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Tips
Tips

FM radio antenna-ish

NutmegCT

Great Pumpkin
Bronze
Offline
The 20 foot long "speaker wire" antenna on my Radio Shack FM receiver came loose, so I reconnected and tightened the screw.

But as I did this, I realized that the reception is *much* clearer - and pretty much free of hiss and background tone sound - if the antenna remains unconnected ... and I just hold the screw between my thumb and index finger.

The wire antenna always gave a light background "bonus" 500 Hz tone and hiss.

Why would my dumb-ol' body provide better reception than a 20 foot long wire? And of course, how can I remove the hiss and background tone when using a wire antenna?

Inquiring minds want to know!
Thanks.
Tom M.
 
Just a WAG….. you become the antenna.
Put on your aluminum foil hat and your reception will get much better.
 
Well ... I'd rather the *radio's* reception would get better.

:angel3:
 
Lots of "voodoo" goes on with radio reception. The old "hold the TV antenna for clearer picture" adage is true for radio as well - impedance and capacitance all come into play and cause different effects at different frequencies. Human bodies are conductive - how much so depends on vast numbers of veriables like temperature, skin condition, sweat, humidity, etc...

FM radio and old school analog VHF TV used almost the same frequency spectrum. A good quality "rabbit-ear" TV antenna will often outperform a single rod or wire. North Country Public Radio actually had a pretty easy to understand article about FM reception stuff here:


Also keep in mind that some of the noise you hear might be power-related, and diminishes when you touch the antenna screws because your body becomes part of the capacitance/impedance noise filter circut.
 
I once hooked up a large portable radio to our TV antennae on the roof
& got really great reception (more distant stations).
 
Put a dipole on the roof (or in the attic)!
 
Holding you key remote to you head lets you unlock car farther away, too.
 
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