Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-24 Thread Nate Duehr
On 2/23/2010 3:11 PM, Jim WB5OXQ inb Waco, TX wrote:
 Is it possible the AM signal is getting into an audio stage instead of the
 receiver front end?  I had that happen once.

Same here. All audio inteconnects are now tiny coax cables at that site 
now, installed with shield grounded at ONE end...

Nate WY0X






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RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-24 Thread Jeff DePolo
 
 On 2/23/2010 3:11 PM, Jim WB5OXQ inb Waco, TX wrote:
  Is it possible the AM signal is getting into an audio stage 
 instead of the
  receiver front end?  I had that happen once.
 
 Same here. All audio inteconnects are now tiny coax cables at 
 that site 
 now, installed with shield grounded at ONE end...
 
 Nate WY0X

At AM broadcast sites or studios co-located with the transmitter,
hard-grounding the shield at one end and RF-coupling the shield at the other
end to the equipment ground via caps (0.01 uF as a rule of thumb) is often
the most effective technique in many situations.

--- Jeff WN3A



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-24 Thread KT9AC
If it was just audio then there would be no feedback of the PL/DPL 
tones, keeping the repeater locked up.

Good advice though.

Jeff DePolo wrote:

 
  On 2/23/2010 3:11 PM, Jim WB5OXQ inb Waco, TX wrote:
   Is it possible the AM signal is getting into an audio stage
  instead of the
   receiver front end? I had that happen once.
  
  Same here. All audio inteconnects are now tiny coax cables at
  that site
  now, installed with shield grounded at ONE end...
 
  Nate WY0X

 At AM broadcast sites or studios co-located with the transmitter,
 hard-grounding the shield at one end and RF-coupling the shield at the 
 other
 end to the equipment ground via caps (0.01 uF as a rule of thumb) is often
 the most effective technique in many situations.

 --- Jeff WN3A

 






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RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-24 Thread Gary Schafer
Don't be too sure about that. Once the am station signal gets into the
receiver it can go anywhere and cause havoc. It could be getting into the IF
or the mixer once picked up by cables.

73
Gary  K4FMX

 -Original Message-
 From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:Repeater-
 buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of KT9AC
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 4:42 PM
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep
 UHF repeaters locked up?
 
 If it was just audio then there would be no feedback of the PL/DPL
 tones, keeping the repeater locked up.
 
 Good advice though.
 
 Jeff DePolo wrote:
 
  
   On 2/23/2010 3:11 PM, Jim WB5OXQ inb Waco, TX wrote:
Is it possible the AM signal is getting into an audio stage
   instead of the
receiver front end? I had that happen once.
   
   Same here. All audio inteconnects are now tiny coax cables at
   that site
   now, installed with shield grounded at ONE end...
  
   Nate WY0X
 
  At AM broadcast sites or studios co-located with the transmitter,
  hard-grounding the shield at one end and RF-coupling the shield at the
  other
  end to the equipment ground via caps (0.01 uF as a rule of thumb) is
 often
  the most effective technique in many situations.
 
  --- Jeff WN3A
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Yahoo! Groups Links
 
 
 


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-24 Thread no6b
At 2/23/2010 17:16, you wrote:
Mark et al,
Yes, this repeater is using the Motorola T1500 series bandpass cavities
(two each for rx and tx). I've tried running rx and tx both duplex and
seperate (borrowing a nearby antenna with permission). I can hear the
interference underneath my signal when I'm about 2 miles away and
monitoring my signal. When its strong enough, the PL encode of the
repeater keeps it locked up until the modulation from the AM station
overtakes the PL being looped (voice peak). Then the repeater drops
since I have a tone panel in between and not continuous PL outbound.

I have tried changing the receive frequency about 75Khz lower and the
interference is not present (so a 4.925Mhz split), so that serves to
prove to me that this indeed a mix.

I can try adding an attenuator the next time I'm out at the site. The
antenna is about 300 feet up and fed with 7/8 heliax, to a Polyphaser
and then superflex to the duplexer. I've also tried without the Poly,
but have the same result. I have some nice Mini-Circuit pads that should
work in the receive side after the duplexer, but think the receiver is
simply overloaded.

