An outdoor shortwave antenna will always give better results than an indoor one. A random length outdoor wire antenna installed as high above ground - and as far away from buildings and power lines as possible - will generally give quite satisfactory results.
The reason behind this is that - like a tuning fork - an antenna will perform best when its size is close to the wavelength of the radio signals it is meant to capture. For example, a half-wavelength dipole antenna cut for reception at the bottom of the 120-meter band (2.3 MHz) would have to be almost 204 feet long for maximum efficiency and effectiveness!
Nevertheless, it is always preferable to use an outdoor antenna, when possible, for two reasons:
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The end-fed 'random-length wire' is the most commonly used because it can be strung up in the air between the receiver and a tall support some distance away from the building where your shortwave receiver is located. This type of antenna will sometimes be referred to as a 'sloper' - because it will often slope down or up from the receiver position.
I have found that an end-fed outdoor shortwave antenna - 138 feet long (42.05 meters) - will give very good results over much of the shortwave frequency spectrum.
If you do not have enough room for a 138 foot end-fed sloper, try a 67 foot sloper. Even if it is roughly half the length, its performance will only be slightly degraded when compared to its longer sister. It's not the ideal length on all frequencies. It's an acceptable compromise.
But not everyone has the available space to install that much wire in a straight line outdoors. Another compromise is to bend it to fit. The wire can zig-zag horizontally - or even vertically - away from your house and still give good results. It means that you will need to support it more than once along its way to the farthest support you have. Just make sure that no given section of the antenna folds back on itself. Ideally, the angle between any two sections should never be less than 90 degrees.
Use non-conductive material for insulators where you attach the antenna wire to a support. Ceramic or hard plastic insulators work best.
I generally use Dacron high-strength rope for my ham radio HF wire antennas. However, I have found that 5/32in. polypropylene diamond-braided rope is quite adequate for less demanding shortwave antenna outdoor installations.
Install your outdoor shortwave antenna
well away from power lines.
Make sure that the antenna cannot touch power lines - during installation - and that it cannot fall over power lines if it breaks (i.e. during a wind storm or ice storm).
As previously explained, outdoor shortwave antennas produce much better results than indoor antennas. Here is a quick overview of commercially made antennas. I will not pretend that the list is complete. Antenna models get dropped and introduced regularly. It will at least give you a good idea of what's available.
Alpha Delta DX-SWL
Alpha Delta DX-SWLS
Hy-Power AB-SWL-SL
Princeton SkyWave SWL Antenna
Alpha Delta DX-ULTRA
Hy-Power SWL-OCF
Princeton SkyWire OCF SWL dipole
QikZepp SWL-OCF1
Alpha Delta DX-Ultra (multiband multiple dipole assembly)
Passive Vertical Antennas
Apex Radio 303WA-2
Active Vertical Antennas
AX-81S Active HF (WinRadio)
AX-81SM Active LF-HF Antenna (WinRadio)
MFJ-1024 Outdoor Active Antenna
The following discontinued shortwave antenna brands may still be available online and in flea markets.
Antenna Supermarket Antennas
Miracle Antennas
RadioMaster Antennas
RF Systems antennas
The indoor shortwave antenna is a compromise when you cannot install an outdoor antenna. Even then, a small indoor loop antenna - installed temporarily out on the balcony when you need it - is better than an indoor one.
Here are the main types of commercially made indoor shortwave antennas - from the least performing to the best performer.
Ameco TPA,
AOR LA390 Active Loop Antenna
Apex Radio 700DTA
Kaito KA33 Active MW/SW Antenna
Kaito KA35 Active MW/SW Antenna
MFJ-1020C Indoor Active Antenna
MFJ-1022 Indoor Active Antenna
Palstar AA30 Active Antenna Coupler*
(The AA30 can be used as a tuned input amplifier
with an outdoor antenna)
For those of you who like to tinker with antennas, allow me to suggest one of my favorite designs: a small tuned loop antenna. Actually, it could also be called a tuned coil antenna because of its dimensions and construction characteristics.
I have built two such antennas.
I only describe the one for the lower bands here.
Note that my two antennas overlap on the 41-meter band. It was just more practical to build two antennas to cover all the shortwave broadcast bands. A single tuned loop would have required a complex switching arrangement which would not have been easy to reproduce at home.
The tuned loop antenna is more effective as a shortwave antenna when its width/height dimensions are a larger portion of the wavelengths it is intended to be used for. In simplified terms, the larger tuned loop antenna captures more RF energy than a smaller one.
Here are the details of the indoor tuned loop SWL antenna that I built for the lower frequency bands 120 meters to 41 meters.
Here is a truly handy software application that I use to make my shortwave listening more productive.
Shortwave Broadcast Schedule Information Software
by Black Cat Systems (www.blackcatsystems.com)
For iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch and Android
$2.99 USD
If you cannot install an outdoor shortwave antenna, and you are not satisfied with the performance of indoor antennas, even the active ones, then you could satisfy your SWL interest by listening to software-defined radios (SDRs) that enable listeners to tune in shortwave broadcasting stations.
These SDR receiving stations are scattered here and there in the world. Some examples are:
73 de VE2DPE
Claude Jollet
7, Rue de la Rive, Notre-Dame-des-Prairies, Québec, Canada J6E 1M9
QTH Locator: FN36gb
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