Possible options ?????

I decided to poke around on the Bird TX/RX website and found this 
"little" guy ( relatively speaking :-) )

Probably more command post sized than SUV sized but hey.. how big is 
that SUV :-)???????

http://birdtechnologies.thomasnet.com/item/all-categories-duplexers-and-triplexers/duplexers-2/28-37-04c?&seo=110

At 9.5 x 19 x 10.5 inches, COULD fit in a car.. It is rated at 65db 
at .5mhz.... so would be a bit better at .6mhz and as I recall many 
of the little mobile duplexers are typically 65db to 80db at 
best....so would be in the neighborhood of lowest useable isolation 
figures, depending on how quiet the TX is to start with.

It looks like it gets to 70db at 1 mhz with less insertion loss so .6 
mhz would likely be somewhere in between... if you do not mind the 
insertion loss...

Assuming we could split, it at worst case, 10-20db of antenna 
isolation in a mobile environment might be possible, and/or some 
additional notching...all this may make a low power 2m portable 
duplexer "plausible" without filling a whole car....:-)

Our club uses a 300khz 6 can TX/RX for our 2M repeater that was rated 
at ~100db at 600khz.. but when we had it set up for 600khz spacing it 
yielded in excess of 120 db TX to RX as delivered from TX/RX.

 From a practical perspective "small" 2M duplexers seem to start at 
about 2Mhz split... but hey size is relative !!!!

Doug
KD8B
 > Morning,
> > We are looking at building a portable repeater for special even use. This
> > will be mobile mounted and 2M. My questions is this: If we are using two
> > radios (one for TX one for RX) then what does the antenna separation have
>to
> > be for all of this to work? Planning on mounting this in a SUV so roof
>space
> > can be adjusted if need be.
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> >
> > Peter Dakota Summerhawk
> > Laramie County ARES

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