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#11
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Floyd Sense wrote:
"I wouldn`t trust an RF-sensed switch to do the job (have never seen one anyway)." They abound. Plenty of devices are keyed when RF is sensed. Catastrophic failure can be avoided by secondary protection for more security. If simultaneous operation of two or more devices with one antenna is required, switching between them wont work anyway. Some form of combiner is needed. A device for automatic switching is the duplexer used with RADAR which automatically switches the antenna from receive to transmit at the proper times. A diplexer, on the other hand, is used to combine the picture and sound transmitters to the same TV station antenna. This may be a bridge circuit or something similar. Its purpose is to isolate the transmitters from each other while feeding the same antenna. That was also my goal in combining the outputs of two shortwave broadcast transmitters to the same antenna but they were of the same frequency and phase. The circulator I suggested in an earlier posting is a variation on a device described in a couple of books I used to have on amateur radio repeaters. In my case I wanted to make a 100-KW transmitter from two 50-KW reansmitters. It worked well. The medium-wave broadcast plant I worked in, with 950 KHz and 1320 KHz transmitters, accessed the same tower through frequency pass / reject filters in the coax lines to each transmitter from the same antenna. It was no problem, given the frequency separation between the transmitters. An amateur VHF repeater has a much more serious problem given a much smaller percentage frequency separation between its receive and transmit frequencies. The amateur repeater nust often use cavitiesto separate the frequencies enough.. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#12
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I wrote in a prior posting:
"The circulator I suggested in an earlier posting is a variation on a device described in a couple of books I used to have on amateur radio repeaters." I still have not come across the repeater books but my 1987 ARRLHandbook has such a circulator (called a hybrid ring) in Fig. 15 on page14-6, A short escription is on the previous page. How it works is more completely described in the repeater books. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |
#13
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Chuck W. wrote:
Ralph Mowery wrote: Is this for two transceivers on the same band or are they on differant bands ? Might be the same, might be different. I was thinking about two HF transceivers rather than VHF/UHF. -Chuck My rig, a Kenwood TS2000 has separate connections for the 2M and 70 cm antennas, I use a duplexor to feed a dual band antenna., works great and the duplexor was about $85 Cdn including shipping. Paul |
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