"T.C. Mann" wrote in message
om...
This question may be slightly offtopic but I figured I would post to
the group that knows antennas best. I have 2 TV antennas, one VHF and
one UHF, that I would like to combine to use a single coax feed. The
specs on a suitable joiner state it has .5dB insertion loss with 30dB
rejection between ports. The specs on a typical splitter are 3.5dB
loss and only 20dB between ports. The question I have is why would
anyone ever use a splitter instead of a joiner? Are there any
applications where you couldn't use a joiner instead of a splitter?
Thank you.
They are different things. A joiner separates (or combines) the UHF from the
VHF with filters. That is why there is so little loss. If you used one to
feed two TVs, one of the TVs would get the UHF, the other the VHF. The
splitter is more or less frequency independent, and feeds half the power to
each output.
Tam/WB2TT
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