HI

The typical answer is: The largest one I could that 1) Would handle the short 
circuit current expected and
2) was self resonant at or above 1.6 GHz.

Bob

> On Jun 21, 2017, at 2:12 PM, David C. Partridge 
> <david.partri...@perdrix.co.uk> wrote:
> 
> Hi Magnus - what sort of inductor value did you use?  68nH or so?
> 
> Dave
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: time-nuts [mailto:time-nuts-boun...@febo.com] On Behalf Of Magnus 
> Danielson
> Sent: 17 June 2017 15:12
> To: time-nuts@febo.com
> Cc: mag...@rubidium.se
> Subject: Re: [time-nuts] GPS splitter
> 
> Hi,
> 
> At one time I had to design a DC-load since the GPSDO did not experience 
> enough antenna current due to a different antenna being used. So, a BNC-T was 
> quickly converted with a SMD inductor and resistor to add 150 Ohm of more 
> load, and that helped the telecom operator to get their GPS out of "no GPS 
> antenna" warning and actually accept the GPS satellites it was already 
> detecting fine.
> 
> Cheers,
> Magnus
> 
> On 06/17/2017 02:40 PM, Bob kb8tq wrote:
>> Hi
>> 
>> The DC block requirement depends a lot on the design of the GPSDO’s 
>> you are using. With some GPSDO’s a 50 ohm load on the eighth port of a 
>> splitter will do a pretty good job of “antenna detect” signaling. In 
>> the more general case of “I didn’t design this beast” dc blocks and dc 
>> shunts to ground is the best approach.
>> This fairly quickly gets you headed in the direction of the HP / 
>> Symmetricom splitters.
>> 
>> Bob
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>> On Jun 16, 2017, at 11:54 PM, Clay Autery <caut...@montac.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> This brings up some interesting questions:
>>> 
>>> If sharing an active GPS antenna, do you have to DC block all but one 
>>> receiver port to prevent multiple receivers trying to supply current 
>>> to the antenna?
>>> 
>>> On say a 26dB antenna (ignoring line loss, power divider insertion 
>>> loss, et al), what is the effective gain to each receiver?  (Sorry, 
>>> having a senior moment)
>>> 
>>> Should ALL unused ports have 50 ohm +/- 0j terminators on them?  I 
>>> assume so...  Thus, it would be "better" to always use the divider 
>>> with the minimum required ports?
>>> 
>>> I am assuming since this is a receive only situation, it will follow 
>>> approximately the same rules of physics that dealing with satellite 
>>> antenna installations.
>>> 
>>> I would LIKE to share one PC-TEL 26dB GPS antenna mounted at the top 
>>> of my 38 foot horiz.loop mast right  at the shack entrance, using 
>>> LMR-400-DB from antenna to Narda 2-way and thence to my current 
>>> hacked Nortel GPSDO and my soon to be complete RPi 2/3 w/ Adafruit 
>>> Ultimate GPS Hat NTP Server.  On that mast, the antenna would have a 
>>> near 360 degree view of the sky completely unobstructed.  
>>> (Eventually, I expect both of those units to be replaced with commercial 
>>> units).
>>> 
>>> I'm assuming that I DC block whichever unit is capable of providing 
>>> the LEAST current at 5VDC...  I suspect the Nortel unit can supply 
>>> more current than the RPi, but that's not a guarantee...  And I guess 
>>> I could block/turn off DC delivery on BOTH units and add a voltage 
>>> adjustable, current limiting DC injection unit into the line.
>>> 
>>> Thanks.
>>> 
>>> 73,
>>> 
>>> ______________________
>>> Clay Autery, KY5G
>>> MONTAC Enterprises
>>> (318) 518-1389
>>> 
>>> On 6/16/2017 7:26 PM, Tim Lister wrote:
>>>> On Fri, Jun 16, 2017 at 4:40 PM, Gregory Beat <w...@icloud.com> wrote:
>>>>> I have reached the point that I need a 4-port splitter for my GPS antenna 
>>>>> (outdoor 5 volt).  Any recommendations of models 
>>>>> (HP/Symmertricom/Microsemi) to acquire OR to avoid??
>>>> As we recommended to me when I asked a similar question, the Narda
>>>> 4372A-4 was a brand I had not heard of before and didn't come up in 
>>>> 'gps splitter' searches. I got one on ebay for $24 plus a bit extra 
>>>> for DC blocks on the n-1 other ports and it seems to work well and 
>>>> it was handy to have an SMA-based solution as most of the gps 
>>>> receivers and the antenna pucks seem to use SMA. This meant I only 
>>>> needed 1 N to SMA converter cable for an external antenna (which has 
>>>> yet to be externalized...). I found it smaller in real life  than it 
>>>> looks in a lot of the pictures, about the size of a modern 
>>>> smartphone but about double or more the thickness (the connectors are on 
>>>> the ends).
>>>> 
>>>>> greg
>>>>> ---
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Tim
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