When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
slight loss of signals from the local station here when I ride. Maybe 5 miles sooner than with the long ones. I have the J&M shorties. I love them.
+1 I have the J&M shorties, they work and look great, but any shorter antenna will have a slightly shorter range if you get out in the middle of nowhere....both CB and radio.
Many years ago, you could have a power antenna on a car that did not go up and down when you turned the radio on or off, if you were in town it worked great down. if you were in a rural area and put the antenna down the volume went down or the station went away. If you use a shorter or lower antenna you will loose some performance, you may not be able to tell this in all cases, but that is the way antennas work.
I have the J&M and like it but just run without most of the time since in SLC you can pick up stations fine and in the canyons and country it's hard to get reception anyway. I tried the antenax hidden antena and think the J&M ouside works a little better.
I have the J&M shorty. I thought it was just as good as the stock one until I was sitting beside my bud one day in a parking lot. There was a song on the radio that my wife liked, so I turned my radio station to the same one he was listening to at the time. His station was coming in crystal clear and mine was not.
That was the same day we both hit the same deer. I took the ears from the deer that night for reminders of what happened. I mounted my deer ear on the top of my J&M shorty antenna. About two weeks later someone decided they needed that ear worse than me and cut my atennna off just below the ear. Now the reception really sucks with 2 or 3" missing off the shorty.
Am using the antennas off of an '09 Ultra on my '06 Ultra with no effect on range what so ever over the original stock antennas on both CB and FM/AM. Best part is now they don't get caught on the garage door.
Last edited by tbradley; Oct 16, 2008 at 02:05 PM.
7 Surprising Harley-Davidson Products that Are Not Motorcycles
Slideshow: The bar-and-shield logo shows up on far more than motorcycles, some of the company's most unexpected products have nothing to do with riding.
Slideshow: From the troubled AMF years to modern misfires, these bikes earned reputations for reliability issues, questionable engineering, or disappointing performance.
Crazy Bunderbike Build Looks Amazing, But Is It Impossible to Ride?
Slideshow: The Swiss custom shop has taken a Harley Softail and stretched it into something so long and low that it looks closer to a rolling sculpture than a conventional motorcycle.
Engraved Rebellion: Inside Bundnerbike's Glam Rock II
Slideshow: A standard cruiser becomes an intricate metal canvas in the hands of a Swiss custom house known for pushing Harley-Davidson platforms far beyond their factory brief.
Slideshow: Harley-Davidson's challenges aren't abstract; they show up in dropping shipments, shrinking dealer traffic, and strategic decisions that aren't yet translating into growth.