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Re: [IRCA] Indoor vertical update
The idea with the balanced feed is that it provides better common-mode 
noise pick-up rejection than any type of coax which can have 
ground-loop current on the shield.
Mark
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Byan <stevebyan@xxxxxxx>
To: badx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: ABDX <abdx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; Mailing list for the International 
Radio Clubof America <irca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; AM-DX List <am@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thu, 12 Feb 2009 1:25 pm
Subject: Re: Indoor vertical update
On Feb 11, 2009, at 10:12 PM, Craig Healy wrote: 
 
Until now it had been a couple of rooms away fed by a 40' length of > 
RG-58 50 
ohm coax. There was a significant noise issue and a number of > 
birdies that 
swamped a number of frequencies. And, some electrical buzz would > 
run for 30 
seconds on and a minute off. Gave me 2/3rds DX time. 
 
I've taken to using quad-shielded RG-6 (cable TV drop cable). The 
garden-variety RG-58 and RG-8 doesn't have enough braid coverage to 
give good shielding. You can find quality RG-58 cable like Belden 8259, 
but it's expensive. Quad-shielded RG-6 cable has even better shielding 
and is cheaply available from Home Depot. You really do need to invest 
in a Snap-N-Seal tool and compression coax connectors. The Home Depot 
connectors are useless. 
 
I replaced the RG-58 with CAT5 ethernet cable of about the same 40' > 
length. 
 
CAT5 is pretty g
ood stuff, and handy where you have a balanced feed. 
 
Best regards, 
-Steve 
 
--Steve Byan <stevebyan@xxxxxxx> 
Littleton, MA 01460 
 
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