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Strange Aerial connection
I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s -
massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? |
Strange Aerial connection
On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:16:42 +0100, "Doki" wrote:
I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? A FM aerial? :-) I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. |
Strange Aerial connection
"Laurence Payne" lpayne1NOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote in message ... On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:16:42 +0100, "Doki" wrote: I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? A FM aerial? :-) I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. I've only got the boggo bit of wire with a connector on the end as supplied with cheap mini systems and a proper RF connector aerial. Nothing that'll go in the holes provided. |
Strange Aerial connection
Laurence Payne wrote:
On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:16:42 +0100, "Doki" wrote: I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? A FM aerial? :-) I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. My guess is that the outer two are for a 300 ohm balanced downlead with the centre pin being ground. If so, then either connect a balanced lead to the outer two pins, or a coaxial cable to either one (not both) and the centre pin. It would be as well to check for volts as Lawrence has suggested. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
Strange Aerial connection
On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:45:21 +0100, "Doki" wrote:
I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. I've only got the boggo bit of wire with a connector on the end as supplied with cheap mini systems and a proper RF connector aerial. Nothing that'll go in the holes provided. Oh, don't be so helpless! Bodge it! :-) |
Strange Aerial connection
"Doki" wrote in message
... "Laurence Payne" lpayne1NOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote in message ... On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:16:42 +0100, "Doki" wrote: I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? A FM aerial? :-) I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. I've only got the boggo bit of wire with a connector on the end as supplied with cheap mini systems and a proper RF connector aerial. Nothing that'll go in the holes provided. Do it the professional way, stick the wires in with matchsticks. Regards Mike. |
Strange Aerial connection
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... Laurence Payne wrote: On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:16:42 +0100, "Doki" wrote: I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? A FM aerial? :-) I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. My guess is that the outer two are for a 300 ohm balanced downlead with the centre pin being ground. If so, then either connect a balanced lead to the outer two pins, or a coaxial cable to either one (not both) and the centre pin. It would be as well to check for volts as Lawrence has suggested. What's one of them then? |
Strange Aerial connection
On May 9, 3:16 pm, "Doki" wrote:
I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? Oh come on you lot, where have you been these last 30 years. Its one of those plastic connections that come on the end of the pink aerials we are so fond of. The outer two are for the signal and the centre is just a plastic locating pin. The AM version is the same with one of the outers at an angle. Can't you still buy these ???? I would just stick two long wires in the outer two and hang them decorously over the picture frame. If you don't have a picture frame find a friend to hold it up..... |
Strange Aerial connection
Doki wrote:
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... Laurence Payne wrote: On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:16:42 +0100, "Doki" wrote: I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? A FM aerial? :-) I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. My guess is that the outer two are for a 300 ohm balanced downlead with the centre pin being ground. If so, then either connect a balanced lead to the outer two pins, or a coaxial cable to either one (not both) and the centre pin. It would be as well to check for volts as Lawrence has suggested. What's one of them then? What's one of what? S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
Strange Aerial connection
"Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... Doki wrote: "Serge Auckland" wrote in message ... Laurence Payne wrote: On Wed, 9 May 2007 15:16:42 +0100, "Doki" wrote: I've got an old Aiwa Reciever, probably dates back to the 70s or early 80s - massive heavy aluminium front, needle tuner etc. Anyway, it's got a rather strange connector on the back for the antenna - 3 holes in a row marked "FM Aerial". Any ideas on what I should be hooking up to it? A FM aerial? :-) I suppose it might be a combined 75 ohm/300 ohm connector. Try your FM downlead into any pair of holes, see which work best! I suppose it might be worth looking for a voltage on any of the holes first, just in case it's some special arrangement for e.g. powering a mast-head amplifier. My guess is that the outer two are for a 300 ohm balanced downlead with the centre pin being ground. If so, then either connect a balanced lead to the outer two pins, or a coaxial cable to either one (not both) and the centre pin. It would be as well to check for volts as Lawrence has suggested. What's one of them then? What's one of what? A 300 ohm balanced downlead. |
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