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Re: [TowerTalk] Field Day

To: "Chris Hoelzle" <choelzle@cox.net>, "'Richard \(Rick\) Karlquist'" <richard@karlquist.com>, <towertalk@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Field Day
From: "Jim Thomson" <jim.thom@telus.net>
Date: Mon, 3 Jul 2017 11:39:07 -0700
List-post: <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com>
###  agreed,  But here we are talking about 2 stations on the SAME band,
like 40m CW..and 40M SSB. On a side note, back in the 70s, I had my Drake line
on a 80m inverted vee.   Also had a yaesu FRDX-400 receiver on an hy-gain
18avt. Like an idiot, I tuned the yaesu onto the TX freq of the drake..pegging the S meter... with the 2 x ants aprx 80 ft apart. Switched the hb 4-1000 from stand by to... operate..and burned out the front end coils on the yaesu Tube RX.

## I just about fried the across the street ham neighbours yaseu he had at the time. All his meters would start jumping up and down, even when shut off. RF also got into his myriad of speaker wiring, with 8 speakers in series parallel, all over his home. Even shut off, and 120 vac un plugged from the wall, the RF would get into the spkr wires, flow to his heath AR-15 stereo RX... then get rectified..and the dc produced, would travel back down the speaker wires into the speakers.. making popping noises.

## another ham drove across town with his mobile rig on 80m ssb, just a few yrs back. When he got 3 blocks away, I shut it all down, and ditto with his icom 720. Last thing either of us wanted was more burned out front ends. All I had to do was cough and trip the
vox, with a kw..and poof, up in smoke.

## ICE depicts a half decent roll off with their 200w, 50 khz wide 30M band pass filter. Its been
around for a long time now.

Jim  VE7RF



-----Original Message----- From: Chris Hoelzle
Sent: Monday, July 03, 2017 11:14 AM
To: 'Richard (Rick) Karlquist' ; 'Jim Thomson' ; towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: RE: [TowerTalk] Field Day

I have done Field Day many times and for many years we just had to endure
cross band interference, noise, clicks and so on

One year, the boss brought a group of filters.

If I was on 20 meters, I would put the 20 meter filter on my xcvr. The
fellow on 40 meters would put the 40 meter filter on his xcvr.

The difference was amazing.  MUCH less cross band noise.
The threat is that if the operator changes bands he will blow the filter,
but as long as he stays on his given band, it makes it better for all other
operators.

NN6CH
Chris Hoelzle
choelzle@cox.net
Laguna Niguel, CA
-----Original Message-----
From: TowerTalk [mailto:towertalk-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of
Richard (Rick) Karlquist
Sent: Monday, July 03, 2017 11:03 AM
To: Jim Thomson; towertalk@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] Field Day



On 7/3/2017 9:13 AM, Jim Thomson wrote:
From: Grant Saviers <grants2@pacbell.net>

We experience lot's of buzz from cw into ssb, need to get as far up
the band as possible.  Reverse also true.  About the same level of
trouble

Grant KZ1W

##  band pass filters, each being 7000-7300, probably are not going to do
much good,
if 2 x xcvrs used on the same band, say 40m cw..and 40m ssb.   Heres a
thought though.
I see ICE and others make band pass filters for the warc bands, like 100
khz wide for 17+12M,
and only 50 khz wide for 30M band.    If they can make a 50 khz wide band
pass filter for 30M
band, they, or somebody should be able to make any BW  filter you want.
IE:  say 7000-7050,

Jim  VE7RF

I am extremely skeptical that any off the shelf filter for 30 meters is only
50 kHz wide, simply based on the fact that the band is 50 kHz wide.
That is only 1/2%.

It is worth reading "Field Day Filters" (April 1973 QST, page 18).
The authors made a fairly serious attempt at building helical resonator
filters.  Even with this technology, the authors state that the filters they
built are not sufficiently selective to do much good in terms of separating
the phone and CW sub-bands.

A better strategy is to use separate receive antennas (as opposed to
receiving on the transmit antennas).  That gives a lot of flexibility to
combat interference in its own right.  We had a lot of success with this at
K6AO ten years ago.

It also allows receive only filters to be constructed.  Receive only filters
actually have a chance of separating sub bands because they can be allowed
to have significant insertion loss and they don't have power and voltage
handling issues.

Rick N6RK
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