The cause of your interference problem is not RX overload.  It is as 
others have suggested: a mix occurring somewhere in the near field of the 
antenna.  Pads may eventually mask the real source of the problem, once 
you've added enough to drop the signal below your RX's noise floor, but 
you'll end up with a deaf repeater.

How far away were the separate TX  RX antennas when you tried that?  I'd 
think if they were far enough apart that you would lose the mix.  OTOH if a 
tower joint is the source of the mix (likely since a lot of length is 
required to couple in the AM BC station), it might be all over the tower.

A similar problem was partially cured here by spraying some conductive 
paint into all the tower joints.  Each time it was done the interference 
would disappear for a few months, then return.

Bob NO6B



[Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-24 Thread larynl2
I agree with Bob. 

Mixing could also occur down at the guy anchor area, where cables are woven 
through the turnbuckles.  Had it happen here...

Laryn K8TVZ


 
 The cause of your interference problem is not RX overload.  It is as 
 others have suggested: a mix occurring somewhere in the near field of the 
 antenna.  Pads may eventually mask the real source of the problem, once 
 you've added enough to drop the signal below your RX's noise floor, but 
 you'll end up with a deaf repeater.
 
 How far away were the separate TX  RX antennas when you tried that?  I'd 
 think if they were far enough apart that you would lose the mix.  OTOH if a 
 tower joint is the source of the mix (likely since a lot of length is 
 required to couple in the AM BC station), it might be all over the tower.
 
 A similar problem was partially cured here by spraying some conductive 
 paint into all the tower joints.  Each time it was done the interference 
 would disappear for a few months, then return.
 
 Bob NO6B





[Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-24 Thread Ron Patten
  Tony,

Do you hear a matching signal around the site on 5 MHz?

Ron



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread KT9AC
I was able to match up the audio coming through the repeater and the 
local AM station. My latest theory is that their signal is so strong 
that its blowing into the receiver's front end and multiplying/mixing 
there (past the bandpass filters and all). They are heterodyne receivers 
after all.

I'm considering an ICE broadcast high-pass filter that cuts off at 
1.8Mhz (model 402). I have an email into them to see how well it might 
work at 448 Mhz.

Tony

tracomm wrote:

 Had a similiar situation at our site, a station on 106.7 MHz, music on 
 hang time on many repeaters, intermod runs gave no clue to reason, did 
 all the usual, grounding, filters no resolve.
 Turned out to be the STL Marti system on 450.100 MHz, from an close 
 studio site pointed right at our site, hitting our Rx multicoupler, 
 mixing with our transmitters. Resolution was low passs  isolater on 
 the STL system.
 Make certain which station the broadcast audio is coming from and give 
 the station engineer a friendly call, may reveal some info to help 
 your issue.

 Chris
 GMRS Inc.


 --- In Repeater-Builder@ yahoogroups. com 
 mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com, Tony KT9AC kt...@... wrote:
 Hi everyone,
 A while ago I was troubleshooting a bad feedback or growl problem
 that was impacting a UHF repeater, of which the short term workaround
 was to not encode TX PL (PL or DPL would keep it locked until the 
 signal dropped enough or timed out).

 In doing some more research, I found a 1250kHz AM station within a 
 mile or two that changes pattern between day and night. The 
 interference mentioned above would appear around drive times (like 
 5pm) so that had me chasing other sources. Still, it was puzzling that 
 a 5Mhz signal could be causing the feedback (it didn't appear when 
 doing normal receiver testing with a service monitor). The recent give 
 away was that I could hear talking underneath my test signal (like a 
 sports show).

 So, if we take the 1250Khz signal or 1.25Mhz x 4 = 5Mhz. I realize 
 that the 4th harmonic of a 5KW broadcast station isn't very powerful, 
 but being in its nearfield might be enough to cause a mix with the UHF 
 transmit output.

 Does this make sense? This phenomenon can be duplicated with both a 
 450 and 440 repeater system - both with standard 5Mhz offsets. I don't 
 think any sort of filtering would work since the mix happens in the 
 air.
 Only by having split PL's can the lockup be prevented, and equipment 
 was both MSF5000 and Micor systems, through correctly tuned duplexers.
 Thanks,
 Tony

 






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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread Jim WB5OXQ inb Waco, TX
Is it possible the AM signal is getting into an audio stage instead of the 
receiver front end?  I had that happen once.

