solo_hiker said:
I beg to differ there: the key is having an ACTIVE external antenna. Both the signal bars and the number of birds seen jump noticeably on my 12XL when my Lowe external antenna is connected, and more than once under deep forest cover I haven't gotten a fix until I've done so. My point is that if you're relying on your GPS under deep forest cover, an active external antenna is a good idea.
An active antenna is a passive antenna with an amplifier in the same box. Every GPSR with an internal antenna contains a passive antenna and amplifiers. The real issue is the relative performance of the internal and external components.
Whether an external active antenna improves your reception depends on the GPSR and how you use it.
Once you have sufficient front-end gain, additional gain (amplification) will not help. An amplifier adds noise (called the noise temperature or noise figure) to the signal--the signal-to-noise ratio, which is primarily determined by the first amplifier in the system, is the critical determinant of "sensitivity". Additional amplifiers increase the strength of both the signal and the noise (and because they will add their own noise, actually reduce the signal-to-noise ratio slightly). Too much amplification can overload the front end and make things far worse.
One reason for using an amplifier in an external antenna is that the cable has significant loss at the GPS frequency (1575MHz). The amplification sets the noise figure before the cable loss and compensates for the cable loss. Otherwise the cable loss will significantly reduce the signal-to-noise ratio.
The GPSR signal bars indicate signal-to-noise ratio, not signal strength.
(The GPS signal is a 1023 chip spread spectrum signal using different orthogonal spreading codes for each satellite. All satellites transmit on the same frequency. The signals are detected by doppler shifted correlation. When the GPSR is searching for the satellites it is scanning in doppler shift and correlation time to find the signals.)
The 12XL is a rather old design. If an external active antenna helps, it is because:
1) the noise figure of the amplifier in the external antenna is better than that of the 12XL,
2) the front end gain of the 12XL is insufficient,
3) the passive antenna in the external antenna is better than the 12XL passive antenna,
4) you put the external antenna in a better location than you put the 12XL,
and/or
5) the 12XL electronics puts out noise that is picked up by the internal antenna, but not by the external antenna.
It looks like Lowe no longer makes the one I have, but if you wanna see what I'm talking about check this out:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=4668&item=5771591222&rd=1&ssPageName=WD1V
Thanks--I already own 2 (different) active external antennas. Here is a spec sheet for one of them:
http://www.pc-mobile.net/ast3spec.htm.
If an external active antenna helps you in your applications with your equipment, by all means use it. But it is not an automatic conclusion that it will help everyone. (There are applications where an external antenna is essential. For instance, when the GPSR is in a shielded location.)
Doug
Electrical Engineer
40 years experience with radio systems.