I have second floor station with HIGH power to a vertical,  this can be very 
difficult for RF Grounding.  At first RFI and RF in the shack was terrible 
at my QTH. 
 
I would do these two things first, 
 
1). Replace ALL and I mean ALL coax with the LMR-400.  Make sure all 
connectors are tight, check them a second time by hand and tighten them 
again.  This alone kicked the but out of most of my RFI problems. 
 
LMR-400 sheild is superior and the losses at HF are very low,   Remember, 
there are 3 conductors on a coax.  Cheaper coax (RG-8 & 213) will let the RF 
from the Inner shield and conductor escape to the outer sheild.  LMR-400 is 
100% film sheilded with a second wire mesh sheild for a very secure 
transmission line. 
 
2).  Use the Sheilded Ground talked about below.  Use a Coax - LMR-400 is 
better for this but RG-8 is ok -  at the ground rod, connect both Sheild and 
center conductor together.  At the last item in your shack before it goes to 
the antenna ( in my case this is the High Power RFI Low Pass Filter ) 
connect ONLY the center conductor. leave about an inch of the center 
insulating material.  Tape up the end to cover and insulate the sheild that 
was exposed. Then connect every other RF ground to that point. 
 
I have very very little RF on my cases now and thus have never had my Orion 
do any thing weird becarse of RFI.  No flickering on my monitors, nothing in 
my mic, and nothing going funny in my house. 
 
I would not be in a hurry to buy the line isolators and baluns,  At high 
power these tend to over heat,  They are ok for Low power when the antenna 
is at a good SWR. 
 
Best 73's
Rich
K5SF
 From: N0KHQ@aol.com
To: k3cc@fast.net, tentec@contesting.com, orion@contesting.com
Subject: [Orion] Re: Orion - Work in Progress
Date: Mon, 13 Dec 2004 11:26:47 EST  
Hi Skip, 
 
I understand you frustration with the Orion.
My frustration with SDR's began with the purchase of the Jupiter about 3
years ago.  
I know you probably don't want to hear this, but, these rigs are very 
susceptible to RFI. If there is any...and I mean any, stray RF in your 
shack the 
Orion or the Jupiter will find it. 
 
First off, the Orion, like the Jupiter, is nothing more than a computer in
an RF environment inside a transceiver case.  
Special RF Grounding and Power Supply precautions must be taken in  order 
for 
the Orion or Jupiter to perform without incident. I know what  your going 
to 
say, "hey, I never had any problems with my other rigs". Well,  your other 
rigs were not SDR's. 
 
A lot of hams have jumped into the SDR arena without thinking, like  
myself, 
about what they were getting themselves into. SDR's are the next step in  
the 
evolution of ham radio transceivers. By the peak of the next solar cycle 
you 
will see one of the other leading manufacturers of ham radio  transceivers 
come out with an SDR. It could be Icom, they are in the early  stages with 
the 
introduction of the IC-7800. 
 
All of the top rigs out today, TS-870, TS-950SDX, FT9000DX,  IC-7800 and so 
on will be referred to as "Boat Anchors", just like we refer  to the tube 
type 
rigs of yesterday as "Boat Anchors". I know all of these  rigs work great, 
but 
there is a time when a product must evolve to the  next step. And, SDR's 
are 
the next evolutionary step in Amateur  Radio. Whether you, I, or anyone 
else 
likes it or  not......its coming. 
 
If your dead set on getting rid of the Orion, don't waste your time reading
any further. However, if your willing to give it one more shot......keep
reading.  
Firstly, when you hear or read about an Orion owner praising the operation 
of their rig, they are not trying to blow smoke up your butt. It's true,  
the 
Orion is a great rig, and in my opinion, the best rig on the market today 
in 
any price range. 
 
So, here we go! Please follow these instruction exactly. 
 
1. If your running a balanced antenna, purchase a 1:1 50ohm Bal to 50ohm 
Unbal current balun from Radio Works (B1-2K) and install it at the antenna  
feed 
point. This balun will prevent antenna currents from coming down the shield 
of the coax and entering you station and at the same time allow for a 
graceful 
transition from a balanced system to an unbalanced system. 
 
2. If your running an unbalanced antenna, purchase an RF Balun kit from 
Polomar-Engineering and install it at the antenna feed point. For reasons  
above. 
 
3. Purchase from Radio Works a T-4 Line Isolator. This isolator will  
install 
right at the back of the coax connector/s on the Orion. This is a  must do. 
 
4. The power for your Orion, I assume, is coming from a DC Power  Supply 
that 
is plugged into a 115vac circuit. This circuit should be a dedicated  
circuit 
and not shared with other appliances in your home. Appliances in your  
home, 
depending on their load impedance's are dumping reactive currents onto  
your 
service neutrals and grounds. The currents are in the milliamp range and  
could 
create havoc in your power supply depending on how well your power supply  
is 
capable of filtering the incoming AC. 
 
