FCM wrote:Thanks for the reply guys. We are using two antenna seperated about 8 ft or so apart. Frequency is 146.700 tx - offset. We are using rg58 coax jumper from the tx side to a 100 watt amp and running hardline from the amp to the lightning arrestor and out to the antenna. On the rx side we are sharing the antenna with a uhf repeater with no issues. Note.. the suspected desense problem existed from the beginning, before we added the amp. Output was 25 watts previously. Transmit is fine , no issues there at all. Yes, I programmed the desktrac to ham frequencies directly without any previous testing. It was previously setup on 154... Everything works great when you are in close range to the site..1/2 mile or so, and worsens when you move away. I also heard about loose rx cable issues in the receiver and mini uhf connector issues. I can check those. Thanks for all the responses and ideas on this topic. Maybe I should just take it to the shop and let them check it with the proper equipment and move on from there. Any more ideas Ill take them for sure!
This is a great board and great people , I used it back in 2000 to learn how to set up a stx portable, rss, rib, labtool, super lab and all that fun stuff!
Yes,,stx portable (the brick)..
Thanks
Frank
First off, RG-58 is trash cable when it comes to repeater operation. There is not enough shielding to prevent leakage.
Second, your antennas don't have enough isolation at only 8 feet apart.
Bottom line is that you need at least 70 db of isolation between the RX and TX ports. It would be even better if you had closer to 100 db of isolation. How ever you get this isolation, that is what it takes for a good repeater to function.
You can obtain isolation in a number of ways. Frequency separation is one. But when running repeaters, your limited in what that separation can be. You can get isolation from antenna separation. Go do some homework on just how many feet that takes. It is large. The use of a duplexer can supply most of the isolation. Last, the use of good coax, like "HELIAX" or another cable like it. The use of coax with just a single copper braid is not a good choice at all.
Go fix you isolation problem and then come back with additional questions.
Jim