Well then I reckon it's fine. I've also checked the coax for shorts, but everything looked good there. I'll just try these other ideas later today and hopefully I can say it's fixed tonight.
Alright, I've got a 102" steel whip mounted onto a horizontal light bar (also holding four 100 watt floodlights) which is mounted onto a chrome roll bar which is mounted in the bed of my truck. Knowing that the bed is made out of that plastic material, "
First thing, What the hell kind of truck is this??? NO truck that I have ever seen has a plastic bed!
Second, if the " roll bar" isn't bolted to the frame, it isn't a roll bar. It is a light bar.
Start by giving us some info about the truck, radio, and so forth so that we can try to help you out.
Well I know I'm having a problem with this antenna and the way it's working with this truck. The SWR is exactly 2 on every channel, regular band. My whip doesn't have any set screws in it, so I can't adjust it up or down, and I shouldn't have to be cutting it any.
The frame and the roll bar provide more than enough metal to support a proper metal ground plane. So long as the roll bar is grounded to the frame - this shouldn't be the issue nor the problem.My truck's bed isn't metal, it's some type of hard thick plastic material, obviously cheaper. I guess that's what Toyota is using in the new Tacomas, but I was wondering if because the whole bed is plastic, it may be affecting the way the antenna is radiating. My roll bar is mounted in the bed, bolted down in the bottom of the bed near the cab, and bolted down on the two wheel well rises in the bed.
The SWR is exactly 2 on every channel, regular band
Removing the spring should have changed the tuning on that antenna VASTLY. That would be like trimming a whole 6 inches off the entire length. It is fair to say that something else is amiss.I did take off the spring and try without luck. In fact, I've tried several different types of antennas, not just the steel whip. I've taken the lights off the bar and tried, but it didn't work.
Are you using a different piece of coax to it from the base radio?I've ran another ground wire with stranded line, instead of solid as well. To be more exact, my standing wave does fluctuate from 1 to 40, but only from about 1.8 to 2.1, and it's the same at 1 and 40. I'll have to get my hands on one of them analyzers, maybe Muscleman has one over here down the road. I'll have to check the SWR again on the other bands, but if I remember right, I think it was lower on C and higher on E, with D being regular. When I hooked my base antenna into the radio today that SWR dropped flat-just what I'm looking, except on my antenna.
I think he said that he had a SS 121 in there and it acted the same, so I doubt it is the radio.[snip]I did take off the spring and try without luck[snip]
What were the results? can you post the SWR reading`s that you got?
Was it exactly the same as the steel whip on the same channels/bands?
Or did you get different readings.
[snip]my standing wave does fluctuate from 1 to 40, but only from about 1.8 to 2.1, and it's the same at 1 and 40.[snip]
Please tell us where it is 1.8 at.
[snip] I'll have to check the SWR again on the other bands, but if I remember right, I think it was lower on C and higher on E, with D being regular. [snip]
If it is lower on band c ( I assume this is one band below the regular 40 band) and Higher on band e ( one band higher) this is telling that the antenna is too long, and removing the spring should have caused a change.
If indeed removing the spring caused the antenna to be too short, the reading you got should have changed to the other extreme.
If it had no effect at all, as Robb Has suggested, you do have another problem.
Try this:
If you have a very short jumper, get some one to help you and move the SWR meter to as close as possible under the antenna ( i am again assuming the the mount is NOT a ball mount and has a SO 239 connector on it that the coax will screw to...not two bare stripped wires attached to the center screw and a grounded bolt) and check the SWR reading on the antenna itself, again going up and down the bands.
Please post the result.