless label. 154/430Mhz. The only way to know for sure is to put a meter or portable antenna analyzer on it and test it.. But, like the @mb523 said, its not going to work very well. GreggInFL 1 Quote
Lscott Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, GreggInFL said: How close to 462/467 must an antenna be to function? I have access to the antenna shown nearby. A friend ran into it and says, "Worthless label. 154/430Mhz. Made in China. About 6 feet tall. 58 cable with a BNC connector. Free to a good home." I'd use it (if it can work with GMRS) on a 15-20' mast with a DB25-G (25W) in a flat, wooded area. I'm not talking 5 x 9 perfection, just adequate to be heard and understood over a short distance, say < three miles. I know, I know, "Try it and find out." I hesitate to try it because 1) it might not work for GMRS and 2) as an apparent dual-band it might lure me into becoming a ham. What say the crowd? Only quick way to find out is test it with an SWR meter. Some of these multi band antennas show oscillation in the SWR across a range of frequencies. You might get lucky where the GMRS frequencies falls into one of the low SWR valley. The link below is a test I did of a favorite wide band mobile antenna. Usable. https://forums.mygmrs.com/gallery/image/268-ca-2x4sr/?context=new And this link is for a test on a Ham dual band mobile antenna to see if it was usable. Doesn't look good. https://forums.mygmrs.com/gallery/image/283-sg7500a-swr-scans-2jpg/ GreggInFL 1 Quote
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