Change the split of the repeater to anything other than 600 kHz.
On Sun, Apr 25, 2010 at 8:06 PM, lpcoates <bruce.coa...@sasktel.net> wrote: > Hi > > We have a local AM radio station on 600 kHz. Their transmitter site is about > 10 miles from the center of the city. From what I've found on the web, they > run 25,000 watts during the day and 8,000 watts at night. On at least one of > our repeaters we're finding that this is mixing with the output of repeater > to create a phantom signal exactly on the input. We're not sure whether the > mixing is happening inside the repeater or in something in the environment > near the repeater. We've confirmed this is the source of the problem on one > repeter and supect it on another. Has anyone had experince with a loacl AM > station on 600 kHz? We're looking for way to combat the interference. > > Thanks > > Bruce - VE5BNC > > > > ------------------------------------ > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >