Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-07 Thread Ian White GM3SEK
Tony Estep wrote:
Nobody commented on my question last night, but I'd still like to hear from
your collective wisdom, so here's a repeat: I set up my sub-rx to listen on
transmit antenna B while the main is listening and transmitting on A, and to
listen on A while main is listening and transmitting on B. This allows for
diversity reception.

...here's my question: My two antennas are located so each is in the
other's null, but they are not far apart, maybe 50 feet at most. When I
transmit, I don't hear any carrier-operated relays or see any adverse
reactions, but I'm still not sure that it's okay. The manual sez well
isolated, but what I'm looking for is some objective way to test or
measure. Can anyone tell me how I can establish for sure that I can, or
cannot, transmit on A when the sub is connected to B, and vice versa? 

Any info (especially first-hand knowledge) would be much appreciated.

Connect a simple diode milliwattmeter to the feed from the RX antenna. 
All it needs is a 47 ohm resistor, a 1N914/4148 diode, a .01uF ceramic 
cap and your DVM. (This is truly a Construction 101 project - can 
anyone supply a suitable web reference, please?)

Gently ramp up the power to the TX antenna, and see how much power is 
coming back on the RX input. Repeat with every combination of bands and 
antennas.

Also read Managing Interstation Interference by George Cutsogeorge 
W2VJN:
http://www.inrad.net/product.php?productid=248cat=148page=1

The first chapter is available as a free download and contains key 
information about power levels for receiver front-end damage. The K3 can 
protect itself... but as you say, you should make sure it doesn't have 
to.

For diversity I am using an active antenna based on a small horizontal 
dipole, which works very well in combination with the low-band 
verticals. Checking with the milliwattmeter and gradually ramping up to 
full TX power, both the active antenna and the K3 are well enough 
protected by the cross-polarization. But the 20-10m beam is horizontal 
and also much closer, so additional protection is needed on those bands.



-- 

73 from Ian GM3SEK
http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek
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Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-07 Thread Jack Smith
Ian:

I've written about simple diode RF detectors at 
http://www.cliftonlaboratories.com/diodes_for_rf_probes.htm

These are not 50 ohm terminated, so it would be a matter of adding a 51 
ohm resistor (nearest 5% value) across the RF port). Or a 47 ohm would 
be fine for this purpose.

Jack K8ZOA


On 1/7/2011 4:37 AM, Ian White GM3SEK wrote:
 Tony Estep wrote:
 Nobody commented on my question last night, but I'd still like to hear from
 your collective wisdom, so here's a repeat: I set up my sub-rx to listen on
 transmit antenna B while the main is listening and transmitting on A, and to
 listen on A while main is listening and transmitting on B. This allows for
 diversity reception.

 ...here's my question: My two antennas are located so each is in the
 other's null, but they are not far apart, maybe 50 feet at most. When I
 transmit, I don't hear any carrier-operated relays or see any adverse
 reactions, but I'm still not sure that it's okay. The manual sez well
 isolated, but what I'm looking for is some objective way to test or
 measure. Can anyone tell me how I can establish for sure that I can, or
 cannot, transmit on A when the sub is connected to B, and vice versa? 

 Any info (especially first-hand knowledge) would be much appreciated.
 Connect a simple diode milliwattmeter to the feed from the RX antenna.
 All it needs is a 47 ohm resistor, a 1N914/4148 diode, a .01uF ceramic
 cap and your DVM. (This is truly a Construction 101 project - can
 anyone supply a suitable web reference, please?)

 Gently ramp up the power to the TX antenna, and see how much power is
 coming back on the RX input. Repeat with every combination of bands and
 antennas.

 Also read Managing Interstation Interference by George Cutsogeorge
 W2VJN:
 http://www.inrad.net/product.php?productid=248cat=148page=1

 The first chapter is available as a free download and contains key
 information about power levels for receiver front-end damage. The K3 can
 protect itself... but as you say, you should make sure it doesn't have
 to.

