Hi,

Yes you possibly will damage the spyverter. Though it does have a fairly high 
level of input attenuation above 65Mhz so it might survive but it certainly 
won’t do what you are wanting. 

 It is intended to shift a very small level signal up 120Mhz. 

A better course of action would be an amplifier designed to operate at 918Mhz 
to amplify (and filter) the out put of the hack RF up to the desired level.

Bernie

> On 26 Apr 2018, at 16:03, Mitja kocjančič <veso...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> anyone knows if Spyverter can be used in oposite direction (to transmit a 
> signal on 120,918Mhz and have it output on 918khz) because HackRF is realy 
> weak on theese low frequencies so if it could put a solid 15dbm below 10Mhz 
> it would be great
> but I am afraid to damage my Spyverter if I try this
> PS: Can I uses bias tee from HackRF to power my Spyverter?
> 
> 2018-04-25 23:08 GMT+02:00 Gavin Jacobs <apriljunk...@hotmail.com 
> <mailto:apriljunk...@hotmail.com>>:

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