I also have one of those 2-Watt MICOR Repeaters, it's moved to the 440 Ham
Band and works great. Now I know why it has such a huge heat sink for just
2-watts. If it's doable to make it into a 12-watt station, maybe someone
will do up an article for the repeater-builder web page some time. If it
will run 10-12 watts continuous-duty instead of just 2 watts, that would be
great! I guess I'll have to spend some time researching it in the MICOR UHF
Repeater manual. Does it have a circulator also, like the higher power
MICOR UHF repeaters have?

Larry


Original Message:
-----------------
From: Eric Lemmon [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed, 05 May 2004 17:19:59 -0700
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Help Needed with UHF Micor PA TLE1713A


Brian,

I, too, have a 2-watt UHF Micor repeater (it was used on an oil
platform) which is essentially a 12-watt PA with an attenuator to soak
up the excess power.  My reason for posting is to alert you to the fact
that the forward and reverse power sensing circuits are different
between the 2W and 12W PAs, so if you bypass the attenuator you must
also alter the sensing circuits to avoid some downstream grief.  Since
you have the manual, this should not be a problem for you.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY

Brian wrote:

I figured it out.  The repeaters I have were 2watt versions and I had to
bypass the attenuator.  Thanks for the info. It helps when you have the
manual, which I did not have until today.




 
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