 For diversity I am using an active antenna based on a small horizontal
 dipole, which works very well in combination with the low-band
 verticals. Checking with the milliwattmeter and gradually ramping up to
 full TX power, both the active antenna and the K3 are well enough
 protected by the cross-polarization. But the 20-10m beam is horizontal
 and also much closer, so additional protection is needed on those bands.



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Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-07 Thread Jack Smith
I've written about simple diode RF detectors at 
http://www.cliftonlaboratories.com/diodes_for_rf_probes.htm

These are not 50 ohm terminated, so it would be a matter of adding a 51 
ohm resistor (nearest 5% value) across the RF port).

Jack K8ZOA


On 1/7/2011 4:37 AM, Ian White GM3SEK wrote:
 Tony Estep wrote:
 Nobody commented on my question last night, but I'd still like to hear from
 your collective wisdom, so here's a repeat: I set up my sub-rx to listen on
 transmit antenna B while the main is listening and transmitting on A, and to
 listen on A while main is listening and transmitting on B. This allows for
 diversity reception.

 ...here's my question: My two antennas are located so each is in the
 other's null, but they are not far apart, maybe 50 feet at most. When I
 transmit, I don't hear any carrier-operated relays or see any adverse
 reactions, but I'm still not sure that it's okay. The manual sez well
 isolated, but what I'm looking for is some objective way to test or
 measure. Can anyone tell me how I can establish for sure that I can, or
 cannot, transmit on A when the sub is connected to B, and vice versa? 

 Any info (especially first-hand knowledge) would be much appreciated.
 Connect a simple diode milliwattmeter to the feed from the RX antenna.
 All it needs is a 47 ohm resistor, a 1N914/4148 diode, a .01uF ceramic
 cap and your DVM. (This is truly a Construction 101 project - can
 anyone supply a suitable web reference, please?)

 Gently ramp up the power to the TX antenna, and see how much power is
 coming back on the RX input. Repeat with every combination of bands and
 antennas.

 Also read Managing Interstation Interference by George Cutsogeorge
 W2VJN:
 http://www.inrad.net/product.php?productid=248cat=148page=1

 The first chapter is available as a free download and contains key
 information about power levels for receiver front-end damage. The K3 can
 protect itself... but as you say, you should make sure it doesn't have
 to.

 For diversity I am using an active antenna based on a small horizontal
 dipole, which works very well in combination with the low-band
 verticals. Checking with the milliwattmeter and gradually ramping up to
 full TX power, both the active antenna and the K3 are well enough
 protected by the cross-polarization. But the 20-10m beam is horizontal
 and also much closer, so additional protection is needed on those bands.



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Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-07 Thread Arie Kleingeld PA3A
Tony,

Most of the time I work in diversity on 160 and 80  when in contest.
I tested the antenna setup by transmitting in one antenne and measure 
the power delivered by the other antenna to a 50ohm resistor.
As long as the power (worst case situation) is low enough (I use a 10mW 
limit)  there's no problem.

(BTW, for the people who want to know, my powermeter can measure from 
-50dBm to +30dBm)

I'd like to add a question: what do other people use as a limit?

73
Arie PA3A



Op 7-1-2011 1:27, Tony Estep schreef:
 Nobody commented on my question last night, but I'd still like to hear from
 your collective wisdom, so here's a repeat: I set up my sub-rx to listen on
 transmit antenna B while the main is listening and transmitting on A, and to
 listen on A while main is listening and transmitting on B. This allows for
 diversity reception.

 ...here's my question: My two antennas are located so each is in the
 other's null, but they are not far apart, maybe 50 feet at most. When I
 transmit, I don't hear any carrier-operated relays or see any adverse
 reactions, but I'm still not sure that it's okay. The manual sez well
 isolated, but what I'm looking for is some objective way to test or
 measure. Can anyone tell me how I can establish for sure that I can, or
 cannot, transmit on A when the sub is connected to B, and vice versa? 

 Any info (especially first-hand knowledge) would be much appreciated.


