[Premium-Rx] FS: HF RECEIVER MULTICOUPLER(FROM DRAKE7-LINESTATION)
K0DAN
k0dan at comcast.net
Tue Apr 24 21:10:47 EDT 2012
Hi Ed, et. al.....
Wow this innocent post on my part really got over-analyzed!
FWIW the Drake splitter was a small PC board with a pair of toroid's and a
few components, which worked great allowing the TR7 and R7 "twins" to
multi-receive, provided the input band device (I think this was before we
talked about "roofing filters") was at or below the second receiver's
operating frequency. For me, this was in the early 80's and I really enjoyed
that station for both amateur TX/RX and simul-receive utility monitoring.
The Drake multicoupler was a simple passive device, but worked very well in
the HF spectrum, especially where the noise floor allowed the user to give
up a few dB in sensitivity.
The Drake circuit was nothing complex, it was just a bit unusual for its
timer, at least in amateur use. It has been sitting idle here for some time,
and I am in "reduce inventory mode", so that's why it's up for sale (and
also spoken for).
There was a time when I had an 8-port active multicoupler, and when you
split a signal that many times you need some gain to compensate for the
circuit losses, but to just have one AUX receiver, 3DB is often an
acceptable loss.
A previous poster mentioned the simple resistor splitter, which is
definitely an option, but the slightly-more complex balun passive splitter
(not necessarily Drake) provides a flat/broadband approach to the entire HF
spectrum. Not bad for a handful of components without the need for AC/DC
power!
Sadly, this is simple tradecraft which is being lost...we should try to
perpetuate it. Your splitter circuit board might be useful to some
young-'un.
Have fun!
73
dan
k0dan
-----Original Message-----
From: Ed Tanton
Sent: April 24, 2012 04:57 PM
To: Premium Receivers
Subject: Re: [Premium-Rx] FS: HF RECEIVER MULTICOUPLER(FROM
DRAKE7-LINESTATION)
Years ago I noticed that balun in their catalog, or online, and talked to
Drake about it. Bought one, and have it around somewhere. Really nice little
guy. I figured sometime I might want to simply split off some 50 ohm
receiving something, and that made as simple a solution as I have ever
thought of. Always nice to have a passive, flat, 50ohm second receiving
output.
Ed Tanton
website: http://www.n4xy.com
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