John---

I'm repeating my two previous messages to you on 8/3/08----they again seem 
appropriate.

Scott

John---

I don't know if you have done the following yet but if not you should.

Put an iso-T in front of your receiver and do a simple desense test using 
your signal generator into the iso-T.  Set the generator for a couple of kc, 
deviation at 1 kc so that you can easily recognize it. Run the signal level 
down to where you can just hear it in the receiver with the transmitter off. 
Turn your transmitter on. Do you still hear your generator signal? Lets 
assume you don't as if you do you don't have desense.

Now, remove your antenna feedline from your duplexer and put a good screw on 
dummy load in it's place  and repeat the above test.  Do you still have 
desense?  If yes, you have insufficient duplexer performance to support your 
transmitter (power and sideband noise spectra) or leaky interconnect 
cabling.

If no, you are getting desensing from either your feedline or your antenna 
or something your antenna radiated signal is exciting like a rusty tower 
joint or joints which is or are producing wideband noise which your antenna 
is hearing and feeding back to your receiver as a desensing signal. If this 
looks to be the case, put the dummy at the end of your feedline in place of 
your antenna and repeat the testing. This should leave you with either a 
feedline or connectors to replace or a possibly bad antenna.

 I've been this far and found a corroded Hustler. Took it down, cleaned it 
up and put it back as a replacement was not immediately available----it is 
still up and working as well as it ever did with absolutely no desense.



Hello (Again) John----

Yes--It is necessary that you put the iso-T immediately in front of your 
receiver----you want to be testing against the signal that is presented to 
your receiver after all of the processing before it.

A couple more thoughts----

Don't overlook the possibility that your duplexer is noisy or maybe I should 
say fried. I have two 2 meter Phelps-Dodge duplexers here that on the 
instruments show 110 db. Tx freq. attenuation into the Rx port as they 
should but badly desense with transmitter power applied----they are 
apparently internally bad connectivity wise----possibly adjusted with power 
applied or just corroded internal finger stock. In any case, they make 
wideband noise with transmitter power applied that is visible as a "hump" of 
noise at the receive frequency when the Rx port on the duplexer is observed 
by spectrum analyzer. And, one interesting fact is that this wideband 
(desensing) noise is not easily detectable by listening to the audio from 
the repeater receiver. In other words----If this sort of thing is your 
problem----you may not hear any change just turning the transmitter on and 
off----you must work against a modulated weak signal either into the antenna 
or via an iso-T.



  ----- Original Message ----- 






  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: John Transue
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 10:54 AM
  Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] De-Sense and Circulator Question



  Yes, the de-sense is present when transmitting into a dummy load and when 
transmitting into the antenna.



  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of DCFluX
  Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 1:06 PM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] De-Sense and Circulator Question



  <snip>
  Also have you measured the desense into a dummy load? Does it only
  appear when the antenna is attached? If so, Take a look at the FM
  broadcast band and write down the stations you hear, then look for a
  pair that is spaced 5 MHz apart.

  On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 8:49 AM, John Transue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  > The RG-214 is new. The cable was built by The RF Connection. I didn't
  > see the shield, but RG-214 is supposed to have two silver-plated copper
  > shields according to everything I have read. Has this been changed?
  >
  > At any rate, the problem of de-sense predated the installation of the
  > new cable.
  >
  > John
  >
  >>-----Original Message-----
  >>From: [email protected] [mailto:Repeater-
  >>[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of DCFluX
  >>Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 11:33 AM
  >>To: [email protected]
  >>Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] De-Sense and Circulator Question
  >>
  >>Is this new RG-214 that has the foil and braid?
  >>
  >>On Tue, Aug 19, 2008 at 5:15 PM, John Transue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  >>wrote:
  >>>
  >>>
  >>>
  >>>
  >>> -----Original Message-----
  >>> From: [email protected]
  >>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of DCFluX
  >>> Sent: Tuesday, August 19, 2008 4:13 PM
  >>> To: [email protected]
  >>> Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] De-Sense and Circulator Question
  >>>
  >>>
  >>>
  >>> Are you using LMR series or Belden 9913 for a feedline?
  >>>
  >>>
  >>>
  >>> No, I have RG-400 in the cabinet and RG-214 leading to the Heliax
  >>feed line.
  >>>
  >>> On Tue, Aug 19, 2008 at 1:08 PM, John Transue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  >>wrote:
  >>>> Members of Repeater Builder have been very helpful .<snip> Now I
  >>am
  >>>> wondering whether a circulator would provide additional isolation
  >>and
  >>>> further decrease the de-sense problem. Your advice would be much
  >>>> appreciated.
  >>>>
  >>>
  >>>
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  >>>
  >>
  >>------------------------------------
  >>
  >>
  >>
  >>Yahoo! Groups Links
  >>
  >>
  >>
  >>
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  >
  >
  >
  > ------------------------------------
  >
  >
  >
  > Yahoo! Groups Links
  >
  >
  >
  >


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