StarLink Mini Antenna Mount

Heli_av8tor

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 3, 2017
Posts
1,255
Location
NW Illinois
Finished the design and printing of a PETG frame to hold my StarLink Mini antenna inside my motorhome. It’s mounted in the skylight above the shower. The sliding cover, with light, still will close under the antenna.
I can still easily remove it for outdoor use if parked under a heavy tree cover. And it works great going down the road.
Tom
 

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Please explain. Does your skylight open or are you saying reception is OK through all that plastic. If that works, I'll need to order one of your new frames.
 
I can not address if Starlink will work with the frame but I have a Mini mounted inside of my Jeep Wrangler and it works very good mounted inside and gets a good signal through the fiberglass roof.
 
I can not address if Starlink will work with the frame but I have a Mini mounted inside of my Jeep Wrangler and it works very good mounted inside and gets a good signal through the fiberglass roof.
Haven't tried that. Is it possible the signal is actually coming through the window?
 
Haven't tried that. Is it possible the signal is actually coming through the window?
I would say no as the antenna is mounted up flush with the roof. Also note it is going through about two inches of foam that I have not trimmed to size yet.


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The two layers of plexiglass doesn’t seen to reduce the signal strength enough to matter.
Not surprising, since they're just radio waves, although high enough frequency to travel straight line. Glass, wood and plastics are pretty much transparent to radio waves, whether low freq or microwave. Radar domes are often made of fiberglass, BTW.
 
My 1st job at Emerson Electric they had me testing radomes (fiberglass covers) for the B-52 tail gun radar (30mm Gatlin gun, holy terror).
We tested for phase angle distortion in horizontal and vertical, as well as transmission loss.
Fiberglass is pretty forgiving, with less than 5% power loss and less than 2% phase shift. I don't remember the frequencies now, but suffice it to say you can usually get by with a lot of different non-metallic materials as long as the thickness/contour is not varying greatly.
Also, the phased array antenna in Starlink can adapt to varying attenuation much better than conventional RF antennas.
 
And that’s what I do. I routed the included cord and AC wall wart over the top of the shower door to the outlet above the vanity sink. Nothing elegant (yet).
 

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