View Single Post
  #4   Report Post  
Me
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In article ,
(Tony Rowlands) wrote:

(Vaughan Henderson) wrote in message
. com...
Hi Tony,

I'm 99% sure the antenna is passive, not active. Check the solder
joints where the four helical wire antennae join onto the board at the
bottom. I've had one experience with faulty connections (came loose
due to excessive vibration) here.

If a visual inspection of the antenna otherwise looks OK, check the
coaxial cable, in particular the connector at the antenna end. Has
any water got in here?

Iridium antennas don't have much gain, and any additional losses in
the coax cable and connectors really reduce the receive signal.

Regards
Vaughan Henderson


Vaughan
Thanks for the reply.
I have checked the antenna (at the antenna) with a multimeter and have
55 Ohms resistance form the centre connector to shield. Have also
replaced the coax. There are a number of SMD (resistors i think) with
221 stamped onto them. The 5th component is connected on the ground
plane of the antenna to the centre tap. No markings so don't know what
it is. Whe I first opened the antenna it had a fair amount of water
inside it. Dried it out and lacquered the circuit.
Should the antenna have any connection between the centre tap and
shield? All help is appreciated.
Tony
S/V Ambrosia


The water is really a dead givaway, that your antenna needed some
maintainance, but the addition of a lacquere to the top of the dried
PCBoard inside the antenna, may well have caused more problems then it
solved. Most UHF and above RF Frequency circuits are designed using
Stripline tuned systems, and by the addition of a lacquere over these
components can cause them to detune from the intended design perameters.
The lacquere adds coapactive coupling and on Stripline tuned circuits
this detunes the stripline components. Most are designed with the
conformal coatings that cover them included, in the design parameters,
so adding more stuff over the top causes problems. If they had no
coating in the original design, then that was not intended to be used in
the final product and addition of any coatings was never intended, and
will cause bad stuff to happen, that was never intended. Now that it is
done, there is no way to undo it and if the lacquere has detuned the
system, it is destroyed and useless, from this point on. Better start
lookking for a replacment.


Me who knows this, by many years of field experience.........