(Thx for the suggestion, CADXER!)
Present :
A) 45 foot longwire, with 14-gauge wire. I think. All I see is a '14' on the spool. It's pretty thick.
2) A four foot accoustic loop. Same gauge wire. I goofed and made it fully four feet rather than
remember that the old NRC loop has something like 44 inch sides. So it doesn't tune the whole dial.
With the loop on the floor one night, and the GE SR II sitting on it, I managed to do a wicked, cardioid-ish null of nighttime regular CJBC 860 and ID WAMO Pittsburgh in the clear, albeit faint.
* * * * * * *
Past, pre-owned ones:
1) A L/W about maybe 50 feet, from my bedroom to a pole on the back of the garage. I hardly ever used it because of
B) The first Loop I ever made. It was the NRC special. With that I used to arrange for wicked nulls of most local and semi-local AMers, me tilting it to and fro and leaning it against a chair for final azimuthing effect.
3) I don't count the 'Wavemagnet' antenna built in to the back of the Zenith console. I didn't know you actually could rotate it without moving the whole radio and waking up the house at 3:45 AM.
4) I had a big, long desk in the room. It was actually a workbench my Dad brought home from work. Around its edges was some sort of aluminum trim. One midday I casually touched the Zenith's antenna lead to the trim.
See, at that point, I had taken out the Zenith radio section from the console and moved it upstairs from the basement.
Well, the connection nulled out all south NJ and Philly stations on frequencies shared with Connecticut .... 690, 800,
860, 1340, 1450, 1490, et al. Those stations were GONE!
5) One night I decided to get gay and connect that Zenith antenna lead to the metal crescent on one of those old rotary phone dials. The dial instantly became noisy and full of chirps and whistles, but I did ID one new station:
WBOS Boston, 1600.
The thing is, local WWRL was on at the time. And the two stations were MIXING. I was concerned that I might've damaged something in the radio, so I never tried that again.
Present :
A) 45 foot longwire, with 14-gauge wire. I think. All I see is a '14' on the spool. It's pretty thick.
2) A four foot accoustic loop. Same gauge wire. I goofed and made it fully four feet rather than
remember that the old NRC loop has something like 44 inch sides. So it doesn't tune the whole dial.
With the loop on the floor one night, and the GE SR II sitting on it, I managed to do a wicked, cardioid-ish null of nighttime regular CJBC 860 and ID WAMO Pittsburgh in the clear, albeit faint.
* * * * * * *
Past, pre-owned ones:
1) A L/W about maybe 50 feet, from my bedroom to a pole on the back of the garage. I hardly ever used it because of
B) The first Loop I ever made. It was the NRC special. With that I used to arrange for wicked nulls of most local and semi-local AMers, me tilting it to and fro and leaning it against a chair for final azimuthing effect.
3) I don't count the 'Wavemagnet' antenna built in to the back of the Zenith console. I didn't know you actually could rotate it without moving the whole radio and waking up the house at 3:45 AM.
4) I had a big, long desk in the room. It was actually a workbench my Dad brought home from work. Around its edges was some sort of aluminum trim. One midday I casually touched the Zenith's antenna lead to the trim.
See, at that point, I had taken out the Zenith radio section from the console and moved it upstairs from the basement.
Well, the connection nulled out all south NJ and Philly stations on frequencies shared with Connecticut .... 690, 800,
860, 1340, 1450, 1490, et al. Those stations were GONE!
5) One night I decided to get gay and connect that Zenith antenna lead to the metal crescent on one of those old rotary phone dials. The dial instantly became noisy and full of chirps and whistles, but I did ID one new station:
WBOS Boston, 1600.
The thing is, local WWRL was on at the time. And the two stations were MIXING. I was concerned that I might've damaged something in the radio, so I never tried that again.