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On Sat, 26 May 2007 18:45:36 -0400, "Robert11"
wrote: Hi, I have two scanners, which I would like them to share a single (Scantenna) antenna in my attic. Only one scanner will ever be on at any time. But, I would like to "permanently" have both scanners attached to the single antenna. What would you recommend as a reasonably low cost splitter for this ? (is Splitter the right term ?) Hi Bob, A coax T connector comes to mind. What type of losses would I expect ? 3dB Just out of curiosity, would the losses be the same if I was actually to use both scanners at the same time compared to just one of them ? Through considerable effort you could recover that 3 dB, but I presume your scanners will operate over a considerable expanse of spectrum. This diminishes that effort. Now, if your scanners operate: one is high bands, the other low bands; then you can get more ingenious by building two filters. One would be high pass, and the other low pass, both with roll-offs at the frequency that separates high from low. The antenna feeds them both, and each feeds the appropriate scanner. In essence, this is your splitter (or you can buy one for $50). This would also bring back the 3dB otherwise lost. The T connector could cause one scanner to inject noise into the other one. There is very little isolation of the Local Oscillator from the front end, and you could hear one cycling through the bands on the other scanner (and, of course, vice-versa). Turn one off and that goes away. It's cheap enough to test first before going further. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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