At Fixya.com, our trusted experts are meticulously vetted and possess extensive experience in their respective fields. Backed by a community of knowledgeable professionals, our platform ensures that the solutions provided are thoroughly researched and validated.
- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
I am not sure what a smart set is in this context.
Your choice of antenna depends largely on whether you are in a good signal strength low interference area or in a fringe area with the possibility of high levels of interference.
Other considerations are, do you want the best stereo reception or are you happy with passable mono, do you want to receive from a single transmitter or do you want to receive from a variety of different directions?
The final consideration is signal polarisation - is the transmitter antenna vertical or horizontal. For best results in all except the strongest signal areas the receiving antenna should be oriented the same.
For receiving from a variety of directions in a good signal area and horizontal polarisation the omni-directional antenna is a good compromise solution. For vertical polarisation a single rod of appropriate length at a height that clears as many local obstructions as possible.
For low signal areas and high interference there are directional antennas of various gains and masthead amplifiers which when used with the best quality coaxial cable produce good results. These solutions are for 75 ohm antenna inputs. Many older FM radios use a 300 ohm balanced dipole type of antenna that as an indoor type can produce good results in strong signal areas - they are highly directional which is both an advantage and a disadvantage. For this type of antenna input a suitable matching transformer should be used with the 75 ohm antennas.
Check the Transmitter Antenna and battery. low battery means short range and the antenna could be broken. Have it checked by a radio modeller shop, but first replace new batteries and inspect the antenna. I don't know what brand it is, so I don't know what antenna you have, an extendable antenna or a short stub.
This worked for my Opus player supposed to work for all Opus players. Tip:
if the Device manager asks you to update first, dont, close the dialog
and Choose 'Repair' tab. Follow the instructions from there. You need to connect the player whilst holding the "+" volume key to enter the repair mode
This worked for my Opus player supposed to work for all Opus players. Tip: if the Device manager asks you to update first, dont, close the dialog and Choose 'Repair' tab. Follow the instructions from there. You need to connect the player whilst holding the "+" volume key to enter the repair mode
This worked for my Opus player supposed to work for all Opus players. Tip:
if the Device manager asks you to update first, dont, close the dialog
and Choose 'Repair' tab. Follow the instructions from there. You need to connect the player whilst holding the "+" volume key to enter the repair mode
Replacement is possible, the back of the radio needs to come off and there is a screw at the bottom of the antenna. Remove this and the old one will slide out and simple to install new one. Call Eton for replacement, can be foung with a google search....
they are dependent upon the antenna. best thing to do if u want a to spent the time and money to do that would be to install a new stereo witha AUX plugin instead of your FM transmitter
I`ve repaired a few of and its almost allways the same problem.
The antenna on the transmitter (the one attached to you belt) breaks off inside at the base.
If you`re handy with a soldering iron you can take the back cover off and remove the antenna for replacement or in some case cut off the broken part and re-solder the rest but it might affect the range.
And by the way this is for the flexible antenna.
Hope this help. good luck
×