It is said that most mid century recording engineers had the ultimate goal of making a record sound as good as possible on a Delco radio. Most of the country was listening on one. It is interesting how sensitive and high definition (to use todays term for high fidelity) our old radios are.
Based on the above from the experts i have to assume I need to trim my radio to work with the new antenna lead given my car was delivered with a front antenna.
Thanks for the education.
Danny Plotkin
-----Original Message-----
From: "John Grady" <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, November 21, 2021 2:50pm
To: "Carl" <cbilter@xxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "Bob Podstawski" <bobp8@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "dplotkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <dplotkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "finsruskw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <finsruskw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Bob Merritt" <bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: {Chrysler 300} Antenna
The 30” length (actually closer to 31”) is a compromise for the middle of the FM frequency band (98Mhz in the USA) where that length matches one-fourth of the wavelength. Lower frequencies like 88 MHz would match to an antenna a couple inches longer and higher frequencies like 108 MHz would match to an antenna a couple inches shorter.
The radios have sufficient sensitivity that a precise match isn’t necessary. I used to design and built my own yagi FM antennas in high school for “DXing” which is the arguably nerdy hobby of picking up distant radio stations. FM signals are at a high enough frequency (located just above channel 6 on the old analog TV lower band) that the signals tend not to bounce off the atmosphere and are restricted to somewhat “line of sight” from the transmitters, with some exceptions due to weather conditions. Those exceptions are called tropospheric ducting or tropospheric propagation, when the FM and old analog TV signals would sometimes strangely travel for hundreds of miles for a few minutes or hours. AM signals, on the other hand, are at a much lower frequency (KHZ vs. Mhz) with very long wavelengths that will bounce off the atmosphere at night, every night, allowing one to hear stations from Mexico and Cuba that are allowed to transmit at up to 10 times the power of US stations. Back in the day folks would listen to AM stations from across the country at night. Hence, some stations were “clear channel” at night so they could be heard many hundreds of miles away. In Chicago, we could receive stations from Canada, Mexico, Cuba, the Caribbean, and from Boston (WBZ), New York (WABC), New Orleans, Dallas, and many other locations. I liked KAAY 1090 in Little Rock, a great rock ‘n roll station in the early 1970’s. The AM car radios of the day were highly tuned RF amped circuits with exceptional sensitivity and selectivity for long distance reception. All, of course, before the days of digital tuners.
Anyway, when Chrysler introduced the AM/FM radio for their cars, a Delco model of very high quality (January of 1963 for Chrysler) the antenna was front fender mounted (no power option), standard on New Yorker Salon and optional on other models. It may have included a fixed length antenna of 31” (can’t remember offhand). The AM only radios were matched to the antenna via an antenna trimmer adjustment for maximum reception, with the antenna set a 40”, regardless of front or rear mounting.
Carl Bilter
From: Bob Podstawski
Sent: Sunday, November 21, 2021 9:18 AM
To: dplotkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: finsruskw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; John Grady; Bob Merritt; chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: {Chrysler 300} Antenna
FM antenna should be 30” for max reception. Cables are shielded and are of no consequence in my understanding
On Nov 21, 2021, at 9:14 AM, dplotkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Except for remote adjusting mirrors most mirrors were installed on the car, at delivery, with the driver behind the wheel who would say "that's good" as a tech moved it about the fender. I have a 63 Galaxie with two mirrors that show nothing at all of value to driver.
My F radio with rear antenna picks up one station and I'm in a metro area, so I tend to agree the long lead in might be a problem. Generally FM can be picked up with even no antenna if the signal is strong given the tiny wavelengths. AM really needs an antenna to work.
-----Original Message-----
From: finsruskw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Sunday, November 21, 2021 8:33am
To: "'John Grady'" <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "'Bob Merritt'" <bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: {Chrysler 300} AntennaMy Parade Green C was ordered with twin rear antennas but was cancelled at the factory for some reason and the code for that was stamped (XXX’ed) out on the data tag.
Weird Huh?
From: chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of John Grady
Sent: Sunday, November 21, 2021 7:28 AM
To: Bob Merritt <bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: chrysler-300-club-international@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: {Chrysler 300} Antenna
I wondered about that , perhaps when you ordered power due to size it just went to back ? Like noted already? which I think looks great , as do twin antennas on the fins on D . (? what about that ?) However if you upgrade the radio to FM within the F housing ( another story ) I do not think FM likes the long antenna cable . It can be tuned to work on AM but may be a problem on FM .
There was a rumor back then that as radios got better in AM ( ours are pretty good) that static from the engine was picked up a lot more with front antennas , probably true . I saw a service bulletin once about jumping around the hood hinge with a copper wire , —- I am not sure when suppressor wires came in too . If you look at old JCW catalogs there are a lot of period devices “ to cut static “ . Corvettes really suffered from this— why all the shielding .
related to the right mirror , I have a car wherein the mirror seems on correctly ( same as other side) but the glass will not turn enough clockwise looking down on it to aim it right ? becomes a decoration .
May be aftermarket , but looks period(?) but no other holes in fender and both sides match ( relating to where they put them , if dealer ?)
Sent from my iPhone not by choice
On 21 Nov 2021, at 7:22 am, Bob Merritt <bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:Yes, the dealer installed the manual antenna and
the location varied.
My F has the manual antenna on the driver side front fender.
Bob
On 11/21/2021 12:20 AM, Nick Taylor wrote:There isn't enough room in the front fender for the power antenna. They did put the power antenna in the fender on the Imperials. The power antenna is more protected in the trunk though.
Interestingly, the regular antennas did not come installed on the cars. The dealer installed them. I have a bulletin that covers it and explains that it is so they can take a radio from one car and put it in another that a customer wanted.
You'll see the manual antennas mounted in different places on the front fender. The dealer was supposed to use a template and it was different if the car had the right mirror. My 60 wagon came with the right mirror and the antenna is in the wrong place and hits the mirror. My 300F didn't come mirrors but the dealer installed them and the antenna.
On Sat, Nov 20, 2021, 5:25 PM Kim Garnett <chryslerf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Why is the antenna on a 300F sometimes on the front fender and sometimes on the rear fender? --
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