The advantage of a dark antennas is how snow and ice might melt 
off it faster... and most of all how you can't easily see a black 
mobile whip on your car so it tends not to get tampered with as 
much. 

s. 

> Roger Grady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> At 12:39 PM 2/21/2007, Steve Bosshard \(NU5D\) wrote:
> 
> >Regarding a clean and shiny antenna, we had a discussion at coffee. The
> >preposition was that radio waves and light have many similarities, ie.,
> >wavelength, reflection, Fresnel behavior, and so forth. Using these
> >similarities, a mirror reflects light, and a dark surface absorbs
light,
> >sooooooooooooooooo, wouldn't a shiny antenna reflect incoming
signals while
> >a dark colored antenna absorbs signals? This may only apply to
receiving
> >antennas - hope I can get this idea to market before the April 1
edition of
> >QST.. .... .. .... .. de nu5d
> 
> Cute idea. However... How do you know aluminum that's shiny or black at 
> visible light frequencies is still shiny or black at radio frequencies? 
> Maybe RF black is visible day-glo orange, or pea-soup green. Or
maybe it 
> would absorb light so well as to be invisible. I think this would
make a 
> good April 1 article. I haven't written one for our repeater club 
> newsletter for a few years, maybe it's time for another. Assuming
you don't 
> mind if I borrow your premise.
> 
> As I think about it a vague sense of deja-vu is forming. Maybe there
was an 
> April Fool's article years ago somewhere about invisible antennas?
> 
> Roger Grady  K9OPO
>


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