At 1/11/2005 10:47 AM, you wrote:
> >
> > This is good.  If all repeater TXs & RXs are good & properly adjusted
>there
> > should be no problem.  9 kHz seems awfuly high; that exeeds the acceptance
> > bandwidth of just about any NBFM radio made.  What did you measure it
> > with?.  Maybe you should contact your frequency coordinator if the owner
>of
> > the other system refuses to turn it down.
> >
> > Bob NO6B
>
>Actually it's not the repeater that is causing the interference, but rather
>a user of the system,

If the offending repeater's output is 15 kHz away from your input, then a 
user cannot cause adjacent-channel interference to your input RX.  Sounds 
like the other repeater is not properly limiting its deviation, hence the 
wide user's signal is passed with fidelity.  The fault lies in the other 
repeater TX not limiting the wide user's deviation.

>  and was measured with my CE-6030 monitor.  Was hoping
>to avoid a war, as he is an older gentleman whom can be stubborn, and I
>would rather solve than fight.  I'm getting ready to try the 10db pad and
>see if that helps any.

Understood, but somebody else's improperly configured repeater TX shouldn't 
result in your repeater's RX coverage being degraded.

Bob NO6B






 
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