Hi all,
After being off the air for about a month, I recently made some changes to the satellite setup. I upgraded from the TH-D7A(G) HT to the TM-D710A mobile dual bander. Yes, a bit bulkier, but worth its weight. Anyhow, I know many sat operators use the Arrow antenna setup, like what I've been using the past 7 or so months with great results. However, I've always known that the diplexer that comes with the unit is reather lossy. From some reports I've read as much as 2.65dB of loss. That's almost half of whats being received or transmitted being thrown away. When I layed out the new portable setup I made it an issue to "lose" the diplexer and put one in line that would perform better. I purchased the Comet CF-416. It's loss is about .26dB. A considerably less amount by far and if needed in other applications it can handle more power than the 10 watts alotted for the Arrow's diplexer. I also bought some good quality RG-58 coax, only 6 feet in length, for both 145 and 440, so there isn't much loss from this. About .6dB according to the data sheet.
After the assembly and installation was complete, on air usage was next. AO-27 had a fairly decent pass to the east of the QTH with a max elevation of 24 degrees. I've remembered how the passes sounded previously at this elevation so I could get a mental comparison. As the bird's timer turned the digital transmission on I noticed one thing immediately, the signal was clearer and no hiss. The analog timer swtiched on and the voices became copiable. The signal appeared to be a bit stronger than the old setup with the Arrow antenna but the most remarkable improvement was from the time I started to receive the signal to near LOS, it never once dropped out! It almost appeared as though I changed my linear antenna to a CP with a preamp.
I figured this is too good to be true. I then decided to test it with AO-51 and see how well that bodes. I noticed I was copying the signal closer to the horizon than the previous set up and again the same results with no drop outs, except for the one time the house blocked the signal for about 20 seconds.
So if anybody is considering improving their current Arrow antenna, please do so by getting a better diplexer. They are not expensive, $40 to $60, and of course some decent coax, short runs are better but give yourself enough slack so you don't cut yourself short!
See you on the birds!
73,
Jeff WB3JFS Las Vegas, NV DM26