Beyondhelp
Well-Known Member
It's possible to get a 'good' reading when the system is bad. For instance, if the braid has corroded. This is because the meter measures the ratio between the signal going up and the signal reflecting back - if the signal going up is low due to a corroded braid, the ratio can be erroneously in the 'good' range.
The SWR meter is no substitute for checking for bad connections and corroded cable. If those issues are OK, then the SWR meter will tell you if the antenna is OK or not.
That's not what I have experienced.
RF does not behave like normal electrical current that most (almost all) people are used too. You'll get reflections at any impedance mismatch, which could be a loose plug, broken coax shorted connection etc.
This usually show up quite easily. If you cut the shielding/screen outer you will still get a bad SWR (try it, if you wish - I wouldn't recommend it however, as all this reflected RF energy is sent back to the output stage and can damage it).
What is important is you calibrate the FWD power in order to correctly measure the reflected power.
I consider anything over 1.5 to be unacceptable in the VHF range, others may say otherwise.
I did mine recently as this pic above just about shows. At 12v I had a FWD power of 25 watts, and REF of about 0.5 which is fine.
Also, I have used CB devices when I've had nothing else to hand, and they have so far all worked, BUT the power readings are widely off, but this doesn't matter since all your interested in is the ratio between FWD and REF power, which is a SWR of about 1.3 in my case.
In fact you can calculate various SWR conditions here:
http://allenk.home.infionline.net/vswr.html
Quality and type of antenna coax is it should also be pointed out (if its not obvious) very important. RG58 coax is ok for short runs of a few meters, but I'd highly recommend to use RG213 for anything more. Not only is its loss half as much as normal RG58 it also protects devices near it better from the RF energy causing a nuisance of itself.
One last thing WHY do VHF manufactures still insist on using cheap low quality RF connectors. (SO239 and PL259) I just don't get why they don't use proven N-type connectors. (Or perhaps they do on really expensive marine stuff?)
.... HTH