|
|||||||
|
|||||
IMPROVING
RECEPTION |
|||||
This article describes radio and antenna ideas you can try, ranging from tapping into your TV antenna or rabbit ears, to purchasing the reasonably priced General Electric Super Radio III. PART 1: Why you can
hear FM 88.9 in your car - but NOT at home PART
1: Why you can hear FM 88.9 in your car - but NOT at home Back to basics for a second. The two basic elements of a superior receiving system are the tuner and the antenna. The weakest links in home receivers are typically, the tuner and the antenna. Add to this mix some home-generated electronic noise, electronic shading from metallic surroundings, added to your poorly designed home tuner, armed with a poor antenna, trying to pull in a weak FM 88.9 signal and your listening pleasure is going to be in serious trouble. So the answer to better home reception involves either running audio cabling from your car into the home (not a likely scenario), or bolster the home antenna system, home tuner, or hopefully, both. Unfortunately, most home receivers are designed to receive only the most powerful local stations using an AC "line-cord" antenna or, at best, a telescoping FM whip antenna. Some higher quality home stereo component tuners and receivers do have separate antenna connectors on the rear of the radio, but all too often the owners fail to utilize this critical connection. These connectors are often also connected to either a "line-cord" antenna or a dangling wire used for FM reception. This antenna situation will render a decent tuner's chance of pulling in weaker stations dismal at best. So what's an FM 88.9 listener to do? First, if your receiver has those antenna connections, try to connect a better FM antenna to that receiver. No matter how good the tuner, it's only as good as the antenna used to capture those weak signals. But, be careful here, sometimes a high price tag is NOT necessarily the best antenna buy. The same is true of some highly publicized receivers. If all you currently have are those typical AM/FM receivers that doesn't allow you that external antenna option, you may have to upgrade both the receiver and the antenna. PART 2: The Better FM 88.9 Receive
Antenna System Home FM antennas come in two basic flavors: the outdoor and the indoor. Then, each flavor antenna comes with several options. There are amplified and passive (non-amplified) as well as directional and non-directional antennas. A major consideration with FM antennas is height. Since FM signals are essentially line-of-sight, the higher the antenna above ground (or average terrain), the better your long-range reception. Finally, you have to consider how long the cable is between your antenna and the receiver and the type of cable used. Generally a "TV" type coaxial cable is suitable for most FM receiver antenna installations as long as the cable run is about 75 feet or less. In this case, less is better. First, let's consider an outdoor-type FM antenna system. This is the best scenario for serious listeners. If pulling in a better FM 88.9 signal is the receive goal, then a directional antenna is FAR superior to an omnidirectional (non-directional) antenna. Put the antenna as high as possible outside the home and use a short direct run of coaxial cable (RG-6) into the receiver. You may have to use a little matching transformer on one or both ends of the coax cable. This will allow a proper connection to the antenna and your receiver if they aren't designed for coaxial cable directly. The antenna is then aimed at the FM 88.9 transmitter site, which is located in Kent, Ohio. You may need a map here. If you are unable to mount this antenna outside on a high mast, you can often achieve excellent results by mounting it in your attic (presuming that the attic is not covered up with aluminum siding). There are several manufacturers of these antennas. A couple that are worth a look are the: Winegard R6000 Prostar and the Winegard HD6065P. According to their advertising: "The PR6000 is a four element flat yagi antenna for FM reception. Recommended for suburban areas where a moderately directive antenna is required. Completely factory preassembled, unfolds in seconds for easy installation. 300 ohm input" Price is about $20.00 The Winegard HD6065P Outdoor FM Antenna is for "the very finest FM and FM stereo reception from stations near or far. Same rugged construction features as outdoor TV antennas including built-in weatherproof 75 ohm downlead housing. Deigned to cut distortion, separate adjacent channels and reduce or eliminate fading and noise." Price is about $72.00 If in the Cleveland/Akron area, I do not recommend an amplified antenna of any kind. Often amplified antennas will not only do a fine job of amplifying the FM stations, but they often do a pretty good job of amplifying every other nearby transmitter and all the noise they can find, thereby canceling out any benefit to the amplified FM signal that you are seeking. Stick to a good basic passive antenna and you'll not have to worry about added interference. Here's another excellent