Eric,

 

Comments/answers interspersed below.

 

Thanks for the help. I believe you are confirming that the problem is
within the box, probably the cables.

 

John 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Eric Lemmon
Sent: Sunday, August 31, 2008 12:30 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Wits End -- Desense

 

John,

You really need to use accurate test equipment, preferably a service
monitor, to verify your frequencies. Yes, my old Singer service monitor
is not good enough to be useful. There is a service monitor for sale (CT
3000B Communications Service Monitor) for $800. Does this seem
reasonable?)  Unless your repeater and duplexer are
exactly on frequency, your desense problem could possibly be due to the
notches on the duplexer not being coincident with the TX and RX
frequencies
of the repeater. It occurs even when there is no duplexer.

The Yaesu FTR-1510, like the similar low-tier products from Kenwood,
Motorola, Icom, and Ritron, is intended for less-stringent applications-
construction sites, shopping malls, race tracks, etc. As I have
mentioned
in other postings to this list, some of these boxes are equipped with
single-braid coaxial cable to connect various modules within the
enclosure.
The Motorola GR1225 and Vertex VXR-5000 are examples of this
cost-cutting
practice. I have corrected significant desense in these two models by
replacing the internal jumpers with RG-400/U cable.

I have performed the test described below, and the result is that there
is desense within the repeater. The cables appear to be good, i.e. the
shielding appears to be heavy silver coated braid. Nevertheless, the
cables are about the only possibility left that I know of. I guess I
have to check them or replace them next.

One way to settle this issue is to first program the FTR-1510 as a base
station, or simply disable the repeat function, and program your TX and
RX
frequencies without any CTCSS tones. Put a suitable dummy load directly
on
the repeater's TX output connector, preferably one that screws onto the
output connector itself, without any cable or adapter fitting.

Using a service monitor, inject a signal at the RX frequency directly
into
the repeater's receive connector. The test signal should be
frequency-modulated with a 1 kHz tone set for 3 kHz deviation. Monitor
the
de-emphasized receive audio using the SINAD meter function, and set the
amplitude to achieve a 12 dB SINAD reading. If the repeater is properly
tuned, this signal level will be in the range of -119 dBm to -113 dBm,
or
0.25 to 0.5 uV.

Now, while watching the SINAD meter reading, key the transmitter. If the
SINAD meter reading drops significantly when the transmitter is keyed,
you
have in-cabinet desense! The cure is probably going to require making up
new double-shielded cables. I don't know what's inside the Yaesu
FTR-1510,
but I will assume that three cables are needed: One cable from the
bulkhead
RX jack to the receiver input, one cable from the exciter output to the
PA
input, and one cable from the PA output to the bulkhead TX jack. Before
replacing any cables, check for loose or missing shields, missing cover
screws, loose connectors, etc.- anything that might allow RF to sneak in
where it doesn't belong.

If the above test proves that the desense is not caused by leakage
within
the repeater enclosure, check to see if the duplexer frequencies exactly
match those in the repeater. It is important to use the same equipment
to
check the duplexer and the repeater; it is more important for the tuning
to
be the same rather than be exactly on the center frequency.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY

Eric,  Thanks.  John




-----Original Message-----
From: Repeater-Builder@ <mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com>
yahoogroups.com
[mailto:Repeater-Builder@ <mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com>
yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of John Transue
Sent: Sunday, August 31, 2008 8:42 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@ <mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com>
yahoogroups.com
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:repeater%40viennawireless.org> less.org
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Wits End -- Desense

I've tried everything, it seems, and I still have desense!!

Even when I connect only the repeater (Yaesu Musen FTR-1510) and a
controller (needed to make the repeater transmit) and put a dummy load
on
the TX out, I get desense.

Following up on Eric's suggestion about holes leaking RF, I sealed the
edges
and holes in the TX and RX units inside the repeater, and I built a
shield
to enclose the back side of the TX connector that is on the back side of
the
repeater. That might have reduced the desense a little bit, but not
much. 

I even ran the TX feedline to an outside wire-mesh chair in an effort to
reduce any possible radiation getting from the dummy load to the
receiver.
There was still the same desense. 

The desense is at least 10 dB.

It appears to me that the desense has to be occurring inside the
repeater
cabinet, but for the life of me I can't see how this can be. Everything
seems to be well shielded.

So, I'd very much like to hear your theories and suggestions. Is there
some
way to find the source of the desense radiation? Is there some way that
unshielded control lines, audio lines, and power lines can carry RF to
the
receiver?

I have looked at the output of the repeater TX with a spectrum analyzer
[tnx
Tom N4ZPT] and it is clean. 

While I don't think the following is significant, for completeness I
note
that the repeater RX and TX both appear to be several kilohertz low in
frequency. However, I do not have a frequency counter, and I am only
checking the frequencies by the use of an HT and mobile, both modern
transceivers by Yaesu. 

Your thoughts, suggestions, and sympathy will be appreciated.

John

AF4PD

 

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