







📡 Elevate your signal game—stay connected, stay ahead.
The Tram 1477-B is a 43-inch tall, pre-tuned dual-band base antenna designed for amateur radio enthusiasts. It delivers high gain performance with 3.5 dBd on VHF and 6 dBd on UHF, featuring an advanced wave design for superior signal coverage. Its black fiberglass, single-section construction offers durability and a low-profile look, making it ideal for hassle-free installation and reliable long-range communication.




| ASIN | B07K8P836G |
| Best Sellers Rank | #357 in Radio Antennas |
| Color | Silver |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (313) |
| Date First Available | November 7, 2018 |
| Item Weight | 1.15 pounds |
| Item model number | 1477-B |
| Manufacturer | tram(r) |
| Other display features | Wireless |
| Product Dimensions | 44 x 3 x 2 inches |
| Whats in the box | product |
L**R
Recommended buy
Works great, I have it on a 25 Watt Vhf/Uhf radio and it has great range. Tested SWR is perfect on both bands.
J**K
Works great on GMRS 1.5 swr.
Excellent SWR on 2m and 440mhz also 1.5 SWR on GMRS 467.650mhz good build quality. Excellent transmission reports and receive, using a 25ft mast. Just dont over tighten U bowls as the metal is soft its the only part you might want to upgrade but not necessary. I love the black version as it's very difficult to spot for you HOA folks.
W**S
Good antenna - performs as promised
Excellent bandwidth. Good construction In black it 'blends in' to my environment
G**S
Good antenna, but there are some things of which to be aware...
Likes: --Construction is quite rugged. --Antenna performs well "overall". --Bandwidth nicely wide on 430/440 band. VSWR at resonance in this band was 1.04:1. --VSWR at resonance on 2m was 1.02:1 with narrower bandwidth. --Price is very good. --Amazon partner from whom it was purchased shipped immediately. I would buy from them again. Dislikes: --Resonant point on 430/440 was kind of low. Minimum VSWR occurred at 434MHz. Great if you're working satellites, but VSWR up near 448MHz was already above 2.5:1. 450MHz was above 3:1. This is getting a bit high in the FM/Repeaters section of the band that gets a lot of activity. It would have been much better to have had the resonant point for minimum VSWR right at 440MHz. Then the wide bandwidth would nicely cover the entire 430-450 range with VSWR's at the edges between 2:1 and 2.5:1, making the best use of "centering" the design. --Resonant point for the 2m band was too high up. Minimum VSWR was at 147.8MHz (less than 1.1:1). At 148MHz the VSWR was just under 1.4:1. Going in the other direction below resonance, the VSWR climbed rapidly with 145.6 being 2.5:1 and 144 at 3:1 or a little bit higher. Again, the tuning of the antenna could have been centered better, say for minimum VSWR at 147MHz or a little below that. 146.52, the national FM calling channel came in at 1.5:1 for the VSWR. This is acceptable, but there are repeaters below 146MHz. --BTW, all of my measurements were made with a NanoVNA-H4. The antenna is still quite useful even with the skewed resonance points so, I rate it a 4, as it is a vast performance improvement over home made J-Poles. --There are NO assembly instructions, nor even a single diagram of the built antenna or a photocopy of a parts list. I've been doing engineering as a career and have been a ham over 50 years so bags of parts didn't scare me off, but beginners would have problems and would likely get frustrated and give lower ratings. --SURPRISE...the hardware is all METRIC !!! What I thought was SAE 1/4-20 hardware was a bit smaller and finer pitched in thread size. Lose something and you're hosed without a trip to Ace Hardware or Home Depot !!! It would have been nice to have had a photocopy parts list pointing out this important fact !!! --Three small hex head bolts were included in the baggie of hardware. Only two such parts were needed with their split washers. One was used to push against the lower mounting tube the antenna and its radials on its base section telescope onto for mounting and weather protection. The other was supposed to go through the threaded upper mounting clamp (just like the lower one), but also pass through a hole in the mounting tube, and then catch some threads in the antenna base. This was to secure the base to the mounting tube and also keep the antenna's base from twisting. The supplied bolt was too short. It had about 3/8" of threads. It needed to have 1/2" to 5/8"'s of threads to do its intended job. So now I have two spare but short hex head M8 bolts, and one split washer left over. --This is how I discovered the hardware was Metric threaded: I had reached for a 1/4-20 SAE bolt from my stash for the upper mounting clamp and found it didn't thread. So I didn't force it. Instead I got a Phillips head M8 spare screw from some Metric hardware I bought at Ace Hardware when I was mounting a transceiver in my old 2007 Tacoma pickup onto the bulkhead behind the bench seat in this truck's standard (small) cab. It fit the threads perfectly, but I had to put several flat washers under the Phillips head along with the intended Metric split washer because this M8 screw had about 3/4" of threads on it. So, overall, it was about a 1/4" too long. But it fit the bill without having to scrounge a Stainless Steel M8 screw of the necessary length. So, my antenna is now fully installed with this minor mod. Bottom line: --Despite the noted shortcomings which I list as a warning to others. I feel the performance obtained and overall robustness of design (black fiberglass is both low profile, hard to see, and absolutely necessary in the strong UV of the Arizona sun of summer), make $59 for this antenna ($63 with tax) a very good value. Just be prepared to maybe make a trip to the hardware store to finish your own installation to your satisfaction. A good end result, but "caveat emptor".
T**S
great antenna
easy to put up I used an old flagpole for the mast and a patio table umbrella hole to suport it. It went through 85mPH WINDS I now have it mounted on the rough with a tripod I got off Amazon It easil reaches a repeater 40 miles away.
R**B
Low SWR, clean look.
I live in an HOA community so I needed something low profile but one that also did the job. Mounted on a 20 foot telescoping flag pole, I can hit several local repeaters on low power and a repeater 43 miles away (as the crow flies) on high power. When the flagpole is retracted, the entire assembly is less than 6’ tall. Besides 2m & 70cm, I can get about 6 GMRS frequencies under an SWR of 2. All things considered, this antenna meets all my needs with good performance and very reasonable price.
D**N
Was as Described
Great Performance for a budget friendly HAM operator & those just getting into the hobby.
W**M
Best Antenna Ever 😊
Works on gmrs uhf and vhf swr are at 1.25 to 1.48 swr using surecomm meter at 462 freq all the way to 467 freq and works well with simplex and repeater channels did not regret buying it instead of the more expensive alternatives….also vhf channels have good swr reading as well …using 50ft rg8x cable
R**D
find this is a great antenna on 2m or 70cm, have also it on GMRS with good results as well
A**R
SWR good on both UHF and VHF bands. Mine was under 1.7:1 on both amateur bands
S**T
This is my second Tram antenna for a base station I'm more than pleased with the build and assembly quality. I've yet to test SWR, but have used for great base antenna. My only complaint is they have shot up dramatically in price with inflation I've purchased this ones big brother for much less 2 years ago. Would still buy again vs the more renowned (and more expensive) brands such as Comet or Diamond.
T**Y
Works very well. Wide bandwidth, good construction and no ground required so it's good for apartment dwellers given its low profile.
M**S
Across vhf and uhf bands no adjustment was necessary. I would recommend this unit.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
5 days ago