K6GBW
Member
Just curious, is this one of the newer Jeeps with the aluminum body? My last Jeep was a JK so I had plenty of steel to work with.
So, I bought the Larsen NMO30 and the 64" whip. Got it tuned to 1.1 SWR using the NanoVNA and verified using an SWR meter. And then the center tab broke off.
All done with Larsen. Back to Laird products.
How did the tab break off? Were you pulling on it, or trying to bend it down for better contact?
I screwed the antenna on to the NMO and then unscrewed it. At least on this product that I got, Larsen uses cheap, low grade aluminum for the conductor. It is very brittle and breaks easily. The Laird and Tram/Browning product are significantly better built based on what I have in front of me.
The NMO 30 I have was ordered a week ago and arrived two days ago.
Appreciate the sympathy.
The first rule is to close all the doors and hatches before tuning. Unless you drive with a door open riding shotgun.i've never had one of those break off on me, even bending them down to make better contact. I wonder if it was just a bad or out of the box defect.
Personally, i prefer larsen and their conductors, over the spring loaded pins. I've had a few cases where the pin had enough corrosion that it was no longer springy and only made contact with certain mounts.
Back to the core of this thread.
OP, i feel your pain. SWR adjustment on 27mhz is somewhere in the spectrum of luck and voodoo. Whomever said REFLECTION has a lot to do with it is absolutely correct. Adjusting SWR on my truck's CB, which has a front fender mount NMO drives me to drink. It can be close to optimal, and then i do something like close the door and its completely off
First off I will bet $1.00 there has never been an aluminum contact tab in the base of any Larsen mobile antenna. Its almost always beryllium copper and maybe silver plated. They would never use aluminum as most mating tabs on the NMO mount are brass or silver plated and aluminum would cause a huge dissimilar metal corrosion party. The internal loading coils are either solid copper wire or copper clad steel and there is no good way they can interface an aluminum spring tab to that.Definitely not impressed with Larsen construction on a couple of levels. However, I also have two Laird that don't seem to work either. The Tram works the best so far.
OK, not aluminum. Still brittle and broken. Experientially, the Larsen lasted a day. The Laird units lasted a month or so and the Tram still works. I'll go with experience over recommendations in almost every case.
I understand that. Your recommendation was the reason I spend $178 on a Larsen antenna. In the meantime, I have a Tram on my truck that has been working for months. You tell me. What should I do based on this experience?As for experience, keep in mind that some of us have been doing this stuff for decades, and it's not just rattling off brand names to sound good, it comes from actual experience with the products. I won't recommend something without good reason.
Purchased through Antenna Farm; NMO 30 base, two 64" whips and one spring. Plus shipping. For the parts I wanted to get, I didn't see any other retailers offering.WTF larsen is $178?
The damn panthers dont even cost that much, and i'm looking at retail.