Eric,

 After reading this article,  I have searched everywhere  I could  to learn
about RSSI Meters. I found the Signal Meter by Mark Weiss built  around the
LF353 JFET Op-Amp. Can you elaborate on this meter, such as where does it
hook to the radio being tuned or the radio being used to tune a Duplexer or
Filter? One article mentioned the IF Section of the radio. On the schematic
for the meter it states RSSI Input and at that point it has a couple of caps
for Preemphasis for Audio Use, which I thought may indicate the
Discriminator Output of the radio. As you may know, there is not a lot of
information out there. I have a SINAD Meter and I would like to know if this
can be as user friendly and give me more precise readings. 

Thanks for your information, help and patience with us who want to learn how
to do things a little better with the with equipment we have or in this case
can build.

 

73 JIM   KA2AJh 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Lemmon
Sent: Sunday, September 20, 2009 1:53 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] UHF Duplexers

 

  

Terry,

In lieu of the ideal bench equipment, yes, the IC-2710 is better than a
handheld, since its impedances are supposed to be close to 50 ohms at the
connector. You are to be commended for your creativity in making do with
what you have. Since your duplexer has been moved from its original
settings, you can only improve matters.

Let's review your process: You generate your 449.625 MHz receive signal
with the service monitor, and inject it into the duplexer's antenna
connector, with your monitoring radio set to 449.625 MHz and connected to
the RX (high pass) connector of the duplexer, and a 50-ohm dummy load on the
TX (low pass) connector of the duplexer. The SINAD input of your service
monitor is connected to the monitoring radio's speaker, and you adjust the
center rods of the high-pass cans to get 12 dB SINAD with the lowest level
signal at the RX connector.

Next, without changing any of the connections, you set the service monitor
to generate 444.625 MHz and program the monitoring radio to receive 444.625
MHz. With your service monitor generating the highest-level signal possible
(at least 0 dBm, but higher is better), you adjust the notch capacitors on
both high-pass cans to minimize the received signal. You might get better
results by monitoring the RSSI voltage at the radio. Do not move the
threaded tuning rods at all.

SNIP

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