Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hey - Merry x-mass Rod...
from the cold in Naperville.... Wes "LRod" wrote in message ... On 2 Dec 2003 09:32:01 -0800, (KC2MAC) wrote: Radioman wrote in message ... Front end overload. It's like trying to see a candle next to a spotlight shining in your face. Even though they are different freqs? I'm transmitting on 146.400, but listening on 147.00 (-600k offset). You may think it's a lot, but 600 kHz to an FM radio can be quite close. Is there anything I could do to treat the symptom aside from keeping the antennas of the two units far apart from each other? See my other response regarding antenna polarization and duplexers. You could actually build a simple notch filter out of a piece of coax and a T fitting. It's not going to be very deep, and it will be wider (in terms of bandwidth) than a duplexer, but every dB helps in this case. I wish I had a spectrum analyzer. I'd love to see definitively what is happening to the spectrum when I transmit. Look at any transmitter product review in QST, especially HF gear. Basically what you will see is a very high spike at the transmit frequency, with progressively diminishing sidebands for several hundred Hz either side of the carrier frequency. There will also be some highly attenuated spikes at periodic intervals above and below the carrier frequency. Maybe there is a way I can turn my old oscilloscope into a spectrum analyzer. hmmmmmmm... Probably not. LRod Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999 http://www.woodbutcher.net |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
ZipperFish talk radio | Homebrew | |||
Any Good Or Useful For Listening Only ?: WiNRADiO WR-LWA-0130 Long Wire Antenna Adapter | Antenna | |||
Using repeaters linked to the internet | Equipment | |||
APRS Linked Repeaters | Digital | |||
Lets Talk Sedition | General |