Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Bret Ludwig wrote: .. Don't you have a generator? Yes, but I hadn't expected to run into power levels high enough to cause this in the "real world". One word: attenuators. Yep, got to love them. The only thing was I didn't realize what was happening. I had used variations of the http://www.members.aol.com/WA1ION/nrants.pdf for several years with no problems. It was only after making substantial improvements to my ground system that the RF levels got high enough to be an issue. In the R2000 the attenuator is after the input matching transformer. I have a nice selection of attenuators, but I didn't see the need. I had three sources of IMD. The MC 9:1 at the antenna coax interface. The MC power divider. The input transformer on the R2000. Attenuators after the MC 9:1 would have only dealt with 2 sources. Keep in mind the signals where pegging the R2000 S-meter. Pegged the R8B and 7030+, drove the PCR1000 completly nuts wioth a 40Db PAD, but I didn't think to check them before making serious changes to the antenna system. I broke the leads on one of the small MC 9:1 so I cracked it open to see how large the ferrite core was. Tiny, very tiny. ~1/16 of an inch. Unless space is so tight that you simply can't afford the slight size increase home wound cores present, I can't see any reason to use the micro sized MC devices. For 99.99% they are fine. But for those who live too close to a couple of MW stations, they can produce odd results. The IP2 was not killer, but it was enough, S2, to cover any signal on 770+1240=2010 and 1240-770=470. I never noticed any IM on any HF frequencies, but then I wasn't really looking. And I suspect that any one source of IMD might be minor enough to not be an issue. I just lucked out, the perfect storm effect. My post was meant to be a cautionary tale about what to be aware of. I really think that had I not added an additional ~50' to make up for the ~3dB loss the MC power divider produced, I wouldn't have ever noticed anything. IMD prodcucts that are buired in the noise aren't much of an issue. Since signal and noise increases with antenna length, it stands to reason that at some point the noise will become an issue. And off frequency signals became noise for me. There were 2 simple solutions, either use a home made 9:1 and power divider, or to use 2 seperate HF wire antennas. I use one R2000 as a time source, I keep it tuned to WWV and record it in the left channel, with the target HF signal in the right. In an attempt to keep our home from looking like an NSA montoring post, and to avoid (false) TVI complaints I try to leep my antennas in a very low profile. While I am a ham, extra class, and have a nice transceiver, It sits on the shelf and I would have to errect an antenna to use that rig. But I had some TVI complaints that were only resovled when the complainer moved away. He saw my antennas and knew I was the source. Low profile means low conflict. My car used to look like a FCC monitoring vehcial. One night while comming back from eastern Kentucky a car pulled up close behind us. I was mildly freaked when I heard a cop on the scanner run my plates with the comment "he has too many antennas to not be up to something." Nothing came of it, but it did encourage me to adopt a much lower profile. Terry |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Initial Observations on the Eton S350DL and the Kaito WRX911 | Shortwave | |||
Observations and predictions on the NPRM | Policy | |||
NON-copyright material | Antenna | |||
How would you improve your CB? | CB |