I’m working on a V-dipole to pick up 137.5MHz NOAA APT transmissions. I found that when lowering the antenna closer to ground than my design, performance improved. I believe this is because the pavement in front of my house is not a great conductor, so my reflecting ground plane is actually a few inches below the surface.

The thing I can’t explain is why I get such a dramatic improvement in performance when I use my finger to touch just the arm of the dipole connected to the center conductor of the coax. The difference is night and day. The surrounding noise in the signal drops to the point that it’s inaudible, but the radio signal is relatively unaffected. Touching the shield conductor does nothing.

I picked up a cheap VNA and was able to determine that touching the antenna does slightly de-tune it, but the impact is the same for both arms. With the configuration I have, the SWR is something like 1.07 before touching it, and it rises to around 1.2 when I do.

I’ve heard about surface currents that can cause problems, but those only occur on the outside of the shield conductor, and I have a ferrite choke right at the feed point anyway.

What’s going on here?

EDIT: to add that I’m using a Nooelec SDR with a SAW filter tuned to NOAA frequencies as well as a terrestrial AM blocker. This is connected to a Framework laptop on battery power. I’m curious if this could be an electrical issue coming from my laptop.

  • pepperprepper@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    You are an antenna, or more likely in this case a counterpoise to the existing antenna. Maybe try and add a pigtail of wire to be an actual counterpoise.

    But it could be a million other things, you could be adding capacitance to the system to bring it more in tune. Have you tried changing the length of the legs? In a v configuration, they could need slightly different lengths to be in tune where you want it.