Lets step back a bit and look at the system here. The K3, with ATU, drives into 
the BPF, when then drives into the external ATU and finally the antenna.
The external ATU takes care of the antenna matching, and should present a 50 
ohm load to the BPF. The BPF, because of its design, should present a 50 ohm 
load to the ATU as well, so everything is matched there.
Before anyone jumps on this, remember the signals go both ways, outbound for 
transmit, inbound for receive. Also, we have a fundamental principal thrown at 
every EE student, that for best transmission of signal, the source and load 
impedances should match.

OK, so let’s look at the K3 side. The K3 antenna port connects directly to the 
BPF’s radio port. Again, we are presuming the BPF is designed for 50 ohms 
resistive source/load. The K3 is designed to transmit into a 50 ohm load, but 
it may not itself be a 50 ohm source. And, the receiver input may not be 50 
ohms as well. Adding a tuned ATU does bring this to 50 ohms, providing a proper 
match into the BPF, so that optimum signal flows both ways. So it could 
actually be beneficial for the ATU to be in-line and properly tuned. The best 
way to perform the tune would be to tune the ATU into a 50 ohm dummy load, but 
tuning into the BPF at low power should work also. The exception to this would 
be if the BPF changes impedance when power is applied, but then if this happens 
the best place for that BPF is the trash can.

Now having said this, the ATU can also be bypassed in the K3, and that circuit 
may provide a proper 50 ohm source/load for the BPF. I would probably take this 
approach myself (and in fact do so in my station). The reason I take this 
approach is to avoid the small loss that the internal ATU presents. In 
contesting, every db matters.

Note that we are talking nits at this point. Unless the ATU was tuned for a 
load quite a bit off 50 ohms resistive, (quite possible), then retuning won’t 
make much difference. Perhaps the op had this situation, and thought it better 
to return the ATU than to bypass it, or he didn’t even think to bypass it. The 
point is, both methods will work, and I doubt he did anything wrong it 
performing the tune.

73!
Jack, W6FB


> On Jul 5, 2019, at 10:18 AM, Mark Goldberg <marklgoldb...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I could not let this go. I've done a lot of work with bandpass filters. The
> mismatch will degrade the filter.
> 
> For an example, I used Elsie, which is a filter calculator. Using the
> example 20 Meter bandpass filter, the passband loss is about .25 dB with
> matched 50 ohms in and out. Changing the output impedance to 38+j12 (38
> ohms plus 135 nH inductor at 14.15 MHz, about 1.5:1 SWR), the passband
> losses increase to about 0.4 - .44 dB and vary more over the band.
> 
> Here are the schematics and plots, anyone is welcome to check my
> calculations, as I do make mistakes!
> 
> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kj31IL_px6nVyRadW4nOi_c6FLgyaRyk/view?usp=sharing
> 
> The loss in the filter will almost double. For 100W in, the loss goes from
> about 6W to about 10W. So, it is not a good idea. A worse match will result
> in even more losses, perhaps overheating and destroying the filter.
> 
> 73,
> 
> Mark
> W7MLG
> 
> On Fri, Jul 5, 2019 at 8:32 AM Don Wilhelm <donw...@embarqmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> Rich,
>> 
>> Yes and no.  With 2 antenna tuners in-line, there will be a bit more
>> loss due to inductor winding resistance, but other than that, it should
>> do harm.
>> 
>> Several bandpass filters indicate that they should be between the rig
>> and the tuner (so the bandpass filters are not run at a high SWR).
>> If the power rating of the bandpass filter is marginal with respect to
>> the rig power, then I would observe that caution. Refer to the bandpass
>> filter specs.
>> 
>> 73,
>> Don W3FPR
>> 
>> On 7/5/2019 10:57 AM, Rich wrote:
>>> To minimize emails direct replies would be nice.  I searched the web and
>>> could not find an answer.   I know there are a ton of smart folks on
>>> this list so I thought I would ask.
>>> 
>>> On Field Day at typical setup is :
>>> 
>>> K3 (or any radio) - bandpass filter -  External Antenna Tuner  - Antenna
>>> 
>>> So the antenna was tuned via the external tuner, but saw a guy then
>>> using the K3 ant tuner to touch up the SWR between the radio and the
>>> bandpass filter.  Is that an acceptable practice?
>>> 
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