John,
Thanks for the more in-depth explanation.

Link antenna and feedline is about as good as you can get.

About the only improvement you might make is to get the two UHF antennas 
directly under each other. That creates a cone of silence and make for the best 
null.

No need for the 7/8" other than a small improvement in signal loss. I would 
think about replacing all of the jumpers with silver plated double shielded 
coax.

The filter that comes to mind for your link receiver would be a very precise 
crystal filter made for your link radio receive frequency.  They are kinda 
pricey, so they may be out of your price range, but they are only a few KC 
wide. Since it sounds like the hub repeater is on a stable frequency and will 
most likely be there for a long time, the crystal filter makes sense. They are 
not re-tunable in the field since they are made for a very specific receive 
frequency. They have a little loss in them, but since you can run the squelch 
fully tight, you have enough headroom, and that should not be a problem.

Other item I would recommend is to install a isolator on the UHF repeater 
transmitter before it gets to the duplexer. I am not sure what you are using 
for a duplexer, but I also might suggest locating a Telewave or similar 9" 
diameter to 12" diameter bandpass filter (one that has two connectors) to go 
between the UHF repeater transmitter and the duplexer. They use these large 
diameter UHF cavities for transmit combiners, but I have seen them on Ebay for 
reasonable prices from time to time. The larger diameter the cavity, the 
steeper the skirts on each side of the transmit frequency will be.

I know this may sound backwards, but I would attack adding the isolator and 
additional filtering on the UHF transmitter as the first step. Once you have 
made the UHF repeater transmitter as clean as it can be, then you can move on 
to adding any additional filtering to the link receiver, if it is still needed.

 
Joe - WA7JAW

 
> Joe, Thanks for asking..
>  
> Question #1 link antenna is on top. 8 element yagi vertical pointed 210 SW
>  
> Question #2 No. They are on different legs and each is on the other side of
> the tower, almost directly opposite each other.
>  
> Question #3 No preamp.
>  
> Question #4 1/2 inch Andrews Heliax (not superflex) on both UHF units 150FT
> on one 140Ft on the other. 3ft jumpers 9914 belden on each radio. same on
> the Yagi's. N type connectors. Wish we could afford 7/8, but we take what
> the club can afford and work with that. Our club has appox 50 members,
> sometimes more or less depending on when they pay there dues. Hi HI. I know
> you didn't ask, but just in case you needed to know, 7/8 is not an option
> for us right now.
>  
> Agreed that even just a few extra db rejection would do the trick. It
> wouldn't take a lot I don't think based on the squelch test, but a few db I
> would be highly thankful for, and I just don't have the knowledge to know
> how to get there from here. (-:
> 
> 73 de  John Godfrey
> KE5NZY BARC Pres.
> 


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