coax type for mobile use

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ddemmers

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Good Everning,
Can anyone recommend a good coax for mobile setup. I currently use 75 ohm but am a bit concerned about swr and would like to upgrade to 50 ohm solution.
 

zz0468

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You didn't give us much to work with as far as the application, but most mobile antennas are factory supplied with RG-58 or similar size coax. In the case of antennas operating at higher frequencies, better quality teflon coax is frequently supplied.

If this is for a scanner, 75 ohm coax is fine. If you're running a mobile kilowatt on the ham bands, RG-58 isn't going to work to well.
 

ddemmers

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sorry,
it is for 2m ham use. I am looking to set up my mobile. I have the radio picked out but would like to use something better than rg58.
 

gewecke

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You could try RG8X for mobile use as well.
N9ZAS
 

zz0468

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sorry,
it is for 2m ham use. I am looking to set up my mobile. I have the radio picked out but would like to use something better than rg58.

If it's for 2m FM use, in the typical lengths used in a mobile installation, good quality RG-58 is just fine. Anything better than that would be a waste of money because you won't see an improvement in performance.
 

OpSec

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RG58 is fine for mobile use. As a rule, I use NMO mounts with double-shielded teflon coax (100% foil / 95% braid)

RG8X or RG8 is absolutely not needed unless you have some type of high power transmitters in the vehicle, such as a contest rig.
 

kb2vxa

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"RG8X or RG8 is absolutely not needed unless you have some type of high power transmitters in the vehicle, such as a contest rig."

RG8X or RG8 is absolutely not needed unless you have some type of high power transmitters in the vehicle, such as a keydown in da bowl CB leenyar.

There, fixed it fer ya!
 
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zz0468

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RG8X or RG8 is absolutely not needed unless you have some type of high power transmitters in the vehicle, such as a contest rig.

I use WR-90 waveguide for my contest rig, but I'm just weird that way. :cool:
 

Citywide173

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I have 100 feet of LMR-195 from another project, and ordered 10 NMO mounts to go with it. All tolled, between the cable and mounts, with shipping, it was $81.00. The cheapest I could find NMO kits with RG-58 cable was $12.49 (I'm sure someone knows a cheaper place, but it's all I found). If I get 10 antenna kits out of the 100 feet, it comes down to $8.10 per kit plus a little extra soldering time, and even though it's a negligible difference, it's still a better kit than the $12.49 one.

I have plans for four immediately, possibly a fifth if I add APRS to my truck and maybe two more on my son's truck, so 10 isn't really a ridiculous number.
 

zz0468

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I didn't know that there was much contesting in the 10 GHz band.

There's quite a bit actually, but it seems to be in localized pockets of activity. There's maybe 100 or so guys in California that are quite active on 10 GHz, there's a handful in Arizona, Texas and New England have large pockets of activity, and there's more scattered around the country.
 
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