Thanks very much for the information. I thought the antenna might be shared by means of the audio panel switching the antenna from one radio to the other, but I understand that even by it's name the audio panel probably only deals with the audio signal from the radio and possibly the headset input to the radio.
If the problem does not follow the radio, I will try to trace to see which antenna is involved with the bad position. In my experience static is usually due to a flaky connection somewhere, so I'll be trying to clean and tighten all the connections that are accessible.
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Switching the antenna is typically never done on transmitters because you could transmit into an "open" and damage the RF power transistor during the switch. Plus, you still want to receive on the other comm and they're the same antenna.
Continuous static can also be a sign that one receiver simply can't "hear" as well as the other. That'd be in the "problem follows the radio" column in your analysis.
Likely culprits:
- crusted up tray connectors
- loose fit in the tray
- bent/loose connectors
- improperly installed BNC or other RF connectors that have an intermittent open in the center conductor
- same thing, but vibration-induced inside a cable that's not properly tied down
- corrosion around antenna base keeping the antenna from grounding to the aircraft frame properly.
- failed stage in the radio in the receiver RF pre-amplifier
You're headed the right direction. Swapping identical radios between trays helps figure out which system has the problem.
It's also a good time to look at all the contacts and they'll get a little "wiping action" moving from one tray to another.
And it's legal for the owner to do.
Keep in mind that there's test gear available for both the receiver sensitivity and the antenna at your local avionics shop. Even bad cables can be swept to see their loss and know for sure. They can nail it down to a component easily.
I, of course, would never tell you to do something a properly licensed Avionics tech should rightly do... But...
If you can find an RF guy who has a "radio service monitor" who knows how to use it (!) along with an iso-T and other various tools, the tests are pretty simple to do.
Checking the antennas with an MFJ is even easier.
But I wouldn't know anything about it. The FAA says so. My IFR 1500 has never been in AM mode, and I've only ever used the MFJ on my Amateur gear.