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Old July 23rd 12, 03:32 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Eric Greenwell[_4_]
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Default Mounting GPS antennas under panel cover

On 7/22/2012 7:13 PM, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Sunday, July 22, 2012 5:11:14 PM UTC-7, kirk.stant wrote:
I'm thinking of mounting a couple of "mouse" GPS
antennas on the inside of my fiberglass LS6 panel cover using
Dual-Lock on the TOP of the GPS antenna. Reason is to have more
real estate to place the antennas, and still provide a
"break-away" function if I have to jettison the canopy
(and cover, which goes with it). Any opinions about any effect the
plastic Dual-Lock would have on GPS reception?

My gut feeling is "no effect", but I claim no deep
knowledge of the electromagnetic spectrum (other than how to run a
no-lock intercept using an APQ-120...).

Comments?

Kirk 66


My concern is not RF absorbing (which will be minimal), but more the
robustness of any adhesive tape on a too-hot-to touch black
glareshield sitting on the ground on a 100F+ summer day. While 3M
Dual-Lock is strong, and the adhesive on those strips typically much
better/more stable at high temps, than any of the Velcro brand
products I'd still be concerned about the adhesive
"creeping"/"walking" or letting go on a really hot day. (but that is
easy to test to see if its a problem)

My facorite under-panel mounts are actually made of thin, one layer
fiberglass moulded around a foam replica of the antenna that are
potted under the glareshield and then the foam core is removed. Where
you pry open a springy entry flap and push in the GPS "puck". I've
got one made like this under my ASH-26E panel for the XM weather
receiver puck for my Gamin 496, so not exactly a GPS antenna but it
works great in this mount (in this case there is no break-away, as
the 496 goes away with the canopy, but the DC power to the 496 has a
break-away connector. You could look at GPS options that break away
at a connector.

Email me if you want and I'll try to find photos of the fiberglass
mount for my XM antenna that Williams Soaring made.


I haven't seen Rex's solution, but maybe you can make a mount that
attaches to the instrument pod, holding the antenna up close to the
glare shield? That avoids the need for Dual-Lock or messing with
fiberglass. I used some 1/16" x1" x3" Lexan plastic to mount the
antenna, then bolted the end of the lexan to a convenient brace. The
flexible Lexan holds the antenna up to the inside of the glare shield.

--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to
email me)
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