Mr Whippy
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posted on 30/10/19 at 07:27 AM |
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DAB aerial
Going to convert my wifes car to a DAB radio but not sure about the aerial, the expensive DAB ones look very suspiciously just like normal ones...
various explanations of the differences don't seem to make any sense either, some claiming they have to be vertical, ever seen a whip aerial
vertical at 70mph...? and my VW has DAB and has a tiny angled one on the roof! Her Volvo I think uses the rear heater element which is very effective
currently for FM.
Thinking about digital tv... mine works just great on an normal old fashioned aerial thrown in the loft that's well over 30 years old...
So it is all just marketing BS?!
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steve m
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posted on 30/10/19 at 08:11 AM |
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I deliver brand new cars, and 99% of them have built in ariels so nothing is seen, or fins
steve
Thats was probably spelt wrong, or had some grammer, that the "grammer police have to have a moan at
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nick205
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posted on 30/10/19 at 08:57 AM |
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quote: Originally posted by steve m
I deliver brand new cars, and 99% of them have built in ariels so nothing is seen, or fins
steve
I don't have DAB a car, but this statement echoes my thinking exactly. Many (most?) modern cars must have DAB and I've not noticed a
sudden reappearance of aerials on vehicles. External vehicle aerials went a good few years ago in place of integrated aerials, which (from
experience) work just fine for analogue radio and I'm pretty certain must for DAB as well.
What's to lose by connecting the existing aerial in the ovloV and testing to see what you get?
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cliftyhanger
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posted on 30/10/19 at 09:57 AM |
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And the portable DAB radio I use for work has an aerial just like my old FM radio. Looks exactly the same. So can't be different?? In fact the
new radio does DAB and FM through the one aerial, as do modern cars.
Best try it I reckon...
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Mr Whippy
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posted on 30/10/19 at 12:20 PM |
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ok cheers, I'll save my money for now and see, hear what happens when I plug in the existing one...
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coyoteboy
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posted on 30/10/19 at 12:43 PM |
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They have elements of the right length for each frequency range, I tried DAB through a normal FM and it didn't work (it picked it up but it had
really poor reception levels).
IT doesn't use the heater element, it uses a purpose build antenna made out of heater element tracks on the back window.
Even with a high gain, 400mm high top of the line DAB antenna, I still get dropouts in a few locations in towns etc.
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peter030371
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posted on 30/10/19 at 08:04 PM |
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DAB is on a higher frequency than FM. To get the best out of it the best antenna will be shorter than an old FM antenna. It might still work OK on a
longer antenna but you will only know by trying it.
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Mash
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posted on 31/10/19 at 08:17 PM |
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I put a Kenwood radio/cd/dab unit in my Transit and it has one of the stick on the window aerials.
Works just fine, in fact it often cuts in when I have the unit set to play FM
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