5. What I do is, the DC power cable going from the power supply to the  
Orion 
is wrapped around a 2-1/2" toriod donut, 6 turns one direction and 6 turns 
the opposite and other direction. 
 
6. One of the biggest culprits is the Orion amplifier keying line. This  
line 
should be wrapped around one of those 3/4" x 3/4" x 1-1/4" toriod cubes as 
many times as possible. RS sells them. 
 
7. Now heres a subject that you may or may not have a problem with: RF
Grounding.  
Some hams get a little confused when talking about Grounding for RF and 
Grounding for Lightning protection. They are not the same and should be  
addressed 
separately. Grounding for Lightning protection will do very little for  RF 
grounding. But Grounding for RF will help with Lightning  protection. 
 
Most ham radio books illustrate a typical station grounding system, where 
you have this big copper plate or bar behind your station and every piece 
of 
your equipment is supposed to be grounded to this bar and then a wire runs 
from 
this bar outdoors to a grounding rod. This illustration is 100% totally 
wrong 
 and does result in the biggest ground loop in the history of Amateur  
Radio. 
 
We are talking RF Grounding here and only RF Grounding: 
Heres what you do. There should be only one point of connection for  that 
wire running outdoors and that is at the wing nut on the back  of your 
antenna 
tuner. If you have multiple station grounds disconnect them  and thrown 
them 
away. 
 
>From Ten-Tec purchase a TT-1251 RF Counterpoise Tuner, it comes in kit 
form 
and will require assembly. I chose the 1251 over the MFJ because the 1251 
has 
more inductance available. 
 
>From the wing nut on the back of the antenna tuner run a short piece of 
copper coated metal plumbers tape (its available from Lowes) to the input 
of the 
1251, from the output of the 1251 run a piece of RG-8 coax, only the center 
conductor of the RG-8 will connect to the 1251 the shield will be removed. 
 
Outdoors, at the other end of the RG-8 connect the center conductor and
sheild together.  
This is where you've got to trust me; depending on which frequency you are
having problems with will determine how long you will cut the countrpoise
wire/s.  
Lets say that the transmit operation of the Orion gets squirrely on 40 m. 
Cut a piece of 14ga stranded insulated wire 20' long (.15 wave length) 
connect 
one end of this wire to the shorted end of the RG-8, on the other end of  
the 
14ga wire solder the wire to a 2' piece of 1/2" copper tubing,  stretch the 
wire out and pound the copper tube into the ground below grass  level. 
 
Go back in the house, tune up the antenna tuner for operation on 40m, when 
the SWR is as low as you can get it, then move to the TT-1251. First, turn 
the 
1251 inductor knob for maximum meter reading, then turn the cap knob for 
maximum  meter reading, then go back to the inductor knob and turn for 
maximum 
meter  reading. The 1251 is simply an antenna tuner for your radial system. 
What 
you  have done here is to resonate the other half of the antenna for 
operation 
on the  exact frequency that your operating on. 
 
Using this system and the above suggestions, I can guarantee you that there
will be no stray RF in your shack to interfere with the operation of the
Orion.  
The guys on the reflectors wont see this but: 
 
I am attaching construction details on the RF Tunable Buried Radial System  
I 
run here at the QTH. Other Ten-Tec Orion and Jupiter owners have install 
this 
 system and are very happy with the results. This information is provided 
to 
you for your use. If I didn't have this system installed at my QTH, there  
is 
no way I could try to run the Orion......been there....done that. 
 
In my opinion there are 5 issues that require correcting with the  Orion:
1. Monitor Level to low when listening to you transmitted audio.
2. Sweep Display to slow
3. Sweep Display intermittently freezes when in "Sub RX" and you push the
"Sub RX" "NR" or "AN" buttons. This is corrected by rebooting the Orion.
4. The "BW" issue when in CW and tuning from 1000hz to 100hz.
5. "Sub RX" RF Gain quits working below a setting of 32.  
Last but not least, documentation and updating of the owners operations
manual.  
Ten-Tec has come a long way since the introduction of the Orion a couple of 
years ago. You have got to admire the gutsiness of a small group of folks 
that 
 live in the Smokey Mountains willing to risk it all. I support their 
efforts 
as  I'm sure others do in there willingness to take the next step in the 
evolution  of ham radio transceivers. 
 
I'm posting this information on both reflectors also, I get tired of typing
rather quickly.  
Have fun.........and.........dont give up. 
 
Happy Holidays 
 
 73
John / N0KHQ / St. Louis
  
Always on  18.130 
 
Antennas: 
 
You can build 'em better than you can buy  'em
Please visit the sites below:
_http://www.hamuniverse.com/antennas.html_ (http://www.hamuniverse.com/)
_http://www.cebik.com/n0khq.html_ (http://cebik.com/nokhq/html)  
 
 
 
 
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