Best outdoor antenna???


Just picked up a Kenwood KT-917 and being that this is my first tuner ever, I am a bit in the dark here looking for a good antenna that could pick up stations located at two opposite directions. I live 10 miles outside of San Antonio,Tx. with Austin 80 miles on the opposite direction with great stations I prefer to ones in San Antonio. I have tried doing some research on antennas and thought of the "Yogi" but they are supposed to be very directional and rejects other stations except ones in it's pointed direction. Does this mean I will not hear the stations in my own city if I directed it towards Austin? If not the "yagi", then what is your suggestion?

One more question, Is it better to use the twin lead 300 ohm
connection or the 75 ohm single lead coaxial? I would truly
appreciate any input on these issues I can get from those of
you with the experience.

John
128x12867chevellesslover
The ST2 doesn't have much gain if you're trying to pick up the Austin stations. I am 45 mi's from Boston and it had problems...If you're that distant you should consider a yagi and rotor.
Yagi's should be used with a rotor, however they are not as effective at reducing signals from the rear as they are from the side, therefor if your two favorite stations are 180 degrees apart you can point it at the furthest one and you may get a usable signal from the other. With San Antonio only 10 miles away you should be able to do this easily. But get a big Yagi (lots of elements). Use the 75ohm coax - it's more immune to interference and can be routed anywhere/way. Using an Omni not only doesn't sufficiently amplify distant signals, it can cause multipath problems (in some areas). Have fun.........
I am a Magnum Dynalab dealer (DISCLAIMER); Having sold many tuners, antennae, and combinations of both, my conclusion is no best antenna exists. The best combination for you will largely be dependent on your location to include number of available stations and their distance from you, topography, proximity of other buildings, RF sources, etc. which will all affect your reception. Your tuner is another variable but not as important as location IMO.
I suggest talking with other folks in similiar situations and when you finally purchase hardware (antenna, rotor, signal amplifier, etc.) do so with an agreed upon money back evaluation period.
Good luck.
I was going to buy an APS-13 but ended up buying an MD-10FM antenna. The initial reason I did this was size and turning radius limitations on my roof. The MD-10FM is 142" and would be the biggest Yagi I could fit on my roof with the rotator. However, when I opened the MD-10, at least to me, the gauge of the aluminum and build quality looked better than the APS. To be fair to APS, the APS-13 I saw was a few years old so it may have changed since then. But the MD seems to have a very nice build quality.

I haven't hooked it up yet but anticipate doing so within the next few weeks. I am using the MD ST-2 whip antenna right now but want to pull in a classical station (that's about 80 miles) away a little better and with the ST-2 it is not real strong during the day. On most other stations the ST-2 is fine but who knows how much better it will get with the Yagi!
the aps-13 is generally considered the best directional fm antenna available to the home user at a somewhat reasonable cost. but, for a high-performance antenna on a budget, consider the winegard hd6065. it is at least as good as the aps9a (if not better?) at half the price of the aps9a.

yes, you will need a rotor if you are wanting to get stations in different directions, & yes, it's possible to receive a signal off the back of one of these directional yagi's, so if you have a really strong station directly behind you when you're trying to pick up a weak station in front of you, look for an antenna w/the best front-to-back ratio. and, this is one of the few situations where an antenna tuner like the md signal sleuth may actually be of some benefit. re: the st-2 whip antenna, i and most other fm fanatics who have tried one have found that a $3 wire dipole almost *always* works better, but the dipole, like a directional yagi, also needs to be oriented for best results for a particular station.

re: lead wire, in theory 300 ohm twin lead works best, but in reality it does not. its lower signal loss is almost never realized, due to its susceptibility to interference from adjacent objects, (even its support brackets), movement, & poor weather resistance. rg-6 coax is usually the best choice. avoid rg-59 - too much signal loss. for really long runs, you may wanna consider rg-11, but it's usually not necessary.

doug s.