Hi,

Juts a thought:

Sometimes certain antennas have a drain plug at the bottom and sometime one
at the top. You should remove the drain plug at the bottom for normal
mounting or the one at the top for inverted mounting.    If you don't water
can ingress, then can't escape and build up.    Another thing to check is
the connector sealing.

Peter

On Mon, Aug 9, 2010 at 4:49 PM, Kevin Custer <kug...@kuggie.com> wrote:

>
>
> radi...@aol.com wrote:
>
>  Hi Kevin,
> The desense is a staticy reception of "weaker" signals( ie an HT at 25
> miles) It had gotten worse as it started to affect strong signals too. If
> the transmitter was turned off, the repeater could hear just fine. Problem
> is intermittent and often followed a rainy day. We replaced "EVERYTHING" A
> UHF repeater on the same tower is unaffected. At this point we think the
> "new" antenna is failing. Tower sections have been bonded grounds improved
> etc etc
>
>
> To know whether or not the problem is the antenna system, do a
> desensitization test directly at the antenna port of the duplexer using a
> good load and a lossy tee or other acceptable method like a coupler slug
> installed into the Bird Watt meter.  If you don't know how to perform a
> desense test, there are several articles on the website that will assist
> you.
>
> If this proves good, then you have more work to do on the outside.
>
> Let us know...
>
> Kevin
>
>  
>

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