GPS Antenna

al chernoff

New member
Oct 11, 1999
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Garmin has a ga 26 with a 6 ft lead and they also have one that hooks to the
windshield on the inside. You might want to look at their web site under
garmin gps III plus accessories.
al

> Patrick:
>
> What I had reference to is their short, 24" I believe, mast type marine GPS
> antenna. The usual GPS antenna you see on trucks and delivery vehicles
> reminds me of the old time RR flare pots.
>
> Paul Bartz
>
> From: Patrick.Flowers
> [mailto:Patrick.Flowers]
> Sent: Friday, January 21, 2000 8:48 AM
>
> Paul,
>
> I don't have the West Marine catalog here at work, but IIRC, there wasn't
> anything listed in there that I liked. The Garmin GA28 low profile antenna
> was the one I was planning to use. Sells for around $100. The only
> downside that I can see is that it comes with 30 feet of cable. I'm no
> radio engineer, but I would think that the cable could probably be shortened
> since this is only a receiver, but I'd probably want an opinion from Garmin
> before I got out the wire cutters.
>
> Garmin also makes the GA29 mast mount, which is the same unit in slightly
> different packaging that could be mounted to a roof rail, ladder or mirror
> if for whatever reason you didn't want to come through the roof.
>

> >
> > Patrick:
> >
> > You say you "plan to mount a marine GPS antenna on the cab roof".
> >
> > Is it anything that's on p. 62 of the 1999 West Marine Master catalog??
> If so, which one??
 
what a great site... i was able to see all of the garmin additions. I think
just having an antenna that would be movable would work for me. I could put it
in the car, or the gm or or. Just my thoughts. thanks for the site info...
really looks good.

> Al,
>
> What I'm looking for is one that attaches permanently to the body and routes
> the cable inside. They're no pictures of the accessories on their site, but
> you can see the GA26 right under the GA28 at:
>
> http://www.skydiversdepot.com/accstreet.htm
>
> Patrick
>

> >
> > Garmin has a ga 26 with a 6 ft lead and they also have one
> > that hooks to the windshield on the inside. You might want
> > to look at their web site under garmin gps III plus accessories.
> > al
 
Patrick:

I see CRS got me again. The correct catalog page is 68 vice 62.

Paul Bartz

From: Al C
Sent: 12/20/99 6:43 PM

For those of us using the Garmin III Plus, the Garmin company sells a
extension of the antenna with a 6' lead so we can position it in another
location. Just my thoughts.
al

> Patrick:
>
> You say you "plan to mount a marine GPS antenna on the cab roof".
>
> Is it anything that's on p. 62 of the 1999 West Marine Master
catalog?? If
> so, which one??
>
> Paul Bartz
>
> From: Patrick.Flowers
> [mailto:Patrick.Flowers]
> Sent: Friday, January 14, 2000 9:41 AM
>

> John, Rick, Arch, JR and Dave, thanks guys for the responses
on the
> outside sun visors.. So far I've learned:
>
> > 5. they don't appear to interfere with GPS reception
>
> To clarify, the fiberglass will block satellite reception(even tree
leaves
> block the satellite signal), but since the visor is relatively narrow,
it
> will only block a small "slice" of sky. My Delorme Tripmate seems to
work
> best when placed at the forward edge of the dash near the center of
the
> passenger side windshield. There's not enough room on the drivers
side for
> the unit to lay flat and the center brace seems to interfere with
reception
> slightly. Neither Dad or I have a sunvisor, so I can't say how the
Delorme
> would work with one in place.
> On my "wish" list is a standalone GPS that will accept a remote
antenna
> input and a serial output(Garmin GPSII Plus is my current target). I
plan
> to mount a marine GPS antenna on the cab roof for best reception.
 
Paul,

I don't have the West Marine catalog here at work, but IIRC, there wasn't
anything listed in there that I liked. The Garmin GA28 low profile antenna
was the one I was planning to use. Sells for around $100. The only
downside that I can see is that it comes with 30 feet of cable. I'm no
radio engineer, but I would think that the cable could probably be shortened
since this is only a receiver, but I'd probably want an opinion from Garmin
before I got out the wire cutters.

Garmin also makes the GA29 mast mount, which is the same unit in slightly
different packaging that could be mounted to a roof rail, ladder or mirror
if for whatever reason you didn't want to come through the roof.

Patrick

>
> Patrick:
>
> You say you "plan to mount a marine GPS antenna on the cab roof".
>
> Is it anything that's on p. 62 of the 1999 West Marine Master
> catalog?? If so, which one??
 
Patrick:

What I had reference to is their short, 24" I believe, mast type marine GPS
antenna. The usual GPS antenna you see on trucks and delivery vehicles
reminds me of the old time RR flare pots.

Paul Bartz

From: Patrick.Flowers
[mailto:Patrick.Flowers]
Sent: Friday, January 21, 2000 8:48 AM

Paul,

I don't have the West Marine catalog here at work, but IIRC, there wasn't
anything listed in there that I liked. The Garmin GA28 low profile antenna
was the one I was planning to use. Sells for around $100. The only
downside that I can see is that it comes with 30 feet of cable. I'm no
radio engineer, but I would think that the cable could probably be shortened
since this is only a receiver, but I'd probably want an opinion from Garmin
before I got out the wire cutters.

Garmin also makes the GA29 mast mount, which is the same unit in slightly
different packaging that could be mounted to a roof rail, ladder or mirror
if for whatever reason you didn't want to come through the roof.

>
> Patrick:
>
> You say you "plan to mount a marine GPS antenna on the cab roof".
>
> Is it anything that's on p. 62 of the 1999 West Marine Master catalog??
If so, which one??
 
Paul,

The GA29 would resemble the truck antenna you refer to, but is much
smaller(about 3 inches in diameter). I believe the truck antenna also
contains the receiver and may contain some other comm equipment(I know that
many truck lines track their vehicles now and I believe it's all part of the
same system). The GA28 is just a "bump" about one inch high, two inches
wide and three inches long. There's a picture of it on the net somewhere -
I'll try to find it(for some reason, it ain't on Garmin's site :
> What I had reference to is their short, 24" I believe, mast
> type marine GPS antenna. The usual GPS antenna you see on
> trucks and delivery vehicles reminds me of the old time RR
> flare pots.
 
The GA28 can be seen at:

http://www.skydiversdepot.com/accstreet.htm

The GA29 can be seen at:

http://www.mts.net/geo/images/ga29.jpg

Another possibility that I've considered is the "Tri-M Mighty Mouse"(honest,
I'm not making this up) that can be seen at:

http://www.thegpsstore.com/site/images/mm.jpg

It's not as pretty, but at $70, the price is right.

HTH,
Patrick

>
> The GA29 would resemble the truck antenna you refer to, but is much
> smaller(about 3 inches in diameter). I believe the truck antenna also
> contains the receiver and may contain some other comm
> equipment(I know that
> many truck lines track their vehicles now and I believe it's
> all part of the
> same system). The GA28 is just a "bump" about one inch high,
> two inches
> wide and three inches long. There's a picture of it on the
> net somewhere -
> I'll try to find it(for some reason, it ain't on Garmin's site :
> Patrick
>

> >
> > What I had reference to is their short, 24" I believe, mast
> > type marine GPS antenna. The usual GPS antenna you see on
> > trucks and delivery vehicles reminds me of the old time RR
> > flare pots.
>
 
Al,

What I'm looking for is one that attaches permanently to the body and routes
the cable inside. They're no pictures of the accessories on their site, but
you can see the GA26 right under the GA28 at:

http://www.skydiversdepot.com/accstreet.htm

Patrick

>
> Garmin has a ga 26 with a 6 ft lead and they also have one
> that hooks to the windshield on the inside. You might want
> to look at their web site under garmin gps III plus accessories.
> al
 
Al,

My wife always fusses about all the cables whenever we travel, so I'm trying
to clean things up a little. The "Mighty Mouse" I mentioned earlier is a
pretty good active antenna that uses a magnetic mount.

Check out:

http://www.gpscables.com/catalog.html

Paul Bartz, check out the "Skymaster" bulkhead mount antenna at the above
site. Looks like it's about 4 inches in diameter and about one inch high -
you'd never see it from the ground if it was mounted on the cab.

This site also has some good links at:

http://www.gpscables.com/links.htm

Joe Mehaffey's site at:

http://joe.mehaffey.com/

has lots of good info too.

Enjoy,
Patrick

>
> what a great site... i was able to see all of the garmin
> additions. I think
> just having an antenna that would be movable would work for
> me. I could put it
> in the car, or the gm or or. Just my thoughts. thanks for
> the site info...
> really looks good.
>

>
> > Al,
> >
> > What I'm looking for is one that attaches permanently to
> the body and routes
> > the cable inside. They're no pictures of the accessories
> on their site, but
> > you can see the GA26 right under the GA28 at:
> >
> > http://www.skydiversdepot.com/accstreet.htm
> >
> > Patrick
 
Hi All!

I use a DeLorme GPS system and am considering mounting the receiver
(antenna) inside a roof vent cover. The wire would allow the vent to be
opened and closed normally, and no more holes through the roof. While
DeLorme doesn't offer any externally mounted antennas, they said that
any antenna using the NMEA0183 standard code would work with their
software. Additionally, if a longer cable is required, a NULL modem
cable with 9 pin connectors can be used. I think that DeLorme gives the
biggest GPS bang for the buck! I hope this helps somebody.

Roy Cummings
'75 Eleganza
Arlington, VA
 
>I use a DeLorme GPS system and am considering mounting the receiver
>(antenna) inside a roof vent cover. The wire would allow the vent to be
>opened and closed normally, and no more holes through the roof. While
>DeLorme doesn't offer any externally mounted antennas, they said that
>any antenna using the NMEA0183 standard code would work with their
>software. Additionally, if a longer cable is required, a NULL modem
>cable with 9 pin connectors can be used. I think that DeLorme gives the
>biggest GPS bang for the buck! I hope this helps somebody.

