[aprssig] Re: Duplexer or Diplexer
Stephen H. Smith
wa8lmf2 at aol.com
Tue Sep 6 00:33:35 EDT 2005
tvsjr at sprynet.com wrote:
>>You won't "fry them". You will only overload and temporarily block the
>>receiver of one radio while the other one is transmitting. In the case
>>of the APRS radio transmitting, that means you will get a one second or
>>so hole punched in your 2M voice RX whenever the APRS radio beacons.
>>[ I have THREE antennas attached to radios capable of transmitting on 2M
>>and 450 (Kenwood TM-742, TM-D700 and Yaesu FT-100) within 3 feet of each
>>other on the roof of a Passat wagon with no problems other than receiver
>>blocking. ]
>>
>>
>
>Don't be so sure. I think I'm OK to comment here... I've got 15 mounts on
>the roof of my Expedition, and just installed 20 today on the roof of my new
>truck (actually, in the topper). I have fried an amateur radio (D700) and
>the preamp in an Optoelectronics Scout connected to an external antenna with
>a high-power (110-watt) Motorola VHF Astro Spectra.
>
>
>
20 antennas on one vehicle roof? How close together were they? Just
inches? You might as well as had the radio transmission lines connected
together with coax T connectors for all the isolation you had!
With minimum separation of a couple of feet or more, I've never had
any problems.
>No reason to spend thousands and thousands of dollars. Since the analog
>Spectra has been EOLed, you can pick them up sub-$200 (Astro P25 radios are
>quite a bit higher, but that's another story.) The Spectra is arguably the
>best commercial radio ever made.
>
>
I would agree. I've used Spectras as a front-end for my radio coverage
mapping system for years. I tap out the 109 Mhz first IF and feed them
into my IFR-1500 service monitor. The Specta working as a preselector
and pre-amp allows the IFR analyzer to see down to -120 dBm or so while
not getting overloaded by out-of-band RF. (Like most service monitors,
the IFR receiver front end consists of a double-balanced mixer with no
selectivity in front of it. For listening to a radio's TX hardwired
into it via coax, it's no problem. Off-air monitoring with an external
antenna causes the IFR RX to overload on mixes of everything from "DC
to light")
For passive selectivity, I have a bunch of single cavities for
various bands (VHF, UHF, 800/900) that I peak up on the test freq with
the IFR's tracking generator; then use as preselectors for the RX. When
I need serious sensitivity as well, I break out the Spectras.
>>o The only TOTAL solution is to conduct voice operations on another
>>band.
>>High-power commercial radios will often block hammy rigs across multiple
>>bands.
>>
>>
>>
Here I meant using alternate bands on the same dual band ham transceiver
(i.e. UHF) so that the usual simple hipass/lopass diplexer could provide
the isolation.
Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
EchoLink Node: 14400 [Think bottom of the 2M band]
Home Page: http://wa8lmf.com
"APRS 101" Explanation of APRS Path Selection & Digipeating
http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/DigiPaths
Updated APRS Symbol Chart
http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/miscinfo/APRS_Symbol_Chart.pdf
New/Updated "Rev G" APRS http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/aprs
Symbols Set for UI-View,
UIpoint and APRSplus:
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.tapr.org/pipermail/aprssig_lists.tapr.org/attachments/20050905/18102443/attachment.html>
More information about the aprssig
mailing list