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#21
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On 9/28/2011 10:46 AM, Jeffrey Angus wrote:
It comes with an adapter cable for Icom radios, but it's a 4-pin Molex connector and the manual doesn't show what the connections/signals are for the radio. Multiple Homer Simpson "Do-oh!" moments. LDG was kind enough to supply me with the application note for the interface cable. I have two Icom radios. An IC-761 with an internal tuner and an IC-726 designed to use with an external tuner. The IC-726 has the mating 4-pin Molex connector. The two signals are essentially a "request to tune" and an "tune complete". The IC-726 has a TUNE button on the front panel for telling the external tuner to do it's thing. (By the way, I do have the matching AT-150 auto-tuner for the IC-726.) All three of the tuners, the IC-761 internal, IC-726 external and LDG have an SO-239 connector for the output and would require an external balun to connect to an open wire balanced feed line. The reason I was using the MFJ Versa Tuner with the IC-761 was fairly simple. It has an internal 4:1 balun and connections for open wire balanced feed lines. Since I had to purchase a balun to use the LDG tuner I realized that "Oh, I can use the Icom tuners with the balun as well." That was my first "Do-oh!" moment. Subsequently on researching the interface signals to/from the LDG I realized that the IC-761 doesn't have a TUNE button or the signals externally because the tuner is already inside the radio. That was my second "Do-oh!" moment. Once the MFJ 4:1 current balun I ordered arrives, the only question that remains is whether or not the specified matching range of the Icom tuners is sufficient to deal with my antenna system. The Icom tuners are specified at 16.7 to 150 ohms. The LDG Z11 Pro II is specified as 2-1000 ohms. Oddly enough, the MFJ Versa Tuner has no specified range. Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi -- "Everything from Crackers to Coffins" |
#22
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Jeffrey Angus wrote in news:j64hp4$i7g$1@dont-
email.me: The two signals are essentially a "request to tune" and an "tune complete". That is not quite correct. Though the protocol is not published by Icom, and the implementation varies a little from radio to radio, the four wires are usually labelled and none are "tune complete". Owen |
#23
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Jeffrey Angus wrote in news:j64hp4$i7g$1@dont-
email.me: The Icom tuners are specified at 16.7 to 150 ohms. The LDG Z11 Pro II is specified as 2-1000 ohms. Oddly enough, the MFJ Versa Tuner has no specified range. Impedance is not a simple scalar quantity as expressed above. The 'specification' is incomplete, you would need to ask the sellers what they meant. If for example, they mean the R component only, do they imply that X must be zero, or that X can be any value? If they mean the magnitude, do they imply that any angle of impedance is acceptable? Also missing is any bounds on efficiency. I have heard from time to time on air, OMs boast that their tuner is so good, they have matched it up with no antenna plugged in. Obviously, efficiency is zero in that case. A tuner with lower internal losses might not achieve the same feat. Owen |
#24
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On 9/30/2011 2:04 PM, Owen Duffy wrote:
Jeffrey wrote in news:j64hp4$i7g$1@dont- email.me: The two signals are essentially a "request to tune" and an "tune complete". That is not quite correct. Did you miss the word essentially? Since it bothers you. From LDG "Start Line." Ground this from an external switch or open collector to initiate a tuning sequence by the external tuner. And "Key Line" This is similar to a PTT line to the transmitter, but in this case tells the transmitter (which is capable of doing it) to, regardless of mode, transmit a low lever CW carrier. When the key line changes state because of a request to tune, it turns on the transmitter. When tuning is complete, the key line toggles back to it's normal state. Though the protocol is not published by Icom, and the implementation varies a little from radio to radio, the four wires are usually labelled and none are "tune complete". If you put an indicator such as an LED on the key line watching it change state is a pretty good indication of "I'm tuning" and "Tune complete" regardless of what it's called. Jeff -- "Everything from Crackers to Coffins" |
#25
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On 9/30/2011 3:03 PM, Owen Duffy wrote:
Jeffrey wrote in news:j64hp4$i7g$1@dont- email.me: The Icom tuners are specified at 16.7 to 150 ohms. The LDG Z11 Pro II is specified as 2-1000 ohms. Oddly enough, the MFJ Versa Tuner has no specified range. Impedance is not a simple scalar quantity as expressed above. The 'specification' is incomplete, you would need to ask the sellers what they meant. If for example, they mean the R component only, do they imply that X must be zero, or that X can be any value? If they mean the magnitude, do they imply that any angle of impedance is acceptable? Do you just like to argue? These are published specifications from the manufacturer. If you have an issues with the validity of their claims, take it up with them. I suspect both Icom and LDG took the time to play with resistive loads to verify the tuning range. If that is the case, then yes, it's a simple scalar quantity. I doubt they took the time to fiddle around adding a reactive components to the test loads otherwise they would haved published a Smith Chart with a "We can match anything within these bounds" as the specification for tuning range. Also missing is any bounds on efficiency. I have heard from time to time on air, OMs boast that their tuner is so good, they have matched it up with no antenna plugged in. Obviously, efficiency is zero in that case. A tuner with lower internal losses might not achieve the same feat. I am aware that a frightening majority of licensed amateurs wouldn't be able to pour **** out of a boot with the instructions printed on the heel. Perhaps you're unaware tha I'm not one of them. Jeff-1.0 wa6fwi -- "Everything from Crackers to Coffins" |
#26
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Jeffrey Angus wrote in
: On 9/30/2011 2:04 PM, Owen Duffy wrote: Jeffrey wrote in news:j64hp4$i7g$1@dont- email.me: The two signals are essentially a "request to tune" and an "tune complete". That is not quite correct. Did you miss the word essentially? Since it bothers you. From LDG "Start Line." Ground this from an external switch or open collector to initiate a tuning sequence by the external tuner. And "Key Line" This is similar to a PTT line to the transmitter, but in this case tells the transmitter (which is capable of doing it) to, regardless of mode, transmit a low lever CW carrier. When the key line changes state because of a request to tune, it turns on the transmitter. When tuning is complete, the key line toggles back to it's normal state. Though the protocol is not published by Icom, and the implementation varies a little from radio to radio, the four wires are usually labelled and none are "tune complete". If you put an indicator such as an LED on the key line watching it change state is a pretty good indication of "I'm tuning" and "Tune complete" regardless of what it's called. The /KEY line can be used to initiate a tune carrier, it is used to sustain the tune carrier until the tx aborts or the tuner ends the process, and it is used by the tuner to signal whether the tune was or was not successful. Owen |
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