Hi Roy,

I was recently looking at DeLorme's web site and it appeared that they only
offered the GPS system with the city street mapping system _OR_ the highway
mapping system. Do you know if it is available with both mapping systems or
if you can use both????

Thanks,
Marion Hope
77 Kingsley

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
George M.(Marion) Hope, Ph.D.
1930 SW 19th Way gmhope
Gainesville, FL 32608 gmhope
(352) 371-2795 (Home) (352) 846-2111 (Office)
 
The DeLorme GPS works just fine with either. Personally prefer Street Atlas 7.0
over the AAA program but the GPS couldn't care less.

Melvin Shaffer

> >I use a DeLorme GPS system and am considering mounting the receiver
> >(antenna) inside a roof vent cover. The wire would allow the vent to be
> >opened and closed normally, and no more holes through the roof. While
> >DeLorme doesn't offer any externally mounted antennas, they said that
> >any antenna using the NMEA0183 standard code would work with their
> >software. Additionally, if a longer cable is required, a NULL modem
> >cable with 9 pin connectors can be used. I think that DeLorme gives the
> >biggest GPS bang for the buck! I hope this helps somebody.
>
> Hi Roy,
>
> I was recently looking at DeLorme's web site and it appeared that they only
> offered the GPS system with the city street mapping system _OR_ the highway
> mapping system. Do you know if it is available with both mapping systems or
> if you can use both????
>
> Thanks,
> Marion Hope
> 77 Kingsley
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> George M.(Marion) Hope, Ph.D.
> 1930 SW 19th Way gmhope
> Gainesville, FL 32608 gmhope
> (352) 371-2795 (Home) (352) 846-2111 (Office)
 
>The DeLorme GPS works just fine with either. Personally prefer Street Atlas 7.0
>over the AAA program but the GPS couldn't care less.
>
>Melvin Shaffer

Thanks, that's what I wanted to hear.

Marion Hope
77 Kingsley

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
George M.(Marion) Hope, Ph.D.
1930 SW 19th Way gmhope
Gainesville, FL 32608 gmhope
(352) 371-2795 (Home) (352) 846-2111 (Office)
 
> I was recently looking at DeLorme's web site and it appeared that they only
> offered the GPS system with the city street mapping system _OR_ the highway
> mapping system. Do you know if it is available with both mapping systems or
> if you can use both????
>
Marion,

I agree with Melvin's reply. While I have both, I only use the Street
Atlas 7.0. I think it's the way to go.

Best wishes,
Roy Cummings
 
Am I to understand that the Earthmate/SA7.0 for $199 which I just saw at
> delorme.com is a good reliable system for use on the road in a GMC?
>

Ken,

In my opinion, yes. For the money, I don't think the DeLorme can be
beat. This assumes that you already have a laptop with a CD-ROM drive.
Also, you may be able to find it for less than the retail price of the
web site.

Best wishes,

Roy Cummings
'75 Eleganza
Arlington, VA
 
>
> I use a DeLorme GPS system and am considering mounting the receiver
> (antenna) inside a roof vent cover. The wire would allow the vent to be
> opened and closed normally, and no more holes through the roof. While
> DeLorme doesn't offer any externally mounted antennas, they said that
> any antenna using the NMEA0183 standard code would work with their
> software.

Roy,

The Delorme Tripmate and Earthmate GPSs do not accept external
antennas. The Delorme software works with receivers(not antennas) using
the NMEA0183 code. If you want to use an external antenna, you'll need
to buy another GPS that has both a serial port outlet and a remote
antenna connection.

One other option is to mount the Delorme receiver to a suction cup style
radar detector windshield mount(especially if you have the smaller
Earthmate).

Also, if you're looking to buy Delorme products, check on eBay first.
They're usually available there. Just bid carefully.

Patrick
- --
Patrick Flowers
Mailto:patrick

The GMC Motorhome Page
http://www.gmcmotorhome.com
 
> The Delorme Tripmate and Earthmate GPSs do not accept external
> antennas. The Delorme software works with receivers(not antennas) using
> the NMEA0183 code. If you want to use an external antenna, you'll need
> to buy another GPS that has both a serial port outlet and a remote
> antenna connection.
>
> One other option is to mount the Delorme receiver to a suction cup style
> radar detector windshield mount(especially if you have the smaller
> Earthmate).

Patrick,

Excellent point regarding the GPS antenna vs. receiver. Frankly. I
don't want, or need, an external antenna. My Delorme receiver works
just fine laying on the dash. If, however, I want to move it out of
sight, I would consider locating it inside of a roof vent cover.

Best wishes,

Roy Cummings
'75 Eleganza
Arlington, VA