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Ralph , Tnx vy much for your prompt response.
The said Yaesu FTV901R transverter has a slot for a 6m module. From the manual ,it works with a 22 MHz crystal for the 50 - 52 MHz portion of the band. The manual states that the transverter includes a 'selective passband filter which effectively eliminates spurious signals', probably including the 2nd harmonics of 10 m you referred to. I found another 28 to 50 MHz transverter design in a rather authoritative book : 'The VHF/UHF DX Book' edited by Ian White ,G3SEK What I would prefer doing is to build a 50 MHz transverter to work with the FTV901R ,making it a neat 3 band package. Another advantage is that the matching HF transceiver has a separate low power output to suit the transverter with the one I have already having the 144 -146 and 430 - 440 MHz band modules,which are the bands allocated to amateur radio in ITU Zone 1 ,which includes Europe. Again , tnx for your response . As always I find the amateur radio homebrew NG a stimulating forum for enthousiasts. Frank GM0CSZ / KN6WH based in Scotland UK Question : Is the Ten-Tec 6m transverter also available for 28 MHz e.g. RX : 50 -- 28 MHz ; TX : 28 --- 50 MHz or can the 14 to 50 MHz transverter be readily modified for operation from a 28 MHz base unit ? Reason for the above question : I have an old (but almost unused) Yaesu FT901DM HF transceiver with a FTV901R transverter with 2m and 70cms modules but without a 6 m module. The system works through the HF transceiver's 28 - 30 MHz band . In Europe the 6m band is from 50 - 52 MHz. The 20 to 6 meter converter is made to operate in the low end of 6 meters. The US band is 50 to 54 mhz but TT does not recommend operating much above 52 mhz with their transverter. They do make a 2 meter to 6 meter transverter so you could run you equipment and feed it to the trtansverter to get on 6 that way. Converting from 10 meters to 6 meters is not done very often as it is difficult to keep the 2nd harmonic of 10 meters out of the 6 meter output. By changing crystals and a few tuned circuits I don;t see why you could not make the converter work with a 10 meter rig. It might be difficult to filter out the 10 meter signal. Go here and look at their products. http://www.tentec.com/ I was having trouble reducing the lowband rig output to 5 to 10 watts needed by the transverter. I finally designed a hard keying circuit and also bypassed part of the transverter padding and fed the low level (milliwat) signal into the transverter. It worked fine by doing that and no worries about blowing out the backend of the transverter. 73 de ku4pt |
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