Over the weekend, I installed the KXV3A transverter and Receive Only antenna 
interface, and also the PR6 6-meter pre-amp. Installation went smoothly for 
both, but I found myself doing a lot of head-scratching about the proper way to 
hook up my antenna. Finally figured it out, with assistance from Wayne at 
Elecraft, who has confirmed the following is correct. 

My problem was trying to determine where to connect the antenna feed line so 
that I could use my 6-meter 3-element quad antenna for both receive and 
transmit functions.  An inspection of the circuit diagrams of the KXV3A and PR6 
made it clear that these components are not intended to carry transmit signals, 
even though they have a "receive antenna out" port. 

To save equivalent puzzlement for others, here's how it works. 

1. Configure the PR6 to be switched on when the K3 is set to six meter band 
using DIGOUT 1, as explained in the PR6 manual, and connect the PR6 to the RX 
Antenna In and RX Antenna Out BNC connectors on the KXV3A; connect the power 
cord to the 12VDC switchable power port (RCA jack) on the back of the K3, and 
connecting the DB-9 connector to the ACC jack on the back of the K3. 
2. Connect your 6 meter antenna to ANT 1 (or, optionally, to ANT 2 if you have 
the optional second antenna port installed with the KAT3 internal antenna 
tuner). 
3. Don't connect any cables to the "bypass" connectors on the "back" side of 
the PR6. (They have other uses, but not for normal transmit/receive through a 
single antenna.) 
4. When operating on 6 meters, if you wish to engage the PR6 preamp, tap the RX 
ANT button (right next to the POWER switch).  This causes the receive antenna 
signal to be routed from the ANT 1 jack through the  KXV3A Receive Only 
circuitry, then through the PR6, back through the "input" side of the KXV3A, 
and from there back to the front end of the receiver circuitry.  
5. When you transmit, the K3 automatically routes the signal directly to the 
ANT 1 jack, bypassing the KXV3A and PR6. 

Notes: 

1. If you're working a strong station and want to dis-engage the PR6, simply 
tap the RX ANT button and you'll remove the PR6 from the antenna path. 
2. Since the KXV3A "returns" the receive signal to the front end of the 
receiver, you can receive on 6 meters using just the PR6 or with the PR6 AND 
the internal pre-amp both engaged.  From what I have read, you don't normally 
need or want to engage the internal K3 pre-amp while using the PR6, but some K3 
owners have reported that they can dig out really, really weak signals using 
both pre-amps. (see, for example, N5GE's report at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/elecraft@mailman.qth.net/msg86350.html) 

Thanks to Wayne for guiding me through the K3 block circuit diagram and other 
help in working this out.

BTW, the 6 meter antenna is a three element quad, fed through an Elecraft BL2 
balun at 1:1 ratio, horizontally polarized  This is a lovely 6 meter antenna. 
It collapses into a small bundle for portable/rover use, mounts on a six foot 
boom, and has a natural impedance of 50 ohms. It has several dB more gain than 
a 6 meter Yagi of equivalent size, is easier to make, has lower material  and 
easier to transport than a Yagi.  

Lew K6LMP
 
Lew Phelps K6LMP
Pasadena, CA DM04wd
Elecraft K3 Serial #3805 
Yaesu FT-7800 (2m and 70 cm, 50 watts FM)
K6LMP (at) me.com




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