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Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-07 Thread Tony Estep
Thanks to Don, Ian, Jack and Arie for all the excellent info. I'm good to go
now.

73,
Tony KT0NY
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Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-07 Thread Scott Ellington
If the power coupled to the RX antenna is too high, or you just want to be 
safe, add a small relay in the RX antenna feedline to disconnect it and ground 
the RX input on transmit.  Radio Shack 275-241 works well.  I run the 12V coil 
on 70 V, with a series resistor, to make it switch faster, but it would 
probably be fast enough for QSK on 12 V.  A reed relay would probably be barely 
audible.

If the sound of the relay bothers you, the same can be done with PIN diodes, 
though it's a bit more complicated. One could probably just copy the circuit of 
one of the switches in the K3.


73,

Scott  K9MA




Scott Ellington
Madison, Wisconsin
USA



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[Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-07 Thread Rose

An IRC Model 196 is an excellent solution.  I have 
them on my K2 and K3.

I think they're available from Array Solutions.

73!  

Ken Kopp - K0PP
elecraftcov...@gmail.com
http://tinyurl.com/7lm3m5


 
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[Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-06 Thread Tony Estep
Nobody commented on my question last night, but I'd still like to hear from
your collective wisdom, so here's a repeat: I set up my sub-rx to listen on
transmit antenna B while the main is listening and transmitting on A, and to
listen on A while main is listening and transmitting on B. This allows for
diversity reception.

...here's my question: My two antennas are located so each is in the
other's null, but they are not far apart, maybe 50 feet at most. When I
transmit, I don't hear any carrier-operated relays or see any adverse
reactions, but I'm still not sure that it's okay. The manual sez well
isolated, but what I'm looking for is some objective way to test or
measure. Can anyone tell me how I can establish for sure that I can, or
cannot, transmit on A when the sub is connected to B, and vice versa? 

Any info (especially first-hand knowledge) would be much appreciated.

73,
Tony KT0NY
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Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-06 Thread Don Wilhelm
  Tony,

The SubRX is protected by a COR in all cases, so if you do not hear the 
COR relay kick in, you are probably OK.

If the two antennas are located in each other's null, then you may have 
the best of all worlds situation regardless of the physical 
separation.  There is more to isolation than physical separation.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 1/6/2011 7:27 PM, Tony Estep wrote:
 Nobody commented on my question last night, but I'd still like to hear from
 your collective wisdom, so here's a repeat: I set up my sub-rx to listen on
 transmit antenna B while the main is listening and transmitting on A, and to
 listen on A while main is listening and transmitting on B. This allows for
 diversity reception.

 ...here's my question: My two antennas are located so each is in the
 other's null, but they are not far apart, maybe 50 feet at most. When I
 transmit, I don't hear any carrier-operated relays or see any adverse
 reactions, but I'm still not sure that it's okay. The manual sez well
 isolated, but what I'm looking for is some objective way to test or
 measure. Can anyone tell me how I can establish for sure that I can, or
 cannot, transmit on A when the sub is connected to B, and vice versa? 

 Any info (especially first-hand knowledge) would be much appreciated.

 73,
 Tony KT0NY
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Re: [Elecraft] Transmitting while listening in diversity mode

2011-01-06 Thread Tony Estep
Thanks, Don.

The nulls of my antennas are not very deep, but I guess it's sufficient. The
antennas are just rudimentary wire arrays strung up in the back-yard trees.
My previous wire-in-a-tree setup was described in Mar 2006 QST. Then we
moved to this QTH, and I had to rethink it. This setup is better than what's
depicted in that article, but still not great. The directivity one can
achieve this way is limited, obviously. Still, I hear no COR clicking, and
all seems well, and it is fun to play with diversity reception. In certain
cases it really makes a big difference.

73,
Tony KT0NY


On Thu, Jan 6, 2011 at 6:47 PM, Don Wilhelm w3...@embarqmail.com wrote:

  If the two antennas are located in each other's null, then you may
 have the best of all worlds situation...
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