Question on this: I have a 151/159 split on my freqs that I am working with,
can a mobile duplexer be used for this and still work well?

Thanks 

Peter Summerhawk-N0WRE

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, August 30, 2008 3:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] RE: [EMAIL PROTECTED] VHF Duplexer

 

At 8/30/2008 10:22, you wrote:
>This question is best posed on the Repeater-Builder list
>(Repeater-Builder@ <mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com>
yahoogroups.com), but I know the answer: A mobile (notch)
>duplexer will not work at a 600 kHz split. Even a 3 or 4 MHz split results
>in unacceptable performance.
>
>I have built a portable repeater for 2m, using the special TASMA "portable
>repeater pair" of 147.585 MHz input and 144.930 MHz output- a split of
2.655
>MHz-

Glad to hear someone besides me is making good use of that pair.

> but I had to use a Celwave 5085-1 duplexer to make it work. The 5085
>duplexer is about twice the size of a mobile notch duplexer, and it is
>intended for splits as narrow as 3 MHz. With careful tuning on a network
>analyzer and using a 1-to-10 watt Motorola 1225 full-duplex transceiver, it
>performs very well.

I'm surprised you had to go to something a bit bigger than the standard 
6-section mobile duplexer to make it work. I have a total of 3 VHF mobile 
duplexers & 2 of them are quite a bit smaller than the 5085-1, but they 
still perform adequately: ~2.1 dB loss & 65 to 70 dB notches. I actually 
put a VHF UHS preamp on one system to try to squeeze a little more S/N out 
of it & it actually worked in that it didn't introduce any desense or 
IMD. Unfortunately the site noise is so high in LA that I don't think it 
actually made a significant improvement in S/N.

Bob NO6B

 

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