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#1
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Greetings,
I have come by a Singer Stoddart 94592-1 rod antenna coupler. It is a cube about 4.5" is green and has a telescoping antenna on top affixed by a screw on BNC type connector. The output is BNC and there are two binding posts for B+ input I believe. I haven't been able to find a thing on the www about this device, although, i did see one listed on ebay once for big bucks. Does anyone have any info on this device they would share with me? The device is for H.F. Dave - KA9SRU Thanks |
#2
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Dave Rude wrote:
Greetings, I have come by a Singer Stoddart 94592-1 rod antenna coupler. It is a cube about 4.5" is green and has a telescoping antenna on top affixed by a screw on BNC type connector. The output is BNC and there are two binding posts for B+ input I believe. I haven't been able to find a thing on the www about this device, although, i did see one listed on ebay once for big bucks. Does anyone have any info on this device they would share with me? The device is for H.F. Dave - KA9SRU Thanks An EM specialist may shed more light on this subject. Twenty years ago, when I managed an EM lab among other responsibilities, Singer Stoddart was the #1 supplier of laboratory quality EM measuring devices. They designed and sold EM test instruments including receivers, antennas, couplers, that were traceable to NBS primary standards. I suspect you have a very expensive coupler for a receiving dipole for measuring radiated EM noise fields. [For about $40,000 you may find a Singer Stoddart receiver and antenna set to use with it g]. Any professional EMers out there?? |
#3
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Dave wrote:
Dave Rude wrote: Greetings, I have come by a Singer Stoddart 94592-1 rod antenna coupler. It is a cube about 4.5" is green and has a telescoping antenna on top affixed by a screw on BNC type connector. The output is BNC and there are two binding posts for B+ input I believe. I haven't been able to find a thing on the www about this device, although, i did see one listed on ebay once for big bucks. Does anyone have any info on this device they would share with me? The device is for H.F. Dave - KA9SRU Thanks An EM specialist may shed more light on this subject. Twenty years ago, when I managed an EM lab among other responsibilities, Singer Stoddart was the #1 supplier of laboratory quality EM measuring devices. They designed and sold EM test instruments including receivers, antennas, couplers, that were traceable to NBS primary standards. I suspect you have a very expensive coupler for a receiving dipole for measuring radiated EM noise fields. [For about $40,000 you may find a Singer Stoddart receiver and antenna set to use with it g]. Any professional EMers out there?? As I read my earlier post, it comes to mind that the matching receiver was an NM-40A ... quite expensive in the mid 80s. |
#4
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![]() "Dave" wrote in message ... Dave Rude wrote: Greetings, I have come by a Singer Stoddart 94592-1 rod antenna coupler. It is a cube about 4.5" is green and has a telescoping antenna on top affixed by a screw on BNC type connector. The output is BNC and there are two binding posts for B+ input I believe. I haven't been able to find a thing on the www about this device, although, i did see one listed on ebay once for big bucks. Does anyone have any info on this device they would share with me? The device is for H.F. Dave - KA9SRU Thanks An EM specialist may shed more light on this subject. Twenty years ago, when I managed an EM lab among other responsibilities, Singer Stoddart was the #1 supplier of laboratory quality EM measuring devices. They designed and sold EM test instruments including receivers, antennas, couplers, that were traceable to NBS primary standards. I suspect you have a very expensive coupler for a receiving dipole for measuring radiated EM noise fields. [For about $40,000 you may find a Singer Stoddart receiver and antenna set to use with it g]. Any professional EMers out there?? Yup. Singer made the NM-25 EMI receiver, too. I don't have any TM's around any more, but there were about a dozen calibrated antennas that went with those receivers. When you made a measurement, you referred to a calibration chart for the "Antenna Factor" at that freq and you used it to convert the received signal strength to actual field strength at that point. The NM-25 was the heaviest item I ever had to lug. Oof! Those binding posts have me puzzled, though. I remember only coarse freq switching on our couplers -- nothing active inside that would take power input. Anything's possible. |
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