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I would like to build a Yagi antenna for my Baofeng UV-5R, but I'm a total newbie when it comes to amateur radios. The antenna will be for UHF and shouldn't be too long (like 1.5 meters max).

So my questions are: how many elements should I use? I'm little bit worried about Baofeng getting overloaded, I don't want to build an antenna that won't be usable with the Baofeng.

How exactly do you connect it to the Baofeng?

Mike Waters
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petrv7
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    the larger elements of your yagi will be roughly half a wavelength – at UHF, that'll be in the order of half a meter. You'd connect that antenna with a coax cable to the antenna port of your radio. – Marcus Müller Sep 29 '19 at 11:11
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    There's **a lot** of yagi online calculators ([example](https://www.changpuak.ch/electronics/yagi_uda_antenna_DL6WU.php)), and your dimensional requirements indicate you'd have at most 5 element yagi at 145 MHz. – Marcus Müller Sep 29 '19 at 11:18
  • [Related question and answers here](https://ham.stackexchange.com/questions/1469/what-antenna-on-a-baofeng-uv-5r-pro-will-give-me-better-reception). – Mike Waters Oct 04 '19 at 01:38
  • I slightly edited the title of your question. If what I did is not acceptable to you, feel free to change it. – Mike Waters Oct 04 '19 at 01:45

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From personal experience UV-5R doesn't work well with external antennas. I'm not sure what is the reason, but from what I know it has something to do with the fact that most of RF part of this radio is implemented in one chip.

I have an experience of using a 3 element yagi with another 5W radio, Kenwood TH-D72A. 3 elements for 2m band and 5 elements for 70cm band is enough for making SAT QSOs. Kenwood TH-D72A is a little difficult to find these days, also this is not the cheapest radio. Something like Yaesu FT-60R or Yaesu FT-65R should work well with a yagi antenna, are not too expensive an are easy to find.

  • This sounds like the outer shell of the antenna connector is not grounded. If so, then hand capacitance must be the "ground". Rats, I was looking forward to using an external antenna myself. – Mike Waters Oct 04 '19 at 01:25
  • The output of a friend's UV-5R into a 50$\Omega$ dummy load met specifications. Why would a 50$\Omega$ antenna not behave the same? – Brian K1LI Oct 22 '19 at 16:16
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The yagi will not hurt your radio if it is made for the right frequency. I would recommend making a small 3 element yagi that you hold in your hand.

You remove the antenna that comes with the radio and then plug a cable in. The other end of the cable goes to the Yagi.

  • This is likely a good answer, *provided* that [Aleksander](https://ham.stackexchange.com/a/15411/8717) is mistaken. Unless someone else comes along with a different personal experience, I tend to believe that he is right. – Mike Waters Oct 04 '19 at 01:32
  • Some baofengs have been reported to have poor front end filters. Those radios might be helped by a narrow band antenna, but will be hurt by a wideband antenna with high gain. So it could go either way, depending on how you build the antenna. Rumor is that their filters are getting better. – user10489 Oct 04 '19 at 04:15
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The antenna on this page seems doable and does not appear to require soldering.

BM2NHC
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