I noticed more and more new cars with small antennas mounted on
the roof (BMW, Civics, Toyota Matrix, PontiacVibes, etc..). They
are perhaps like 20 inches long or even smaller (some seem as
little as perhaps 7 or 10 inches long). I was under the
impression that car antennas needed to be like 30 inches or more.
Do short antennas work well? Are these for show only? Is there
another antenna hidden somewhere else?
I am thinking replacing my current (in-glass) antenna with one of
these (the Civic SI ones are really nice and are perhaps 7 inches
long). Do you think it is a simple as installing any other
aftermarket antennas (drill hole, install antenna and connect
lead)?
TIA
joe.ker - 11 Sep 2005 22:07 GMT
Most of those short antennas are amplified.
Just about any external antenna is better than in in glass antenna
>I noticed more and more new cars with small antennas mounted on the roof
>(BMW, Civics, Toyota Matrix, PontiacVibes, etc..). They are perhaps like 20
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>
> TIA
'Curly Q. Links' - 12 Sep 2005 03:05 GMT
> I noticed more and more new cars with small antennas mounted on
> the roof (BMW, Civics, Toyota Matrix, PontiacVibes, etc..). They
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
> TIA
----------------------------
Frank,
Without knowing what car, or the year, it's hard to guess whether yours
(is it even a Honda?) has the output for the powered antenna amplifier
on the stereo. You'd also have to get the (+power) wire to wherever you
decide to install the antenna.
My (unamplified) CR-v antenna extends to about 2.5 feet, but under 10"
is sufficient unless I'm trying to pull in something on another
continent :-)
'Curly'