- Original Message - 
From: KT9AC kt...@ameritech.net
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, February 23, 2010 4:01 PM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF 
repeaters locked up?


I was able to match up the audio coming through the repeater and the
 local AM station. My latest theory is that their signal is so strong
 that its blowing into the receiver's front end and multiplying/mixing
 there (past the bandpass filters and all). They are heterodyne receivers
 after all.

 I'm considering an ICE broadcast high-pass filter that cuts off at
 1.8Mhz (model 402). I have an email into them to see how well it might
 work at 448 Mhz.

 Tony

 tracomm wrote:

 Had a similiar situation at our site, a station on 106.7 MHz, music on
 hang time on many repeaters, intermod runs gave no clue to reason, did
 all the usual, grounding, filters no resolve.
 Turned out to be the STL Marti system on 450.100 MHz, from an close
 studio site pointed right at our site, hitting our Rx multicoupler,
 mixing with our transmitters. Resolution was low passs  isolater on
 the STL system.
 Make certain which station the broadcast audio is coming from and give
 the station engineer a friendly call, may reveal some info to help
 your issue.

 Chris
 GMRS Inc.


 --- In Repeater-Builder@ yahoogroups. com
 mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com, Tony KT9AC kt...@... 
 wrote:
 Hi everyone,
 A while ago I was troubleshooting a bad feedback or growl problem
 that was impacting a UHF repeater, of which the short term workaround
 was to not encode TX PL (PL or DPL would keep it locked until the
 signal dropped enough or timed out).

 In doing some more research, I found a 1250kHz AM station within a
 mile or two that changes pattern between day and night. The
 interference mentioned above would appear around drive times (like
 5pm) so that had me chasing other sources. Still, it was puzzling that
 a 5Mhz signal could be causing the feedback (it didn't appear when
 doing normal receiver testing with a service monitor). The recent give
 away was that I could hear talking underneath my test signal (like a
 sports show).

 So, if we take the 1250Khz signal or 1.25Mhz x 4 = 5Mhz. I realize
 that the 4th harmonic of a 5KW broadcast station isn't very powerful,
 but being in its nearfield might be enough to cause a mix with the UHF
 transmit output.

 Does this make sense? This phenomenon can be duplicated with both a
 450 and 440 repeater system - both with standard 5Mhz offsets. I don't
 think any sort of filtering would work since the mix happens in the
 air.
 Only by having split PL's can the lockup be prevented, and equipment
 was both MSF5000 and Micor systems, through correctly tuned duplexers.
 Thanks,
 Tony




 



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RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread Jeff DePolo
 I'm considering an ICE broadcast high-pass filter that cuts off at 
 1.8Mhz (model 402). I have an email into them to see how well 
 it might 
 work at 448 Mhz.
 
 Tony

Before you spend any real money, you might just try a shorted quarterwave
stub.  If you want, I can make one up quick and see how much attenuation it
provides at 1.8 MHz.  I have to spend some quality time with the VNA tonight
anyway so it won't take but a second...

--- Jeff WN3A



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread DCFluX
How about 1.25 MHz RF coming down the outer jacket of the UHF antenna
and into the ground of the system? You have about 200 ft or so of
coax?  Try a mag mount antenna temporarily.

Not really sure how you'd cure that though. Not sure if snap on RF
beads would work on coax with a signal going in the center.


RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread Mark HARRISON
I would have thought good grounding practices on the feeder and equipment at 
the base of the tower would have pretty well bypassed any 1.25MHz stuff.

Ferrite 'beads' will reduce common mode pickup on coaxial cables without any 
effect at all on the signal inside the coax. 
Don't expect too much attenuation though - usually they are only good for 
8-15dB at UHF frequencies, and somewhat less at low frequencies (choose your 
ferrite material carefully!).

73,
Mark VK3BYY

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of DCFluX
Sent: Wednesday, 24 February 2010 09:35 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF 
repeaters locked up?

How about 1.25 MHz RF coming down the outer jacket of the UHF antenna
and into the ground of the system? You have about 200 ft or so of
coax?  Try a mag mount antenna temporarily.

Not really sure how you'd cure that though. Not sure if snap on RF
beads would work on coax with a signal going in the center.







RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread Mark HARRISON
Hi Tony,

Are you using a duplexer on this repeater?
A lot of cavity filters act as a short circuit to DC and low frequencies, so 
additional filtering is unlikely to help.
I can only think of one type of cavity that has a DC path between from input to 
output (via an internal inductor) and not to ground.  This type could I guess 
pass low frequencies.  It's simple to test - disconnect the antenna and 
receiver leads and measure the DC resistance with a meter between the centre 
and outer on the cavity connectors.  If it's 0 ohms then it's likely to be a 
very good high pass filter for broadcast frequencies!

Also, using a temporary attenuator you should be able to determine if there is 
an intermod problem within the receiver, or parts of the antenna filtering 
system on the receive side of a Duplexer.  Inserting an attenuator will reduce 
the interference (and desired signal) by the same amount if everything on the 
receiver side of the attenuator is functioning correctly.  If instead the 
interference drops by 2-3 times (in dB, and the desired signal drops only by 
the attenuator value) then you've found your problem!
Placing a power attenuator in the duplexed antenna line is more complicated 
because you are attenuating both the Tx and Rx signals.  You would expect the 
interfering signal to drop by more than double the attenuation value, and you 
can't really tell if the problem is in the antenna, antenna feeder, or 
something external.

73,
Mark VK3BYY

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of KT9AC
Sent: Wednesday, 24 February 2010 09:02 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF 
repeaters locked up?

I was able to match up the audio coming through the repeater and the 
local AM station. My latest theory is that their signal is so strong 
that its blowing into the receiver's front end and multiplying/mixing 
there (past the bandpass filters and all). They are heterodyne receivers 
after all.

I'm considering an ICE broadcast high-pass filter that cuts off at 
1.8Mhz (model 402). I have an email into them to see how well it might 
work at 448 Mhz.

Tony



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread KT9AC
If you wouldn't mind...that would be interesting to see how it works.


DCFluX wrote:

 How about 1.25 MHz RF coming down the outer jacket of the UHF antenna
 and into the ground of the system? You have about 200 ft or so of
 coax? Try a mag mount antenna temporarily.

 Not really sure how you'd cure that though. Not sure if snap on RF
 beads would work on coax with a signal going in the center.

 






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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread KT9AC
Mark et al,
Yes, this repeater is using the Motorola T1500 series bandpass cavities 
(two each for rx and tx). I've tried running rx and tx both duplex and 
seperate (borrowing a nearby antenna with permission). I can hear the 
interference underneath my signal when I'm about 2 miles away and 
monitoring my signal. When its strong enough, the PL encode of the 
repeater keeps it locked up until the modulation from the AM station 
overtakes the PL being looped (voice peak). Then the repeater drops 
since I have a tone panel in between and not continuous PL outbound.

I have tried changing the receive frequency about 75Khz lower and the 
interference is not present (so a 4.925Mhz split), so that serves to 
prove to me that this indeed a mix.

I can try adding an attenuator the next time I'm out at the site. The 
antenna is about 300 feet up and fed with 7/8 heliax, to a Polyphaser 
and then superflex to the duplexer. I've also tried without the Poly, 
but have the same result. I have some nice Mini-Circuit pads that should 
work in the receive side after the duplexer, but think the receiver is 
simply overloaded.

Tony

Mark HARRISON wrote:

 Hi Tony,

 Are you using a duplexer on this repeater?
 A lot of cavity filters act as a short circuit to DC and low 
 frequencies, so additional filtering is unlikely to help.
 I can only think of one type of cavity that has a DC path between from 
 input to output (via an internal inductor) and not to ground. This 
 type could I guess pass low frequencies. It's simple to test - 
 disconnect the antenna and receiver leads and measure the DC 
 resistance with a meter between the centre and outer on the cavity 
 connectors. If it's 0 ohms then it's likely to be a very good high 
 pass filter for broadcast frequencies!

 Also, using a temporary attenuator you should be able to determine if 
 there is an intermod problem within the receiver, or parts of the 
 antenna filtering system on the receive side of a Duplexer. Inserting 
 an attenuator will reduce the interference (and desired signal) by the 
 same amount if everything on the receiver side of the attenuator is 
 functioning correctly. If instead the interference drops by 2-3 times 
 (in dB, and the desired signal drops only by the attenuator value) 
 then you've found your problem!
 Placing a power attenuator in the duplexed antenna line is more 
 complicated because you are attenuating both the Tx and Rx signals. 
 You would expect the interfering signal to drop by more than double 
 the attenuation value, and you can't really tell if the problem is in 
 the antenna, antenna feeder, or something external.

