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I noticed that this Ray Johnson had a couple interesting buttons on it,
I'd have to go back up tot he shop to see what, but one of them was something like "25w" Like, you pushed it in if you wanted extra power. I don't think these are CB antennas. they look like they were made for the boat, Not sure of the configuration of the coax. I thought a solid mount would probably be a better way to go, seeing it's kind of hard for it to slip out of your hand and hit the drink. Like my wifes cell phone did last year... I'll check out the antennas well. But this set up is probably as obsolete as the old state cop "whip" antenna. Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sat, 18 Nov 2006 15:35:26 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "Tim" wrote in message oups.com... The antennas are well mounted and secure. Dual graphite sticks approx 4-41/2 ft. long. If I don't replace the radio, I'll probably take the antennas off, because it would be silly to have the antenna's and no radio. So I'll probably get a radio... Any suggestions on a reasonable replacement? AND are the twin antenna compatable or necessary for a modern radio? I'm open for suggestions. Thanks! I really don't feel I have a need for a marine radio, but if I ever wanted to take the family on the Ohio, Illinois, or Misssissippi, I figure it would be really nice to have one. Dual antennas are not necessary, if fact if they are not phased properly they can reduce the effective transmitting power. If they are wired together, it sounds to me like some stuck a dual CB antenna on the boat which would be cut for the wrong freq range for marine VHF. Given the condition of some of the other electrical stuff, I'd invest in a new antenna as well as a radio. Uniden and Icom are common radios. (get an Icom!) You really should have a marine radio on the boat. Higher the antenna, the better. I agree with Eisboch - those may be CB antennas, but I have seen marine Firesticks. I suspect that they aren't though - unless it has a phased harness which is possible. The only real way to tell is with a SWR (Standing Wave Ratio) meter or if you can get your hands on one, a field strength meter. Probably for the novice, the SWR meter is the easiest to use and they are cheap enough - around a good serviceable SWR meter is $20 or thereabouts. You want to test to see if you get a 1:1 or 1:1.5 ratio on channel 16. As to radio, I prefer fixed mount to gain the extra power over a hand held. There really isn't much of a price difference between a bells and whistles handheld and a decent DSC enabled fixed mount radio - maybe $20 or so. Cobra, Uniden, Standard, Icom - all are good radios and do the job well. I use Icom which are a little more pricey, but an MF55 Cobra and the equivalent Uniden/Standard radios are all about $100. You get the extra horsepower (25 vs 5 watts), DSC and a few other features. It's always a good idea to have a VHF radio onboard - in particular on bigger rivers and even larger lakes. |
#2
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OOPS!
I ahve to make a correction, this set us is a Ray Jefferson" not "Ray Johnson" my bad. I kept thinking Ray Johnson, probably due to the Johnson CBs Tim wrote: I noticed that this Ray Johnson had a couple interesting buttons on it, I'd have to go back up tot he shop to see what, but one of them was something like "25w" Like, you pushed it in if you wanted extra power. I don't think these are CB antennas. they look like they were made for the boat, Not sure of the configuration of the coax. I thought a solid mount would probably be a better way to go, seeing it's kind of hard for it to slip out of your hand and hit the drink. Like my wifes cell phone did last year... I'll check out the antennas well. But this set up is probably as obsolete as the old state cop "whip" antenna. Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sat, 18 Nov 2006 15:35:26 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: "Tim" wrote in message oups.com... The antennas are well mounted and secure. Dual graphite sticks approx 4-41/2 ft. long. If I don't replace the radio, I'll probably take the antennas off, because it would be silly to have the antenna's and no radio. So I'll probably get a radio... Any suggestions on a reasonable replacement? AND are the twin antenna compatable or necessary for a modern radio? I'm open for suggestions. Thanks! I really don't feel I have a need for a marine radio, but if I ever wanted to take the family on the Ohio, Illinois, or Misssissippi, I figure it would be really nice to have one. Dual antennas are not necessary, if fact if they are not phased properly they can reduce the effective transmitting power. If they are wired together, it sounds to me like some stuck a dual CB antenna on the boat which would be cut for the wrong freq range for marine VHF. Given the condition of some of the other electrical stuff, I'd invest in a new antenna as well as a radio. Uniden and Icom are common radios. (get an Icom!) You really should have a marine radio on the boat. Higher the antenna, the better. I agree with Eisboch - those may be CB antennas, but I have seen marine Firesticks. I suspect that they aren't though - unless it has a phased harness which is possible. The only real way to tell is with a SWR (Standing Wave Ratio) meter or if you can get your hands on one, a field strength meter. Probably for the novice, the SWR meter is the easiest to use and they are cheap enough - around a good serviceable SWR meter is $20 or thereabouts. You want to test to see if you get a 1:1 or 1:1.5 ratio on channel 16. As to radio, I prefer fixed mount to gain the extra power over a hand held. There really isn't much of a price difference between a bells and whistles handheld and a decent DSC enabled fixed mount radio - maybe $20 or so. Cobra, Uniden, Standard, Icom - all are good radios and do the job well. I use Icom which are a little more pricey, but an MF55 Cobra and the equivalent Uniden/Standard radios are all about $100. You get the extra horsepower (25 vs 5 watts), DSC and a few other features. It's always a good idea to have a VHF radio onboard - in particular on bigger rivers and even larger lakes. |
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