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On Fri, 24 Oct 2008 02:14:24 -0700 (PDT), dgleeson422111
wrote: What we have repetadly found is that the radio in the office can receive long after the radio in the street has stopped receiving. (The person with the radio in the street is moving away from the office.) Is the moving station manually portable or is it mounted on a vehicle? If the moving operator is bored and continuously talks on a GSM phone or if the (vehicle) generates some other kind of interference, this would reduce the SNR at the moving station. The radios are the same and the power supplies to the radios are the same. Indeed switching the radios gives the same effect. The propagation paths between the two radios are the same in terms of distance. However the radio signal transmitted from the office travels through walls first before then traveling through open space. Its the opposite for the radio in the street, firstly traveling through space and then through the walls in the office. Does the transmitter have some kind of SWR protection ? If the Tx antenna is close to the wall, it might detune the antenna, increasing the SWR and the SWR protection drops the transmitter power. Paul OH3LWR |
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