OK, I found the message. now the question: what aluminum tape is best for
this?  Or is there a "best" tape?  I just got a Motorola duplexer for a 462
repeater I'm building, and it has the holes/slots in it.  (And yes, it *IS*
a MICOR.)  Of the various types of tape available, does the adhesive need to
be conductive? Or is it "good enough" for the foil to merely cover the
openings?

 

For example, I was browsing Mouser's choices of tape HERE
<http://www.mouser.com/catalog/635/2090.pdf> ...
http://www.mouser.com/catalog/635/2090.pdf 

I am interested in these tapes: 

3M 425 or 427 (adhesive conductivity not listed)

3M 1170 (listed: "conductive adhesive")

Although I'm thinking at these costs, they must ALL have conductive
adhesives... 425 (1" wide) costs $20.93/roll; 427 is $61.95/roll; and 1170
is $46.07.  If anybody has insights, I'd be interested to hear!

 

Thanks,

Mark - N9WYS 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com On Behalf Of Eric Lemmon

 

As I and several others have noted earlier, the Motorola T-1500-series

duplexers are barely adequate even with a 5 MHz split.  Nevertheless,

Motorola shipped thousands of Micor repeater stations with this duplexer,

and they worked fine.  But, keep in mind that a Micor 75-100 watt PA was a

very good design and far more stable and noise-free than most aftermarket

power amplifiers.  The crystal-controlled Micor exciters are inherently less

noisy than the synthesized exciters used in newer and less-expensive

repeaters.  The extremely sharp, crystal-controlled Micor receivers were

better able to shrug off nearby carriers or noise than many- if not most-

modern synthesized receivers.

 

Even if your T-1500-series duplexer is optimally tuned, you can possibly

improve its performance a bit by using adhesive-backed aluminum tape to

cover the slots where the loop and probe adjustments penetrate the side

walls of the cavities.  The metal tape will eliminate a possible leakage

path through the slots.  Your jumper cables should be made of RG-400/U or

RG-214/U cable with the proper connectors on each end- no adapters.

Crimped-on, silver-plated connectors are more reliable than those that are

soldered or clamped.

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