Thanks C. This is usually why I ask for recommendations of resources. I'm not an expert at anything myself but when I look for a text or other source material I try to find what's considered the best of the best. The instruction is usually more coherent and is, shall I put it kindly, on the other end of the spectrum from "I'm getting free energy by electrolysing water".
A couple of my favourite authors are Jim Williams and Douglas Self, but personalities are independent of truth in science, and any good reliable source is good. More often with ACM articles than IEEE (I'm a computer scientist by trade) I find hidden brilliance in random papers, sadly wishing these people knew how good they were.
Re antennas: what you've said I pretty much understand from basic principles and my experience with audio, computer simulations of the wave equation, and to a laser degree lasers, however, at ~= 100Mhz I'd have a resonator of 3 metres in length; hardly portable. I know that there are antennas that operate efficiently at fractions of a wavelength, I know there are antennas that are efficient over a broad band of wavelengths and I have a basic understanding of things like a parabolic reflector. I know there are "fractal" antennas.
I don't mind stuff that "seems" magical, but I like a good solid explanation of why the magic works (preferably with equations and their derivation). I don't mind stuff that works but isn't fully understood why it works, just so long as that's really the case and not just lack of knowledge.
When I build stuff, I like to be able to design the thing myself from the ground up, or at least *fully* understand an existing design, and that requires really knowing what's going on. I'm a bit of a goof and let my imagination run wild, put when it comes to a task, I'm pretty serious, even for fun projects.
Hopefully that gives you an idea of the kind of resource I'm looking for, and I will hunt around!
It's probably obvious my next thought was to buy one of those DVB-T TV dongles, turning much of the task into a software problem, leaving me with the task of building an antenna for it and maybe rig myself some kind of broadband direction finding tool, eventually making it portable (not tied to the PC or laptop)
I'm putting up new shelving in my lab right now, so I haven't gotten back to the noise hunt yet, but I am going to follow the common sense suggestions first. I am thinking to the future though for the next time I need to hunt for a noise source, it would be nice to have a quick and dirty tool to help me out :-)