Thanks Cortland.
The terminology they use is somewhat different than what most of us
would use. What they call a field strength meter in the CATV
industry is actually a frequency selective voltmeter - a basic
tunable receiver. Those meters have a video output intended to drive
a scope, which many have used to see power line noise signatures.
But exactly what is output on that port I honestly don't know. I may
have to buy one and look at what comes out of that port on my 100
MHz scope in the shop to figure it out. It's probably supposed to be
obvious, but... not to me.
73,
Paul Kelley, N1BUG
RFI Committee chair,
Piscataquis Amateur Radio Club
On 12/30/2012 12:35 PM, Cortland Richmond wrote:
Paul,
Even an audio scope is good enough if you first rectify the RF to
recover the envelope. I presume that's what they were talking about WRT
the Sadelco (etc.) FS meter. These old CB meters' sensitivity increases
with frequency (until the sampling baod nears resonance, anyway) but you
can use a toroidal style meter to get a pretty level response.
For DIY directional couplers, check out (for example)
http://www.hoaglun.com/blog/2010/1/16/directional-coupler-version-two.html
Cortland
KA5S
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