WSGH675 Posted 19 hours ago Report Posted 19 hours ago So just wondering has anyone try to do a rat tail/tiger tail on there gmrs handheld radio and if so did they get any results Quote
Socalgmrs Posted 19 hours ago Report Posted 19 hours ago Sure a 6.5” 12g wire with a ring terminal inter the antenna will help but I never found it helps enough. I just use 771 antennas and have no issues with tx distance. With a short and stubby antenna they do help somewhat. WSGH675 1 Quote
73blazer Posted 19 hours ago Report Posted 19 hours ago If you mean a counterpoise , I tried this on a few different HT's, no discernible difference in any department, noise/quieting, distances nothing. I could measure on a meter the receiving end was a bit better from the HT transmitting with the counterpoise, but for real world humans, there was no difference. I was glad it didn't work, because who really wants to walk around with a giant piece of wire hanging off their HT? WSGH675 1 Quote
tweiss3 Posted 19 hours ago Report Posted 19 hours ago At UHF, there isn't much discernable improvement, the radio body is more than enough counterpoise to the antenna. Now, when you get to low band VHF (50MHz) a tigertail counterpoise has the potential to provide significant improvement to compromised antenna systems. WSGH675 and WSDM599 1 1 Quote
SteveShannon Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago A friend of mine did some testing, including using an external microphone so he could measure the effect of the tiger tail unaffected by coupling with his body. He actually felt that his radio worked better without the wire. I have never tried it. WSGH675 1 Quote
Lscott Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago 22 minutes ago, SteveShannon said: A friend of mine did some testing, including using an external microphone so he could measure the effect of the tiger tail unaffected by coupling with his body. He actually felt that his radio worked better without the wire. I have never tried it. Not that shocking a result. At the frequencies used by GMRS,UHF band, the usual quarter wave rubber duck antenna is only about 6 inches long. A median sized HT's body is about that size and would provide a reasonably good ground plane, needs to be about a quarter wave in size, for the quarter wave rubber duck antenna typically used. On VHF I would expect to see some measurable improvement. Quote
tweiss3 Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago On another note, I recently bought a Motorola HT-1250 for 6 meter use, and I needed to replace the antenna. The replacement came with instructions, and there were 2 different cut lines, 1 for with a RSM attached and 1 without. It was about 0.75"-0.5" different across the band. For those wondering, this is a helical antenna designed to cover 30MHz to 50MHz with a bandwidth of maybe 2MHz when cut. Quote
tweiss3 Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago 1 minute ago, Lscott said: On VHF I would expect to see some measurable improvement. This is probable for many of the ham or single band antennas, but some of the magic in the "all-band" HT antennas doesn't appear to be improved by a tiger tail. Though, to be honest, the radio bodies are significantly larger and involve much more metal than say a FT3DR or Woxun GMRS radio. Lscott 1 Quote
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