I agree with Eric about the shielded enclosure especially. And be sure to 
use a connector on the coax where it passes through the box. Just running 
the coax through a hole in the box defeats all, most or some the shielding 
of the box.

Chuck
WB2EDV



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Eric Lemmon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, November 22, 2007 11:10 AM
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Receiver overload


> David,
>
> My first move would be to add a bandpass cavity in front of the receiver.
> All cabling between the receiver and the RX output of the duplexer should 
> be
> double-shielded, with proper connectors on each end- no adapters, and no
> nickel-plated connectors.  The mini-UHF connector going to the MaxTrac
> should be the only exception, but it's okay if very tight.
>
> If that doesn't cure the problem, then enclose the receiver in a shielded
> box, and bring the signal and power leads out through feedthrough
> capacitors.  The MaxTrac radio has a lot of plastic in its case, and is
> susceptible to signal intrusion.  The best shielded box to use is a 
> die-cast
> aluminum enclosure from Hammond.
>
> I have assumed that the FM transmitter carrier is pure, without harmonics 
> or
> spurious artifacts.  If the FM transmitter is radiating on a frequency 
> close
> to your desired input frequency, the above fixes may not have any effect.
>
> 73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
>
> 

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