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#1
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I have 220 MHz and 440 MHz antennas. They are mounted on the same
mast, the 440 ontop and about 3' under that is the 220. I would like to feed both antennas with one piece of coax. How can I do this? I'm not interested in SWR as they will not be used to transmit, only for receive. I want to do this with as little loss as possible as the stations I want to receive are located a long distance away. Bill |
#2
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Billy wrote:
I have 220 MHz and 440 MHz antennas. They are mounted on the same mast, the 440 ontop and about 3' under that is the 220. I would like to feed both antennas with one piece of coax. How can I do this? I'm not interested in SWR as they will not be used to transmit, only for receive. I want to do this with as little loss as possible as the stations I want to receive are located a long distance away. Just parallel them. The 440 should have a high impedance on 220 and the 200 should have a high impedance on 440. The frequencies that you have to worry about are the 3x frequencies, i.e. 148 x 3 = 444. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#3
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![]() "Billy" wrote in message om... I have 220 MHz and 440 MHz antennas. They are mounted on the same mast, the 440 ontop and about 3' under that is the 220. I would like to feed both antennas with one piece of coax. How can I do this? I'm not interested in SWR as they will not be used to transmit, only for receive. I want to do this with as little loss as possible as the stations I want to receive are located a long distance away. Bill the 'proper' way to do this is with duplexers. these are basically bandpass filters that only pass the frequency you want from each antenna onto the single coax and prevent interaction between the two antennas. the cheap way is to just connect the two of them with a T connector and hope for the best... the experimenters way is to cut the coax between the two antennas and the T connector to minimize interaction. for this i would start with 1/4 wave at 440mhz feeding the 220 antenna, and 1/4 wave at 220mhz feeding the 440 antenna.... listen to a source on 440 with just that antenna and connect the 220 antenna and see if the signal drops, if it does add another 1/4 wave at 440mhz to the 220 antenna feed and try again, if that doesn't fix it try removing 1/8 wave... then hook the 220 antenna to the receiver and listen to a signal on it, connect the 440 antenna and see if the signal drops too much, if it does add 1/4 wave on 220mhz to it's feed line and try again... etc, etc, etc... if you have access to a network analyzer you can save lots of time. make it fancier by adding stubs and you end up building a duplexer in coax. |
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