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#1
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I have two small 433MHz transmitter kits that I use for some remote
switching. Only one is on at a time. I want to run a coax from them to a roof mounted aerial but don't want two coaxes and two aerials so what is the simplest method of joining the two aerial outputs together? I am assuming that they won't like just being directly connected together. |
#2
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Hi Peter
Use a 1/4 wavelength 75ohm coax from each TX joined at a T then 50 ohms to the antenna. The same idea is used to join two power amps in parallel. This assume the back end of the TX can handle some signal from the other TX. Wont be all that much there though. Work it out. Note this assumes 50 ohm output Z on the TX's I have two small 433MHz transmitter kits that I use for some remote switching. Only one is on at a time. I want to run a coax from them to a roof mounted aerial but don't want two coaxes and two aerials so what is the simplest method of joining the two aerial outputs together? I am assuming that they won't like just being directly connected together. |
#3
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![]() "Peter" wrote in message m... I have two small 433MHz transmitter kits that I use for some remote switching. Only one is on at a time. I want to run a coax from them to a roof mounted aerial but don't want two coaxes and two aerials so what is the simplest method of joining the two aerial outputs together? I am assuming that they won't like just being directly connected together. Sure fire way is to use a Daiwa, MFJ, etc coax switch. Tam/WB2TT |
#4
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![]() "Tarmo Tammaru" wrote in message ... "Peter" wrote in message m... I have two small 433MHz transmitter kits that I use for some remote switching. Only one is on at a time. I want to run a coax from them to a roof mounted aerial but don't want two coaxes and two aerials so what is the simplest method of joining the two aerial outputs together? I am assuming that they won't like just being directly connected together. at these low power levels, a wilkinson combiner will work. you'll loose 3db i think. basically, it's the same thing as a catv splitter. |
#5
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Peter wrote:
"---but don`t want two coaxes and antennas, so what is the simplest method of joining the two aerial outputs together? I am assuming they won`t like just being joined together." Good assumption. Tom Bruhns and others have excellent answers. An r-f switch is simple and effective. Switch the antenna and its cable between transmitters. There are duplexers which allow combining the outputs of multiple transmitters to one antenna . They replace an antenna switch or relay when multiple transmitters must have access to an antenna suimultaneously as is the usual case of the usual audio and video transmitters used in TV broadcasting. But, why bother with a duplexer requiring tuned cavities, circuits, and, or, multiple lines if simultaneous operation of the transmitters is not required? In the case of multiple transmitters to be operated simultaneously, they can get much isolation by end to end antenna stacking. The stacked antennas fall into each other`s null zones and this isolates the individual antennas much as does cross-polarization. I`ve seen estimates of 1/10 as much coupling between end to end antennas as compared to side by side antennas at the same distance from each other. This guess, 10 db, seems reasonable to me. Cross-polarization estimates I`ve seen for coupling are 20 db down from coupling for same polarization of antennas. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
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