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Old September 10th 04, 05:20 AM
Dale Parfitt
 
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"Richard Clark" wrote in message
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On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 03:50:44 GMT, "A-Tech"
wrote:

It seemed to me that a reasonable attempt would be to use a piece of

300ohm
flat-lead and short
it at an appropriate distance from the screw-terminals of the antenna.

None
of my attempts have
yielded any observable improvements. It may be that the filter must be
"deeper" (higher Q?) than
what my attempts provide.

Any ideas?


Hi Bryce,

Length can be very critical as you can imagine. Trying to find the
sweet spot, over and over, can become taxing if not simply fruitless
(undoubtedly your experience to this point).

A simple method is to connect the twin lead in the usual manner.
Measure out a little more than 1.5M to work with (this will be too
long, but it is better than being too short). Take a razor blade (old
style used for scraping paint) and working from the far end cut
through the insulation of both leads at once to short them out.
Repeat at 1/16" intervals (or 1mm intervals if we are sticking with
metric) and note results. You don't want to cut through completely,
just enough to nick the copper and make a good short with the blade.

Keep in mind that while you are handling the line doing this, you are
part of the tuned circuit (and possibly detuned circuit too). It will
give you a quick ball-park and reduce the cut-and-try.

73's
Richard Clark, KB7QHC


Unfortunately, you will find that the -3dB BW of a single stub is in the
neighborhood of 5% or 5MHz at your frequency of interest. The
discrimination between your desired and undsired channels will be
negligible.
We manufacture a line of small multiple cavity symmetrical and asymmetrical
notch filters- getting under 0.5% BW with small topology filters is nearly
impossible at VHF.

Dale W4OP