This forum is for discussions regarding System Infrastructure and Related Equipment. This includes but is not limited to repeaters, base stations, consoles, voters, Voice over IP, system design and implementation, and other related topics.
The MTR2000 has a VSWR limit (I believe as low as 1.3:1 for some models). If the station is keyed and the limit is reached the station will stop transmitting. You must unkey the station then rekey to transmit again. I realize that ultimately correcting the high VSWR would solve this problem but, does anyone know of a method to change (increase) the VRSW limit, or have the station ignore it so as not to shutdown.
You could also install an isolator (and accompanying harmonic filter) on the output of the transmitter. Reflected power from the antenna would be sent to the isolator's dummy load instead of being reflected back to the MTR2000.
HumHead wrote:You could also install an isolator (and accompanying harmonic filter) on the output of the transmitter. Reflected power from the antenna would be sent to the isolator's dummy load instead of being reflected back to the MTR2000.
The MTR2k already has as an isolator in it... depending on what PA you have you could even have more than one. The 100W versions have a single stage and the 30-40W ones have a dual stage one at least in UHF which are the ones I usually deal with.
The real solution is to fix the antenna / duplexer problems.
Adding another one hides the fact from the MTR that there is a problem. It better has a large dummy load on the circulator. The internal circulator load is likely where they measure the reflected power that triggers a shutdown.
Nand wrote:Adding another one hides the fact from the MTR that there is a problem. It better has a large dummy load on the circulator. The internal circulator load is likely where they measure the reflected power that triggers a shutdown.
Nand.
I'm sure that's how they do it. It's that way on the MSF5000's and on a couple of GE amplifiers that I have. But again, it doesn't solve the real problem, only hides it from the MTR.