What you sometimes don't want to do is make some cables too neat. I
remember a repeater that had desense problems. The fix was to cut the
tie wraps off the receiver and transmitter cables coming from the
duplexer that were neatly dressed inside the cabinet. They were running
parallel and
On Tue, 10 Nov 2009, Joe wrote:
What you sometimes don't want to do is make some cables too neat. I
remember a repeater that had desense problems. The fix was to cut the
tie wraps off the receiver and transmitter cables coming from the
duplexer that were neatly dressed inside the cabinet.
--- On Tue, 11/10/09, ab6li johnever...@sbcglobal.net wrote:
From: ab6li johnever...@sbcglobal.net
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Coiling excess coax.
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, November 10, 2009, 1:39 AM
Hello to the group.
I would like to gather some opinions
At 11/9/2009 22:39, you wrote:
Hello to the group.
I would like to gather some opinions on coiling excess coax as sometimes
found when interconnecting cables may be a bit too long for an application.
Good idea? Bad idea? I know that the excess length would add some loss and
that would be
Hello to the group.
I would like to gather some opinions on coiling excess coax as sometimes found
when interconnecting cables may be a bit too long for an application.
Good idea? Bad idea? I know that the excess length would add some loss and that
would be undesireable but in some cases
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