option. Some of you may be able to benefit from hooking your outdoor TV antenna into your FM receiver. Many homes that have since switched over to cable TV may have these vestiges on their roofs waiting to be pressed back into useful service. Of course you'll have to rotate the antenna toward FM 88.9 and lock it down (or it'll never provide peak performance). Not everybody has an unused TV antenna or can put a 6 element FM (TV like) antenna in their attic or on their roof. For you, we'll have to drop back to Plan B: the indoor antenna. The first thing to try, in case you never hooked it up, is that flat "twin-lead" dipole antenna that probably was supplied with your receiver. It amazes me how many times I've seen home receivers that have NO antenna whatsoever connected to its antenna terminals (and folks wonder why the reception is so poor). If you have already connected it, and it's just in a bundle on the floor, try spreading the out the leads as far as they'll go and position it broadside to FM 88.9 (Kent, Ohio). Moving it closer to a window, or higher, will sometimes help too. It may take a little experimentation to achieve good results. In case you don't have a twin lead dipole and want to try one, they're available everywhere including K-Mart, Wal Mart and Radio Shack for about $3. If the dipole is close but not quite enough antenna to do the job, your basic TV "Rabbit Ears" antenna is another cost-effective alternative. A couple of inexpensive options are available locally. And there are a few good alternatives that may work almost as well and that are even slightly less expensive. These are your basic TV "Rabbit Ears" antenna. A couple of inexpensive options are available locally. K-Mart has an RCA Model "Ant 120" for about $12.99 that looks just fine for this mission. For Wal Mart folks, they have a Phillips/Magnavox model "MANT 200" for about $9.96 that should also provide a huge improvement to the line-cord or dangling wire antenna. I haven't personally tried either of these, but I'm sure an upgrade to either should be a big help. You'll want to ignore any UHF cables and only deal with the VHF cables for connection to your receiver. If you're old enough to have grown up with the music of FM 88.9, then you're no doubt familiar with the TV Rabbit Ears routine. But just to review... These rabbit ears antennas will require some experimentation to bring in the best signal. That single, multi-position knob and orienting those two telescoping elements should allow for some excellent optimization on FM 88.9. Generally pulling those elements out all the way and then rotating the antenna and the knob for best reception will do the trick. Again, I stress that there's no need for expensive amplified versions, or even the UHF loop, but you will have to play around with the rabbit ears for best results and perhaps even relocate it to a different room for best results. Be aware of devices that might cause locally produced interference into your system (such as computers, TV sets, motors and anything that makes little sparks). Again, experimentation will reveal how far you'll want to keep the antenna away from those noise generators. One nice thing about these indoor antennas is that the cable line loss is almost nothing! So all the signal it receives goes right into the tuner. Another feature is that in spite of having to play around with it a bit, installation is easy (Hey it sure beats climbing around on your roof). Do be careful to unpack it all so that it can be re packed good as new, if return is necessary and always ask about the store's return policy. If you do nothing more than stretch out whatever antenna is already on your receiver, be it the AC line-cord or a dangling piece of wire, you may help things considerably. If you've never tried this, give it a try. To review your FM 88.9 antenna options, going from best to worst: Antenna Options
As you see, the best option is the Directional FM Outdoor antenna and for indoor use, the cheap VHF-TV rabbit ears may be all you need. If you happen to live in a big high rise building and none of this is of value, then gather the residents and demand that the landlord install an FM antenna on the roof aimed at FM 88.9 and feed it to all units in the building! If none of these antenna options works well for you, then it may be time to consider relocating to a new home or buying a better receiver. Considering the pain of moving... a receiver upgrade may be the next move. PART 3: The Better Receiver First, let's start with a few basics to be aware of when receiver shopping. As mentioned earlier, a key to good weak signal reception is a good antenna. If the receiver has no external antenna input then you're already in trouble. So Rule 1 is always being sure the receiver can accept an external antenna. This can be either twin lead or coax. Next you'll want to consider the two most important tuner tech specifications: sensitivity and selectivity. Sensitivity refers to the ability to hear weak signals and selectivity deals with being able to reject adjacent stations. Anything