 73,
 Mark VK3BYY

 -Original Message-
 From: Repeater-Builder@ yahoogroups. com 
 mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com [mailto:Repeater-Builder@ 
 yahoogroups. com mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com] On 
 Behalf Of KT9AC
 Sent: Wednesday, 24 February 2010 09:02 AM
 To: Repeater-Builder@ yahoogroups. com 
 mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM 
 keep UHF repeaters locked up?

 I was able to match up the audio coming through the repeater and the
 local AM station. My latest theory is that their signal is so strong
 that its blowing into the receiver's front end and multiplying/ mixing
 there (past the bandpass filters and all). They are heterodyne receivers
 after all.

 I'm considering an ICE broadcast high-pass filter that cuts off at
 1.8Mhz (model 402). I have an email into them to see how well it might
 work at 448 Mhz.

 Tony

 






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* To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/

* Your email settings:
Individual Email | Traditional

* To change settings online go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/join
(Yahoo! ID required)

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repeater-builder-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
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RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-23 Thread daniel haines

How long is your feed line? Do you have any toriods on your feed line, where it 
comes in your shack?

 
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 From: kt...@ameritech.net
 Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 16:01:45 -0600
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF 
 repeaters locked up?
 
 I was able to match up the audio coming through the repeater and the 
 local AM station. My latest theory is that their signal is so strong 
 that its blowing into the receiver's front end and multiplying/mixing 
 there (past the bandpass filters and all). They are heterodyne receivers 
 after all.
 
 I'm considering an ICE broadcast high-pass filter that cuts off at 
 1.8Mhz (model 402). I have an email into them to see how well it might 
 work at 448 Mhz.
 
 Tony
 
 tracomm wrote:
 
  Had a similiar situation at our site, a station on 106.7 MHz, music on 
  hang time on many repeaters, intermod runs gave no clue to reason, did 
  all the usual, grounding, filters no resolve.
  Turned out to be the STL Marti system on 450.100 MHz, from an close 
  studio site pointed right at our site, hitting our Rx multicoupler, 
  mixing with our transmitters. Resolution was low passs  isolater on 
  the STL system.
  Make certain which station the broadcast audio is coming from and give 
  the station engineer a friendly call, may reveal some info to help 
  your issue.
 
  Chris
  GMRS Inc.
 
 
  --- In Repeater-Builder@ yahoogroups. com 
  mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com, Tony KT9AC kt...@... wrote:
  Hi everyone,
  A while ago I was troubleshooting a bad feedback or growl problem
  that was impacting a UHF repeater, of which the short term workaround
  was to not encode TX PL (PL or DPL would keep it locked until the 
  signal dropped enough or timed out).
 
  In doing some more research, I found a 1250kHz AM station within a 
  mile or two that changes pattern between day and night. The 
  interference mentioned above would appear around drive times (like 
  5pm) so that had me chasing other sources. Still, it was puzzling that 
  a 5Mhz signal could be causing the feedback (it didn't appear when 
  doing normal receiver testing with a service monitor). The recent give 
  away was that I could hear talking underneath my test signal (like a 
  sports show).
 
  So, if we take the 1250Khz signal or 1.25Mhz x 4 = 5Mhz. I realize 
  that the 4th harmonic of a 5KW broadcast station isn't very powerful, 
  but being in its nearfield might be enough to cause a mix with the UHF 
  transmit output.
 
  Does this make sense? This phenomenon can be duplicated with both a 
  450 and 440 repeater system - both with standard 5Mhz offsets. I don't 
  think any sort of filtering would work since the mix happens in the 
  air.
  Only by having split PL's can the lockup be prevented, and equipment 
  was both MSF5000 and Micor systems, through correctly tuned duplexers.
  Thanks,
  Tony
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
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[Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-22 Thread tracomm
Had a similiar situation at our site, a station on 106.7 MHz,  music on hang 
time on many repeaters, intermod runs gave no clue to reason, did all the 
usual, grounding, filters no resolve.
Turned out to be the STL Marti system on 450.100 MHz, from an close studio site 
pointed right at our site, hitting our Rx multicoupler, mixing with our 
transmitters. Resolution was low passs  isolater on the STL system.
Make certain which station the broadcast audio is coming from and give the 
station engineer a friendly call, may reveal some info to help your issue.

