I bought one from PriusChat shop, it is made by Visual Garage. Install went fine, I followed the instructions exactly. Turned on the radio... I now get just 2 stations. The reception is absolutely horrible. Has anybody here ever used a hidden antenna that works well? Im thinking that this stupid fin antenna isn't worth hassling with (it looks good) so if I just keep it on the car and then add a hidden antenna under the dash, Ill have the shark fin just for looks and a hidden antenna under the dash for functionality. By the way, the only reason I got this shark fin antenna was because the stock antenna base started leaking into the car, and this seemed like the best way to solve it without having to undo the headliner etc. So, the shark fin is now just an expensive, good looking leak stopper.
Pretty sure that the shark fin or other stick antenna in that location is ONLY for SiriusXM and the AM/FM antenna is in the rear glass.
Say wha? Really? I see wires in the glass but I always thought that was just the rear defrost. To add to the confusion... this is my girlfriends car, and I never really listened to the radio in it before. But, she says her am/fm reception was definitely better before the shark fin, but... I guess my bottom line is: Is there some sort of hidden antenna or antenna boost that can be done under / behind the dash?
more info... this is a 2013 Prius C. I looked in the manual, there is no mention of satellite radio or Sirius XM or any of that. The only info about the antenna, which was in the audio section, is to not put a car cover over it or let it hit the ceiling of a garage. So, it sounds like the roof antenna is indeed for am/fm on this car.
Have a good look at those "wires". On my C, some of them are located near the edge of the glass where defrosting would NOT be needed.
I've had the same Visual Garage shark fim antenna on my Prius v since 2012. Reception has been good and about the same as on the OEM "rubber duckie."
I do believe that the AM/FM "antenna" is on the rear window. The reception of certain stations change depending on if I back into a spot or pulling nose first.
As far as I know the sharkfin already contains a broadband RF preamplifier. Maybe verify that it is receiving power and functioning? Better to say includes an amp- not sure if it is packaged in the sharkfin assembly or located along the cable path going up to the head unit. I have seen preamps used like this in a number of Asian-built cars in recent decades- the amp is usually near the antenna connection or built into the mount.
There is no amplifier inside any shark fin antenna. The amplifier is under the roof and inside the car. It is installed by the manufacturer. The "rubber duckie" has a 27.5 inch wire spiral wound around an insulator core. The shark fin has a 27.5 inch total length zig-zag trace on a printed circuit board. They are both 1/4 wave omni directional ground plane antennas. The ground plane is the car's roof. Ideally a 27.5 inch vertical element mounted 90 degrees from the ground plane makes the best omni directional antenna for the FM band.
There was definitely no amp inside the shark fin, just an eye bolt to screw onto the base where the whip was, and that eye bolt is attached to a wire that goes to the side of the fin where there is a gold zig zag wire. We are in a rural area... from more reviews Ive read in the last few hours, it seems like everybody who has one of these shark fins and they are happy with the reception live in more urban areas... anybody in a more rural area says the performance isnt nearly as good as the stock antenna was. Of course, I can't tell if thats a hard rule or not but it does seem like a pattern Ive seen. Anyhoo, Im still wondering if I can just add some sort of under-dash antenna and disconnect the shark fin antenna lead and call it a day. Like I said, the shark fin looks good anyway
Time to answer that part of your question: NO. You can't put an antenna inside the car, especially under the dash, and expect it to work at all. The metal body of the car will screen out all of the radio signals. Unless maybe you are right next to a transmitter. It sounds to me like it is time to put the original antenna back on just to test if it still works better.
If you want really good reception for nearly all 360 degrees, you can get a 27.5 inch straight antenna whip with a M5 thread that screws into the recess after unscrewing the "rubber duckie."
haha, yes, I should have said... no outcome yet. She doesnt use the radio that much anyway, so we'll just live with it for now. You answered my question about a hidden antenna, and since that's not going to be an option, we'll just see if the lack of radio becomes an issue or not.
There is an amplifier in the standard Prius gen3 antenna base. It receives power from the head unit and comes in three versions, one for amfm only, another for am/fm and xm, and a third for am/fm xxm and safety connect. All are called antenna amps, some have as many as four mini coaxes to the head unit. Some preamps fail and degrade the reception. My gen3 unit failed and had to be replaced. I did retrofit a sharkfin on my older gen2 Prius but reception was bad. I removed it on the gen2 and reinstalled the standard antenna. I do not think the gen2 had a preamp. The gen2 xm had a dash mounted antenna. This is a pdf I put together to install the antenna amp on my 2012 v. I did not remove the headliner per Toyota's instructions; instead I pulled the back down to access the mounting bolt.