What is considered the best base station antenna for for listening to 150 to 900 Mhz?
Most of my listening is 155-162 and 440-480. I'm not as concerned in the 855Mhz area as much. I have RG58 right now and switching to the LMR 400 cable, so I want a complete face lift.
I have about a 45' run.
I want to purchase a high quality base station antenna.
I wish the scanners had dual antenna inputs on the radio so I could have two separate antennas feeding the radio.
I'm not exactly sure why you recommend NMO unless there's something I don't know.
What is considered the best base station antenna for for listening to 150 to 900 Mhz?
Many reputable manufacturers make an NMO base station adapter. It is an NMO mount with an N connector on the bottom. It'll often have ground radials attached. You thread the NMO antenna on top, your coax cable to the bottom and mount it on your mast. It can be a good option for some. An antenna like the Larsen NMO-150/450/800 can perform better than a discone when set up this way.
It's very interesting to hear the different input on this subject. I've heard good things about the OmniX antenna. I live in New England so I do need an antenna to fight the elements. I need to make the change soon because winter will be here before you know it. I want to do this once and price is secondary when it comes to picking up the signals I want. Winters are too long and I only want good quality stuff that works superior. I appreciate all the input & ideas you listeners are giving me. I have tried the Moonraker M100 for Sht's & giggles. It made reception worse. Waste of money. Anybody else like the OmniX or equivalent?
If your listening is confined to roughly 150-160, 450-470 and 800MHz then the Larson triband and a ground plane kit will work noticeably better on 800 and equal to and maybe a tiny bit better on the other bands.
If you have future needs for VHF air, UHF mil air or frequencies outside the very narrow range of the Larsen, then a Discone will work much better there. The typical scanner Discone is not that good on 800.
I have been using an OMNI X for almost a year now. VERY pleased with it. The construction is very good and all stainless steel hardware. I have it up on a 16' mast (four 4' sections) bracketed to back of my garage. Withstood many heavy winds. Running LMR 400. I am in central Rhode Island and can hear stations way out in Mass. Full scale too. I guess it depends on location as far as monitoring 800mhz. I can receive one or two sites from the state P25 simulcast system. But my yagi antennas outperform the Omni X for 800 mhz. simulcast.It's very interesting to hear the different input on this subject. I've heard good things about the OmniX antenna. I live in New England so I do need an antenna to fight the elements. I need to make the change soon because winter will be here before you know it. I want to do this once and price is secondary when it comes to picking up the signals I want. Winters are too long and I only want good quality stuff that works superior. I appreciate all the input & ideas you listeners are giving me. I have tried the Moonraker M100 for Sht's & giggles. It made reception worse. Waste of money. Anybody else like the OmniX or equivalent?
I have been using an OMNI X for almost a year now. VERY pleased with it. The construction is very good and all stainless steel hardware. I have it up on a 16' mast (four 4' sections) bracketed to back of my garage. Withstood many heavy winds. Running LMR 400. I am in central Rhode Island and can hear stations way out in Mass. Full scale too. I guess it depends on location as far as monitoring 800mhz. I can receive one or two sites from the state P25 simulcast system. But my yagi antennas outperform the Omni X for 800 mhz. simulcast.
Do you need omni coverage or some extra gain in one direction that will result in lesser gain in other directions?Most of my listening is 155-162 and 440-480.