RF Fundamentals: The Beginner’s Guide to Antennas & Connectors
1. Antenna Gain (dBi): Directivity, Not Power
Gain doesn't "create" energy; it focuses it. Think of it as reshaping the signal beam.
Low Gain (3dBi)
Light Bulb: Radiates in all directions. Best for short range or moving vehicles.
High Gain (12dBi+)
Flashlight: Narrow, focused beam. Best for long-range, stationary links.
2. Impedance: 50 Ohm vs. 75 Ohm
Incorrect impedance causes signal reflections and potential equipment damage.
| Type | Standard Application | Common Cables |
|---|---|---|
| 50 Ohm | Data & Voice (WiFi, 4G, Ham, GPS) | RG174, RG58, LMR200 |
| 75 Ohm | Video & TV (Cable TV, Satellite) | RG6, RG59, RG11 |
⚠️ Never mix 50 Ohm and 75 Ohm components.
3. Cable Loss: Length Matters
Higher frequencies experience faster signal drop (Attenuation).
Signal Loss (2.4GHz per 10ft)
- 📉 RG174 (Thin): ~3.2 dB loss — Short pigtails only.
- 📊 RG58 (Standard): ~1.5 dB loss — Mobile radio use.
- 🚀 KSR195 (Low Loss): ~1.1 dB loss — High performance.
4. What is VSWR?
Measures efficiency of power transmission to the antenna.
Excellent
Acceptable
Critical
VSWR Calculator
5. 2.4GHz
A 2.4 GHz antenna or system is simply a device that transmits and receives at the frequency 2.4 GHz. All devices are required to operate in a narrow frequency band. Wireless routers are forced (by government regulation) to work at 2.4 GHz. If the government had said they have to work at 2.9 GHz or 1.3 GHz, it would not have mattered at all. The wireless propagation environment is different for 2.4 GHz or 1 GHz, but for home personal wireless communications it would not matter significantly.
Wavelength at 2.4 GHz
c/f = (3×10⁸ m/s) / (2.4×10⁹ 1/s) = 0.125 meters = 4.92 inches
Bluetooth devices also use the 2.4 GHz band, in addition to some cordless phones and radio controlled toys. The IEEE 802.11 wireless standard specifies WLAN computer communication at 2.4 GHz.
6. RF Terminology Reference
Looking for a specific RF term? Browse our complete A–Z glossary with definitions for connectors, cable types, signal metrics, and more.
View Full RF Terminology A–Z →Need a Technical Consultation?
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