I was lucky. I was looking for a GPS splitter a few months ago. Since I wasn't in a big hurry I had the luxury of time to hunt. I picked up a GPS Networking LNFA1X4-N for under $50. File that success under even a blind squirrel sometimes finds an acorn. It is an active splitter that provides just enough gain to overcome the splitter losses. It can accept DC power for itself and for pass through to an active GPS antenna from any of the four receiver ports without back feeding voltage to receivers on other ports.

I was concerned that this splitter and my Symmetricom 58532A antenna wouldn't operate if all of my receivers were 3.3V but both seem to work perfectly well with either 3.3V or 5V.

Paul, N1BUG


On 4/30/20 1:37 PM, b...@att.net wrote:
I use splitters for broadcast satellite stuffs all the time.  My
preference is for splitters that have diodes so that all receivers
can provide LNB power and at the same time not back-feed any of the
other receivers. That way, if any of the receivers fails, any of the
remaining receivers can provide LNB power to keep the system up and
operating. I would want my GPS system to operate the same way.

However, here in my home shoppe I have two DATUM 9300-53054 receivers
running 24-7, and on UPS.  They are each on their own antenna.

Burt, K6OQK

On April 30, 2020 10:11:55 AM PDT, Chris Quayle <sys...@gfsys.co.uk>
wrote:
On 04/30/20 17:00, time-nuts-requ...@lists.febo.com wrote:
Re: GPS antenna splitter recommendation? (John Ackermann N8UR)

Usually a lurker here, but a couple of points. The best splitters
are those designed for the task, such as the HP or symmetricom 4
way boxes seen from time to time on Ebay, though typically
expensive.

There are various issues:

1) The gps receiver will throw a fault if the antenna dc load is missing, though a simple fixed resistor load takes care of that.

2) The commercial units provide low noise gain to make up for the loss in a passive output splitter.

3) Typically, only one of the receiver ports is specified to
provide the antenna power and also internal preamp power, with dc
isolation for the rest.

Can't see that a passive splitter would be an ideal solution
without serious hackery, when you could build one using the cheap
uhf amp gain block pcb's widely available now...

Regards,

Chris

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