I am planning to build, in the next couple of days, the couplers needed
to test this idea. To revisit it, I have qn inexpensive RF-controlled
8-way band switch, and several people suggested that I should couple the
RF from the "remote" to my feedline, and pick it off the other end, to
eliminate path losses over the ~300 foot range.
This seems plausible to me, but as usual I'm having trouble figuring out
the specifics. Say I take a piece of RG-59, remove the jacket and the
shield braid, and then couple the output from the remote to the center
conductor moni-match style. Should I lay the coupling wire parallel to
the center conductor, or should I wind it around the insulated center
conductor? What sort of total length for the coupling wire would give
best results at ~315 MHz? Any difference in the design of the coupler
on the receiving end?
I assume I should pull the braid back over the "coupler" section - is
that right? If I have common mode chokes (#31 toroids) on both ends of
the feedline, will it be better to have the couplers between the chokes,
or doesn't it matter, since the UHF RF will presumably be going by
differential mode?
--
73, Pete N4ZR
The World Contest Station Database, updated daily at www.conteststations.com
The Reverse Beacon Network at http://reversebeacon.net, blog at
reversebeacon.blogspot.com,
spots at telnet.reversebeacon.net, port 7000 AND now
at arcluster.reversebeacon.net port 7000
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