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๐ป Elevate your SDR gameโnever miss a signal again!
The K-180WLA Active Loop Broadband Receiving Antenna is a high-performance, compact antenna designed for SDR radios, covering 100kHz to 180MHz with a peak gain of 20dBi. Featuring a built-in rechargeable battery, waterproof construction, and advanced protection circuits, it excels in noisy urban environments and limited spaces, making it the go-to choice for professional shortwave and VHF listeners.









| ASIN | B092VYVQMY |
| Antenna | Radio |
| AntennaDescription | Radio |
| Best Sellers Rank | #218 in Radio Antennas |
| Brand | DmgicPro |
| Color | K-180WLA |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 89 Reviews |
| Impedance | 50 Ohms |
| Manufacturer | DmgicPro |
| Maximum Range | 55 Centimeters |
| Mfr Part Number | K-180WLA |
| Model Number | K-180WLA |
| Number of Channels | 1 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1 YEAR |
M**E
Performs beyond expectations!
I've been using this for several days and it is exceeding expectations. I am using it indoors. I live in a very high noise, city environment. This is now allowing me to receive stations I could not hear before. It has brought back joy to shortwave and mediumwave listening for me. I cannot recommend this antenna enough, especially for extremely noisy environments.
M**A
Chinese to English Instructions Need Some Help
The Chinese to English manual definitely needs some love and is the only thing I find fault with. I am really enjoying the antenna and have it hooked up to a RWL-SDR dongle. Works very well. It did take a couple of days to figure it all out, so I thought my lessons learned tips might help fill in the gap with the supplied manual. There's no need for glue, just put the pvc pipes together and friction should hold it all together since the antenna doesn't weigh much. I did add a layer of tape on the top pipe to ensure the cap fits tighter to prevent it from coming apart if I hung it up by a string. If you don't glue it then you can take the whole thing apart in 30 sec. Pretty obvious how it goes together, just make sure the loop is a round circle and not an oval and at least 22 inches top to bottom. The antenna receives RF directionally, not omni. The antenna is a donut; turn the hole of the donut to face where you want to receive VHF/UHF signals or turn the edge of the donut towards where you want HF signals. Try turning the antenna a bit to tune in a weaker signal that might not be perfectly aligned. The antenna and yellow preamp box are weatherproof. Make sure to put some sag or a loop in the cable so that water drips off the cable and doesn't travel into the house. There's a yellow preamp box where the metal loop is attached that contains a selectable switch. If you primarily want to search and receive long distance FM stations then don't touch it. If you're close to powerful FM radio stations and getting overpowered or want to search and receive clearer 80m/40m/20m/etc HF signals then you'll need to open the preamp and move the switch from FMDX to HF. If you don't need FM radio stations there's a $16 Broadcast FM Block Filter (88-108 MHz Block) that you can purchase to shut out FM radio signals. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01LE9LRPM/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Mount or hang the antenna 3ft from any walls and windows before you power it up. Put it where the kiddies/pets can't touch it while it's in use. You'll have to mount it outside if you want decent reception. There is a SDR# software setting to turn on the reception of AM and HF signals below 28MHz. Here's how: In SDR# stop the program. Then select "Sampling Mode" > "Direct sampling (Q branch)". Now hit play. If the "Sampling Mode" is greyed out it means you didn't stop the program. To resume going back to listening to VHF/UHF then hit stop again, select "Sampling Mode" > Quadrature sampling". Hooking up the SMA cables to the blue cable box (not waterproof) is fairly obvious. Long antenna cable goes to the ANT connector. Short SDR dongle cable goes to the RADIO connector. Don't power on the antenna unless everything is connected first. On the blue antenna cable box there is a power switch to turn on the antenna. What's not clear is the LED lights. Here's my findings: 1) Far right LED shows red while you're charging the lithium battery. **NOTE do not charge the battery while the antenna is powered on. Supposedly the battery lasts around 40 hours between charging so it's not something that needs to be done all the time. 2) Middle LED shows green when the lithium battery is fully charged. Make sure to pull out the USB charging cable before powering on the antenna. 3) Far left LED light shows red when you have the antenna powered on and active. A quick test to see if the antenna is working below 28MHz is to power it up and tune to the AM stations (540 - 1600 kHz). Make sure you first select "Sampling Mode" > "Direct sampling (Q branch)". Got AM, then everything is probably working fine. See if you can find the Ft Collins, CO UTC Signal at 10Mhz. You'll hear seconds ding off then a distinct signal at the minute mark. It'll also announce the UTC time in English. Pretty cool. Good luck!
B**D
Pleasantly Surprised
We had low expectations but were pleasantly surprised. Our primary interest for the antenna is 100 kHz to 1700 kHz. We have physically larger antennas for comparison but this was our first use of a small loop antenna like this one. We needed something with a lower noise floor and this antenna provided it. Signals below 2 MHz were at least the same, and typically better, than our larger antennas and an AM band vehicle radio. We set the loop up outside in a temporary installation at about 7 feet above ground. The diameter of the support the mast is about about 1/16" (0.045") smaller in diameter than a 1/2" PVC pipe. We'd give it 5 stars but don't know about longevity of the product after a just a few days of use. Glad the battery was included, the ones shipping from overseas for a few dollars less don't. We've attached the manual we received. Thanks to the previous reviewers on their input which helped with our decision to try this product. We are definitely not disappointed with the performance under 2 MHz.
H**S
Great first SDR wideband antenna
Best overall antenna for SDR 300 khz - 165 MHz in terms of cost vs. performance. Mounts easily on mic/light stand or other stable vertical support.
T**R
Pick one up, you'd be surprised what this thing can pick up
Simple and easy to put together. Instillation is also easy. Tunes in channels very well, and helps with blocking electrical noises by simply turning it away from the noise. work well with AM, FM, SW, WX.
B**.
Works as advertised
Works as advertised, though make sure you're far enough away from stuff like buildings and that kind of thing because if you're not, all you're going to hear is interference.
A**R
Do Not Buy!
Missing loop. Even if there was a loop theres no pvc to mount it to like it shows in the picture. No hardware to mount it as well. No instructions or diagram at all. Worthless. Do not buy!!!!!
N**E
Not the greatest
Doesn't work very well. All I can pick up are the local FM broadcast stations.
E**O
Great product
Quick delivery. Great product for the price.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 months ago