One of my favorite things to do in the summer is ride my bicycle. Sometimes the rides are a little long and if I don't have a riding partner can be a bit dull after a while. I considered combining amateur radio and bicycling. It's been done, and some setups are very impressive and eye catching. Not something I am interested in. I would like my setup to be fairly low profile, yet effectively be able to hit the local repeaters around the city running low power on a small handheld transceiver.
Reading on the various ways others have mounted antennas on bikes I found two main ones. Either mounted on some kind of bracket on the back of the bike or attached to the 6 foot pole of a fiberglass safety flag.
The safety flag setup is usually done with a wire J-Pole twin lead design such as this one here:
http://www.bikexprt.com/bicycle/antennae.htm
I thought I could go a little lower in the profile as this antenna is pretty high. I may still have a go at it sometime but for now I decided on trying to use a quarter wave antenna to cover the 2 meter band. I wanted to also try using the bike frame as the counter poise to this antenna. I read that the frame typically does not make for a good counterpoise but I wanted to try it anyway. There seems to be enough material on the bike to act as one on 2 meters and up.
I was looking into ways to mount this antenna. Some people constructed their own brackets but most just attached the antenna to a rear rack mount. Usually the antenna was attached with some kind of connector like an NMO or SO-239 mount which was mounted through the rear rack mount on the bike. I looked at these as well as antennas on Amazon. Most of what I found didn't appear to be tunable. Meaning that you could not pull out the antenna element and trim it to resonance for the frequency range you want to use it on. This may be necessary, especially when attached to an odd structure like a bicycle. It is by no means a car roof. They also seemed a little pricey for just a stainless steel rod of a certain length to be screwed on to a mount.
I did spend a little bit of money on a rear rack mount for my bicycle from REI, (I know right, I'm supposed to be cheap!) Well the thing cost me a little over $1.00 after my 20% discount and the dividend from what the XYL must have spent some money on the previous year or two. I mounted this to the bike and not having any commercial antenna to put on it I built one with what I had laying around.
Playing the role of Macgyver I pieced together an antenna from a small block of scrap wood to be used as the center insulator, a scrap section of copper tubing, a length of scrap coax with an SMA connector from an old cell phone antenna, the left over BNC cap from the bitx 40 kit, a bolt, a washer, a nut, zip ties and finally a generous portion of hot glue.
I drilled a hole about the same diameter of the copper tube in the wood, almost but not all the way through. I drilled a second hole about halfway through the wood to fit the bolt I had. The head of the bolt would rest at this half way point. A smaller hole was drilled for the bolt to go through the wood and through the rear reflector attachment hole in the bike rack. The bottom side of the rack was sanded down to remove the paint to make electrical contact between the bare aluminum rack plate and the bolt.
Sanded aluminum area - AC9LF |
HOT GLUE!!!! - AC9LF |
Choke - AC9LF |
Finished junky antenna - AC9LF |
I still have to take it for a test spin to see if it falls apart. I have some extra zip ties to secure it to the frame if it does fall off during cycling. Future improvements may be to add a connector to make it easier to remove when needed. I'm excited to give this a go.
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