> We make MF & VHF systems and for some of our VHF systems we use a single > set of antennas and a T/R switch (passive and active). However since our > frequency of operation is 2-3 orders of magnitude lower it's probably all > different...
The radar I worked on was a ~2.7GHz job. Since the receiver was spammed for the first several hundred metres in range due to large amounts of echo from ground clutter any such early returns were gated out. After that the circuit controlling the attenuator (PIN diodes) ramped the voltage so that the overall gain of the system increased in time. This was to maximise or normalise the S/N ratio at the ADC. When you are looking for metallic bogie's many 10's of KM away you need all the return you can get even with the gain achieved from integrating multiple returns. Anyway, the author of the grandfather post doesn't sound like he has too much RF experience (who does?) Perhaps a circulator will do or even better, an RX/TX switch module (diplexers?) - though this might involve a hardware hack to get the switching pulse out in time. The thought did occur to me to get something like a Furuno boating radar head with an integrated separate transmit and receive antenna. You'd get a nice narrow beam from one of those. _______________________________________________ Discuss-gnuradio mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss-gnuradio
