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


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