Long-time listener, first-time caller. I got into GMRS handhelds a couple years ago to stay in touch with friends while hunting. Now I'm looking to build out a 15-20W mobile rig to get a little better performance and have a backup to my HT. As seems to happen in life, practical constraints are getting in the way of optimization. So, I'm hoping folks smarter than I am can give their thoughts on a few alternative antenna placements. For context, I drive a 3rd gen Tacoma with a fiberglass Leer cap. I'm not willing to drill the roof. I regularly carry a canoe or kayak up top, so I need something offset enough that it won't interfere with the boat (I know I could remove the antenna, but I don't want to have to choose between the radio or the boat if I can avoid it).
Option 1: Hood/fender-mounted whip (MXTA26 or similar) near the passenger-side A-pillar. I know it will work, but I also know that getting the antenna higher would be better. I also don't love the idea of transmitting right next to my face.
Option 2a: Ghost antenna mounted on my roof rack. My cap has Thule tracks installed, each approximately 58" x 2". I also have the WingBar cross-bars installed, which are oval in shape and roughly 50" x 3.5". I could mount the antenna on the track just forward or aft of the front WingBar tower. The ghost antenna is short enough that the boat would clear it.
Option 2b: Ghost antenna mounted on a WingBar. I could mount on the outer edge of the forward WingBar, which would maximize height but would expose the antenna to some tree/brush impacts.
Option 3: Folding antenna on Thule tracks. I could mount a folding whip or fiberglass antenna on one of the Thule tracks. I'd rather the antenna be in play all the time, but I could compromise on a folding antenna if the ghost just wouldn't cut it.
My very basic understanding is that Option 1 likely has a better ground plane but will experience more interference from the truck cab. Options 2-3 prioritize height at the expense of antenna gain. I don't want to run a tall antenna up top because the areas I hunt are extremely overgrown.
I think (please correct me if I'm wrong) that Options 2-3 have enough metal in the system from the Thule tracks and/or WingBars, but that the long/skinny shape of that metal could cause directional transmission issues.* For those of you well-versed in this sort of thing, I'm curious how big of a deal that is.
*It's possible that there are enough metal-to-metal connections in the roof rack that the whole system could function and one continuous ground. But I don't know, so for the time being I'm assuming that the ground plane would be either one track or one WingBar.
So with all that said, if these were your options, which would you choose? Or would you do something else entirely?
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WSAK598
Long-time listener, first-time caller. I got into GMRS handhelds a couple years ago to stay in touch with friends while hunting. Now I'm looking to build out a 15-20W mobile rig to get a little better performance and have a backup to my HT. As seems to happen in life, practical constraints are getting in the way of optimization. So, I'm hoping folks smarter than I am can give their thoughts on a few alternative antenna placements. For context, I drive a 3rd gen Tacoma with a fiberglass Leer cap. I'm not willing to drill the roof. I regularly carry a canoe or kayak up top, so I need something offset enough that it won't interfere with the boat (I know I could remove the antenna, but I don't want to have to choose between the radio or the boat if I can avoid it).
Option 1: Hood/fender-mounted whip (MXTA26 or similar) near the passenger-side A-pillar. I know it will work, but I also know that getting the antenna higher would be better. I also don't love the idea of transmitting right next to my face.
Option 2a: Ghost antenna mounted on my roof rack. My cap has Thule tracks installed, each approximately 58" x 2". I also have the WingBar cross-bars installed, which are oval in shape and roughly 50" x 3.5". I could mount the antenna on the track just forward or aft of the front WingBar tower. The ghost antenna is short enough that the boat would clear it.
Option 2b: Ghost antenna mounted on a WingBar. I could mount on the outer edge of the forward WingBar, which would maximize height but would expose the antenna to some tree/brush impacts.
Option 3: Folding antenna on Thule tracks. I could mount a folding whip or fiberglass antenna on one of the Thule tracks. I'd rather the antenna be in play all the time, but I could compromise on a folding antenna if the ghost just wouldn't cut it.
My very basic understanding is that Option 1 likely has a better ground plane but will experience more interference from the truck cab. Options 2-3 prioritize height at the expense of antenna gain. I don't want to run a tall antenna up top because the areas I hunt are extremely overgrown.
I think (please correct me if I'm wrong) that Options 2-3 have enough metal in the system from the Thule tracks and/or WingBars, but that the long/skinny shape of that metal could cause directional transmission issues.* For those of you well-versed in this sort of thing, I'm curious how big of a deal that is.
*It's possible that there are enough metal-to-metal connections in the roof rack that the whole system could function and one continuous ground. But I don't know, so for the time being I'm assuming that the ground plane would be either one track or one WingBar.
So with all that said, if these were your options, which would you choose? Or would you do something else entirely?
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