You need to check the entire transmitter, not just the exciter.

Chuck
WB2EDV



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mathew Quaife" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 2:17 AM
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Repeater Rx is Better than TX, Why


>
> Well have to rule out the wattmeter, I have two of them, both gave the 
> same
> results, one being bird wattmeter and the other being Yaesu YS-500.  The
> antenna has only been in-service since September.  If it was the antenna,
> would it not be noticed on the RX as well, which is not having any 
> problems
> at all.  I will put the exciter back on the scope today and look at it, 
> but
> last I looked it was fine.  Someone mentioned my past problem with 
> adjacent
> channel noise, yes, there was a problem there, the deviation had jumped up
> to over 6 Khz wide, brought it back down to 4.5 Khz via the controller and
> that took care of that.  Will pump the signal into the service monitor and
> see what that reads.  All I know it seems strange for it to receive twice 
> as
> far as it does transmit.
>
> Mathew
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, January 24, 2005 3:41 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Repeater Rx is Better than TX, Why
>
>
> Either your wattmeter is lying, or you have one of two
> worse problems..
>
> 1)
> Check your TX with a spectrum analyzer.  I'll bet that
> your on-frequency power is down.
> A wattmeter reads power on all frequencies - spurs or
> on frequency.
>
> I was bit by that oversight years ago.
>
> A 6m 100w TX that used to be clean ended up as a comb
> generator due to a leak in the roof creating corrosion in
> the PA deck... The on-channel power was maybe 20w,
> everything else was trash.
>
> It was a miracle that we caught it before someone else
> figured out where the grunge was coming from.
>
> 2)
> Your diamond antenna may be hosed and giving you a
> low ERP.
>
> Mike WA6ILQ
>
> At 03:28 PM 1/24/05, you wrote:
>
>>Ok, I know this sounds silly, but my repeater is now hearing
>>better than it transmits.  Here's the setup, the the issue.  I have
>>a Maggorie (no comments) HiPro transmiitter running 2 watts into
>>a Vocom Amp running 160 Watts into the duplexer, 130 out to the
>>antenna, fed with 7/8" hardline into a Diamond Dual Band Antenna
>>at 92'.  VSWR is 1.1:1, with 130 watts forward and 1/10 watt reflected
>>at an impedance of 52 ohms, (MJF 259).
>>
>>The receiver is a GE Mastr Pro ER-41 series receiver, tied to an ARR
>>preamp at 24 db going through a two of the DB 4001-1 for filtering
>>and finally into a set of TX-RX Duplexers, 3 cans pers side.
>>
>>I used to be able to hear the repeater nearly full scale for about
>>40 miles with no problem.  Recently at 20 miles away, it's barely at
>>1/4 scale on my radio.  This has been noticable with several users
>>on the system, and my mobile just got a new antenna, all set and
>>tested fine there, and other repeaters there is no problem.  I can
>>hear users nearly 60 miles from the repeater, but they can't hear
>>the system.
>>
>>Is it possible something could be wrong on the duplexer end of it.
>>I get no decense on the system, and receive audio is ok quality at
>>60 miles, just less than full quieting.
>>
>>Any thoughts.  Mybe just propagation.
>>
>>And the 160 watts from the Vocom amp was as low as I could go before
>>I began to cause havick, so it does not like lower power.
>>
>>Mathew     Thanks!
>
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>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
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> Yahoo! Groups Links
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> 






 
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