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What happens if you pipe the output of one radio in to 2 amps?
Richard Harrison wrote:
Yuri, K3BU wrote: "Learned it to be a no-no trying to feed phased arrays with individual amplifiers, at the same frequency." I`m not sure separate amplifiers have anything to do with distortion because I`ve seen distortion at certain azimuths from arrays driven by a single amplifier. Drive around a broadcast array with sharp nulls while listening. You will notice severe distortion at the edges of sharp nulls. I always attributed this to phase out of the carrier frequency at an azumuth where the sidebands aren`t completely nulled out, and this produces the overmodulation and distortion. It`s only a speculation to explain the cause of an observed effect. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI I wonder if we can really define that as distortion. It's distortion to you at the time perhaps, since the whole signal as you'd like it to be delivered is not there while you drive through the null. However, the antenna system is just doing its job, and doing it well in the directions it was intended. The nulls are by nature not supposed to contain signals with smooth frequency response, since they aren't supposed to contain any signal at all if perfect, correct? tom K0TAR |
What happens if you pipe the output of one radio in to 2 amps?
"Richard Harrison" wrote in message ... Yuri, K3BU wrote: "Learned it to be a no-no trying to feed phased arrays with individual amplifiers, at the same frequency." I`m not sure separate amplifiers have anything to do with distortion because I`ve seen distortion at certain azimuths from arrays driven by a single amplifier. Drive around a broadcast array with sharp nulls while listening. You will notice severe distortion at the edges of sharp nulls. I always attributed this to phase out of the carrier frequency at an azumuth where the sidebands aren`t completely nulled out, and this produces the overmodulation and distortion. It`s only a speculation to explain the cause of an observed effect. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI The effect, distortion, seemed to be noticeable in any or all directions and over DX path. The only thing we could figure out, was that it had to do with separate amps feeding separate ants. Switching to either one, signals were clean. Feeding two antennas from one exciter through hybrid was no problem. In my case it was 4 square and Inv Vee about 3/8 wave away. I have heard the same effect on one YU station, and he was getting reports of raspy signal and when I told him to turn the other amp off, he was clean. The distortion was quite significant, it produced complaints from about one in five stations worked. Closest thing to describe it, would like signals distorted by Aurora. 73 Yuri, K3BU |
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