Hi Jim,
You ask
"What is the RF path for antenna switching in the SB220?"
Not sure what you are meaning to ask here.  Please clarify.
Joe WB9SBD
Sig
The Original Rolling Ball Clock
Idle Tyme
Idle-Tyme.com
http://www.idle-tyme.com
On 3/3/2018 4:40 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
 
On 3/3/2018 12:09 PM, Joe wrote:
 BUT I may have fixed it by accident. I have been in the process or 
bringing an old dead SB-220 back to life, and have put it inplace 
this morning, so cabling has changed greatly in the shack. And the 
problem may be gone now by just changing out all the cables? 
 
 Lots of problems like this are caused by a bad piece of coax, or coax 
with a poor shield connection (or no shield connection). Under normal 
operation, current on the center conductor returns on the shield, so 
the field stays within the coax. When there's no shield connection, 
current returns on whatever path Mother Nature finds, and there's a 
strong field OUTSIDE the coax. That field radiates, and also 
magnetically (inductively) couples to anything around it.
 What is the RF path for antenna switching in the SB220? Many unwashed 
engineers used the chassis as return rather than running coax. This 
creates the same sort of problem inside the amp -- current returns on 
the chassis rather than the coax shield, so it produces EM and 
magnetic fields. GOOD amp designers use coax for everything in the RF 
path.
73, Jim K9YC
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