Just occurred to me that I had both preamps engaged in radio 2 which is an
IC746. It's S-meter seems overly generous anyways. Looks like 2nd and 3rd
harmonics are more like S9+10dB with no preamps on. (only time I would need
them would be maybe on a quiet 10m band to pull out super weak signals).the
initial "spike" is higher, which I think is a function of the Icom digital S
meters which I really don't like.
So, at constant S9+10dB readings (initial spike higher).solid dashes @ 30wpm
CW.am I safe?
Is there a better way to measure? FM mode? Readings with a scope of some
kind or ?
Thanks
Mike VE9AA
Mike, Coreen & Corey
Keswick Ridge, NB
From: Mike & Coreen Smith VE9AA [mailto:ve9aa@nbnet.nb.ca]
Sent: January 20, 2015 5:40 PM
To: 'cq-contest@contesting.com'
Subject: SO2R technical questions
How can I tell if I have too much energy at the input of "radio 2" when
transmitting on "radio 1" ?
I've done a few DXpeditions and field days (CY0AA, CY9AA etc.) and we had
some cheapie bandpass filters and some rapidly made crappy coax stubs
(without using any kind of device other than a calculator and a measuring
tape to verify the correct lengths).
At times we operated w/o one or both (both LP and QRO) and sure, we had
interference, but nobody blew up a rig.
Now nearly 2 decades later I am just barely dipping my toe into the SO2R
waters so with N1MM+'s help, today hooked up my Winkey to 2 rigs (IC7410 &
746) and when transmitting on a wide variety of antennas on radio one
(HF9V, A3S, Inverted L's for 80/160), and limiting radio 2 to only a ZS6BKW
as an inverted Vee (G5RV like) antenna about 50-60' away from all the
various antennas, harmonics were fair to bad, but not what I would call
severe. (no stubs, no BPF's, nuttin' but air).
CW peaks looked like around *50-60/S9 and steady dits were *40/9 if those
cheezie Icom bar-graph S-meters are to be believed. *(if I was on the exact
2nd or 3rd harmonic frequency)
Is this too much signal?
I can build some coax stubs over time...and I am working on a YCCC SO2R box
as time permits but don't have a lot of spare dough for BPF's (2 of them
would run me $1200-$1400 CDN by the time I had them in the shack)
nor a SIX-PAK(another $1k_), thus I am wondering about cutting costs going
in. Another local tried SO2R, didn't like it and had spent many thousands.
I don't have the spare dosh, nor will I, hence my question..
If I am willing to leave the amp turned off (sigh..), and antennas will all
be separated only 50', how do I know if I have too much signal at the input
of the 'other' radio?
Oh and feel free to school me on SO2R...I have nearly googled the internet
dry, so have done lots of reading, so if you have a web page up, I've likely
seen it ;-) Just never tried it.
Technique is what I lack.
I figured it was time. I find myself (especially in CW contests) calling CQ
and ALT-TABBING over to check my email, surf the net, watch the greyline
maps, stare out the window , talking to family etc. a LOT in contests.
Is SO2R the next step?
Mike VE9AA
p.s.- I will sorely miss using the amp, but if I try SO2R @ 100w and like
it, maybe I can stumble onto some cheap 419 BPF's and a 6-pack somewhere
later on. I don't care a hoot about automation. I like to flick the
switches manually.
Mike, Coreen & Corey
Keswick Ridge, NB
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