in depth here will quickly run away from the concept of keeping this series easy for all, so I'll simply suggest that if shopping for a new receiver, be aware that a good receiver should be both sensitive and selective. Sometimes the importance of the selectivity of a tuner is under emphasized. In a crowded radio market such as Cleveland/Akron, this is a big mistake. Often the receiver with superior selectivity, will outperform the more sensitive, yet less selective one. Finally, I recommend that whatever you end up with; try to make certain that it has a stereo/mono switch, which provides the ability to switch to mono if the signal is too weak for good stereo. Weak stereo signals equal noisy reception! Although one of the nice things about FM 88.9 is the stereo presentation, I'm sure you'd rather hear a clean MONO signal than a nosy annoying stereo one. So if the radio isn't stereo, so much the better...remember our goal here is a BETTER FM 88.9 signal and one that you can enjoy all day long. OK...you may be saying: "Enough teckie talk.... what's a good receiver and try to leave me a few bucks for food and rent." PULL the CAR INTO THE HOUSE! If you're NOT a "Do-it-your-selfer," then I suggest you skip this section. But, if you're a bit handy...and want a superior system that often meets all the guidelines above and won't cost you a bundle, then allow me to refer you back to Chapter One. This is the chapter that discussed why you can receive FM 88.9 so well in your car and not in your home. A bad suggestion was to run speaker wires from the car into the house. Another bad one is to drive the car into your living room. But...if you were to take just the car radio into the home, connect it to a decent antenna....add a 12 volt 120 vac power supply and a couple of speakers...you'd have an excellent FM receiving system in your living room or bedroom. Many excellent auto radios are available from junk yards or flea markets for a few dollars ($5-10)! Every time someone replaces that factory AM/FM job with a fancy CD or Cassette model, another perfectly good surplus radio hits the used market. OK...it does take some handiwork to connect it up. You have to properly connect: a DC power supply (about $39.99 from Radio Shack and cheaper elsewhere via mail order), a pair of speakers and an antenna (even an auto whip antenna might do the trick). But if you're handy and you've never considered it before, you may want to give it a try. I think you'll be pleased with what you get for about $65.00 or MUCH less (depending on what you have around the house).. "I'M NOT HANDY...But not willing to spend lots of bucks either!" OK...I have several specific bottom line recommendations... all easily available by toll-free mail-order....or on the internet. First, allow me to suggest the famous "GE Super Radio III." Although this radio is very popular with AM fans (due to its excellent AM tuner/antenna), it's also a most excellent FM performer. It is essentially a big portable mono radio with a large built in speaker system and bass and treble controls that gives it a most impressive sound, especially for the price. It also has those important FM (& AM) antenna terminals on the rear (requiring a transformer for coax cable). The built-in whip antenna even does an impressive job by itself. It's not digital which allows the advantage to offset the tuning slightly when faced with a strong adjacent channel that's splattering onto 88.9. Although it runs on AC, it also takes 6 big "D" cells, which may come in handy when the lights go out! The downside with this receiver is that it's NOT built for much abuse...so you'll want to set it on 88.9, turn it on, and leave it alone! The price seems to typically be in the $65.00 (& s/h) area. If you're looking for something that looks a bit classier (in a wood grain case) ...and still has an excellent sound, is mono (for less noise), has an excellent tuner is amazingly simple to operate (aside from the on/off switch and volume control it has just a big analog tuner dial), and is $120.00 (plus s/h)....then... I suggest the "Tivoli Audio Henry Kloss Model 1." This
small package has quite the big sound. If you remember the old KLH table
radios, this will bring back a warm feeling. Details are available on
their website: www.tivoliaudio.com or their toll free number: There's also a wealth of amazing great radio finds on EBay such
as the Sony ICF-9740W. This is a nice looking mono analog table
radio has a 6.5" speaker, variable tone control and according to
Sony, provision for the all-important external FM antenna. Price is around
$59.99. Ah yes...we return again to that fringe radio basic. The finest receiver is only as good as its antenna. So if you already own a fine tuner or receiver, make sure you provide it with the best possible antenna. PART 4: Bottom Line I hope some of this information was helpful with your efforts to pull in a cleaner stronger FM 88.9! |
Sunday Oldies Jukebox / WSTB
Radio 1900 Annalane Drive, Streetsboro, OH 44241 Copyright © 2004-2008 Sunday Oldies Jukebox / WSTB Radio |
||||