Let's not forget that the MVP repeater in question is the LPI (Low Power
Industrial) version, and it comes with a 19C327014G7 PA module that has a
range of 1.5 to 5 watts.  The MVP LPI repeater was normally delivered with
the power set for two watts at the duplexer's antenna jack.  More info is
here:
<www.repeater-builder.com/ge/lbi-library/lbi-32772a.pdf>

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, February 07, 2009 8:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: GE MVP output power level

At 2/7/2009 10:27, you wrote:
>The auction listing mentions that original MVP Repeater has
>only a few watts output. I seem to remember the original MVP
>repeater PA being rated about 2.5 to 3.5 watts output?
>
>Bob and Chuck,
>
>Are you guys turning down the output power on your conversion
>MVP (radio to) Repeaters? ... or running near/at the nominal
>radio RF output level without major internal cabinet de-sense
>problems?

Nope. Full power on the 30 watt VHF/25 watt UHFs. I do turn down the 40 
watt UHF radios down to just under 40, as that seems to be the point of 
maximum efficiency for those PAs.

For the VHF HB radios, an old CPU fan/heatsink combo clamped to the flat 
back surface & keyed by the (buffered to eliminate fan noise) PTT line 
provides more than sufficient cooling. The UHF PAs aren't quite as 
efficient; for those I still use 110 VAC fans that spin 24/7, or in one 
case where the site manager didn't allow that, larger PTT-keyed 12 VDC fans.

No desense problems with the MVP. There is a TX-LO IMD problem in the UHF 
radios that is documented, along with the fixes, in my MVP conversion 
article on the repeater-builder website.

Bob NO6B





Reply via email to