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![]() "Dave Platt" wrote in message ... snip I don't think there's any problem with using these sorts of cables in commercial or amateur service in *simplex* applications... they can handle transmitting, or receiving, just fine. It's only when you try to do both, simultaneously, through the same cable. that the noise generation can become a problem. The same can be true of some classes of antenna problems. The repeater system I help maintain developed a serious desensitization problem, due to internal corrosion/oxidation which occurred in the antenna after several years up in the weather. I doubt that the corrosion/oxidation effect would ever have been noticed if the antenna were in service as a normal (simplex) base antenna - it didn't affect the transmit SWR or the receive sensitivity at all, All metallic contacts are potential problems. For years I did Navy electronics, including a couple hundred EMI inspections. Where "topside housekeeping" was neglected, broadband noise (BBN) was sure to be a problem. (All topside metallic objects need to be either insulated or firmly connected -- no incidental contact.) As little as a hundred watts would excite some junctions to generate BBN that could be detected throughout the HF band on other antennas. More power would generate BBN up to several hundred MHz. Been there. |
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