Chris 
GMRS Inc. 
 


--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, Tony KT9AC kt...@... wrote:
Hi everyone,
A while ago I was troubleshooting a bad feedback or growl problem 
that was impacting a UHF repeater, of which the short term workaround 
was to not encode TX PL (PL or DPL would keep it locked until the signal 
dropped enough or timed out).
 
In doing some more research, I found a 1250kHz AM station within a mile or two 
that changes pattern between day and night. The interference mentioned above 
would appear around drive times (like 5pm) so that had me chasing other 
sources. Still, it was puzzling that a 5Mhz signal could be causing the 
feedback (it didn't appear when doing normal receiver testing with a service 
monitor). The recent give away was that I could hear talking underneath my test 
signal (like a sports show).

So, if we take the 1250Khz signal or 1.25Mhz x 4 = 5Mhz. I realize that the 4th 
harmonic of a 5KW broadcast station isn't very powerful, but being in its 
nearfield might be enough to cause a mix with the UHF transmit output.

Does this make sense? This phenomenon can be duplicated with both a 450 and 440 
repeater system - both with standard 5Mhz offsets. I don't think any sort of 
filtering would work since the mix happens in the air. 
Only by having split PL's can the lockup be prevented, and equipment was both 
MSF5000 and Micor systems, through correctly tuned duplexers.
Thanks,
Tony




Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF repeaters locked up?

2010-02-22 Thread Chuck Kelsey
A lot of strange things can happen.

We had a situation where a school bus control station that was situated a 
couple blocks from an FM broadcast tower caused the control station to spur 
and get into our control station almost 20 miles away. When the offending 
control station was put on the bench (away from the FM broadcast station) it 
worked fine.

Have also had radio station Marti transmitters get into stuff as well. Was 
told by someone that Marti's were known to spur easily.

Chuck
WB2EDV



- Original Message - 
From: tracomm trac...@yahoo.com
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, February 22, 2010 8:41 AM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Can the 4th harmonic of 1250 AM keep UHF 
repeaters locked up?


 Had a similiar situation at our site, a station on 106.7 MHz,  music on 
 hang time on many repeaters, intermod runs gave no clue to reason, did all 
 the usual, grounding, filters no resolve.
 Turned out to be the STL Marti system on 450.100 MHz, from an close studio 
 site pointed right at our site, hitting our Rx multicoupler, mixing with 
 our transmitters. Resolution was low passs  isolater on the STL system.
 Make certain which station the broadcast audio is coming from and give the 
 station engineer a friendly call, may reveal some info to help your issue.

 Chris
 GMRS Inc.



 --- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, Tony KT9AC kt...@... wrote:
 Hi everyone,
 A while ago I was troubleshooting a bad feedback or growl problem
 that was impacting a UHF repeater, of which the short term workaround
 was to not encode TX PL (PL or DPL would keep it locked until the signal 
 dropped enough or timed out).

 In doing some more research, I found a 1250kHz AM station within a mile or 
 two that changes pattern between day and night. The interference mentioned 
 above would appear around drive times (like 5pm) so that had me chasing 
 other sources. Still, it was puzzling that a 5Mhz signal could be causing 
 the feedback (it didn't appear when doing normal receiver testing with a 
 service monitor). The recent give away was that I could hear talking 
 underneath my test signal (like a sports show).

 So, if we take the 1250Khz signal or 1.25Mhz x 4 = 5Mhz. I realize that 
 the 4th harmonic of a 5KW broadcast station isn't very powerful, but being 
 in its nearfield might be enough to cause a mix with the UHF transmit 
 output.

 Does this make sense? This phenomenon can be duplicated with both a 450 
 and 440 repeater system - both with standard 5Mhz offsets. I don't think 
 any sort of filtering would work since the mix happens in the air.
 Only by having split PL's can the lockup be prevented, and equipment was 
 both MSF5000 and Micor systems, through correctly tuned duplexers.
 Thanks,
 Tony