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Passive & Active Repeaters Amateur and Television By Kevin Custer W3KKC |
While this writeup covers a TV application, the principles are the same. In this case RF is RF.
I have a situation where a cable tv headend is located about 2.5 miles from one of my ham repeater sites. I knew of a situation where a cable operator needed a way to improve a tv station's signal that was on the other side of my repeater site. The TV station, WHAG in Hagerstown MD, inquired about a way to produce a P5 quality picture at the cable system headend. We originally discussed receiving the TV station on frequency at the repeater site and then microwaving it to the cable headend. The signal at the cable headend direct from the station was near non-existent, we measured below -35 dBmV. The signal at my repeater site just two and a half air miles away was +15 dBmV. The repeater site is located on a mountain at over 2,900 feet ground elevation, the elevation at the cable headend was over 500 feet lower and the mountain was blocking the signal from the TV station. I decided to place two back to back directional TV antennas at the repeater site, one pointed to the station and one to the headend, coupled with high grade low-loss cable. The result was a signal that was non existent now became quite watchable. The signal at the headend was nearly -20 dBmV, and on UHF, that's not a bad picture.
I then decided to add some gain to the system. I placed a Jerrold JLX line extender (a cable TV booster amplifier) in the line between the two antennas. I was able to get away with 35 dB of gain before the system oscillated, so a gain of 20 dB was settled on for unconditional stability. This then produced a signal at the headend of nearly 0dBmV and nearly P5 (perfect) picture. Because the line extender has operational bandwidth in the UHF amateur band, the UHF repeater at the site overloads the line extender, so band pass filtering before, and after the line extender was added. Since this device doesn't produce a signal greater than 100 mW it doesn't need to be licensed. Professional grade cut-to-frequency antennas were used to allow maximum gain on channel and minimum adjacent response.
In this particular scenario, we were able to produce a good picture with no amplifier. The added amplifier allows a near perfect picture to be rebroadcast over the cable TV system. Other viewers using outside antennas also benefit. Because of this situation, the TV station agreed to pay my electric bill and has agreed to place a standby generator at the site. This system places NBC 25 WHAG Hagerstown, MD into 20,000 additional homes west of my repeater site in southwestern PA.
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Copyright ©1999 and the date of the last update by Kevin Custer W3KKC
The information presented in this web site, on these web pages and in these modifications and conversions is © Copyrighted 1995 - current by Kevin Custer W3KKC and multiple originating authors.