Hi ghondie
I’m new to this site (today), but I am a Radio Comms Engineer, so may be of some help.
Your install should be straightforward, simple things to remember are the basics which are as follows.
Wire your PMR Radio straight to the Battery rather than tapping into of the Cars Loom (decent cable and both Positive and Negative Fused near the battery). Keep the Coax Cable as short as possible and without any sharp bends or kinks (I personally wouldn’t wrap it around ferrite beads or coils), if your running Tx High Power i.e. more than 25 Watts, upgrade to Double Screen Coax (make sure its 50 Ohms though).
The most important things are Connecters and using the correct Aerial, connecters should be made as per the instructions insuring both the inner and outer coax is connected properly (you should be able to give them a good tug without them falling apart). Try a run the coax cable above the roof lining rather than down a sill.
The Aerial needs to be matched to the frequencies your using, a good PMR Installer would be able to do this using a Forward / Reverse Power Meter (or worse case a VSWR meter) and then adjust the Aerial Whip to its correct length. As you’re using the Amateur frequencies, these are quite narrow band compared to the PMR bands, so as long as you get a decent Amateur Aerial for the correct bands then you should be OK.
Ideally the aerials should be body mounted (i.e. the coax earth at the aerial base is connected to the body work). If your using ¼ Wave Aerials (simple whip type without coils or matching boxes) then these need to have, what’s called a ground plain, which would be an area of the Cars body work around the base of the aerial with a radius approximately equal to or more than the length of the aerial whip, (i.e. aerial is fitted in the middle of the roof or near middle front or back of the roof and not fitted to the edge of the roof or Cars wing.
If your fitting what I would call an High Gain Antenna (sometimes known as Ground Plain Independent Antenna) which will have a Coil at its base or in the middle (or both) of the whip, then these can be fitted without the required Roof area, i.e., wing, rear door, roof rack etc..
Finally if you’re fitting 2 or more aerials together on the same car try and keep them away from each other.
If you follow the above basic rules you won’t go far wrong and it should give you the best radio performance.
Thanks Chris.