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11 meter bandpass filter

According to this image this filter is crap.
As promised.
Roll off starts to happen at below 25 and above 30. So if your a freebander you are probably OK. My cables suck and I had to use adapters to get to PL259 so inband insertion loss is actually .2 dBm not 1.
View attachment 42028

Look at popular Bencher YA-1.
Bencher-YA-1-9kHz-100MHz-1kHz-RBW.jpg

So, for 1st harmonic attenuation YA-1 is light years ahead. Checkmate.
IMG_0055.JPG
 
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You know, I don't. Please educate me.
You use bandpass filters to be able to transmit and receive on different bands at the same time. For example: you have 2 radios. 10 and 11m. When you transmit on one of them, the other is deaf because of the other transmitting. With bandpass filters you can use them both at the same time.
For harmonics get quality low pass filter, it will do the job.
Mike
 
Ok. Thanks. I thought a band pass filter would be good to keep out everything that wasn't 11m with the hope of making 11m quieter. I guess my ignorance is showing.
 
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Ok. Thanks. I thought a band pass filter would be good to keep out everything that wasn't 11m with the hope of making 11m quieter. I guess my ignorance is showing.


See screenshot from other thread. “Attenuating Harmonics”, isn’t the same question. (Use of a Low Pass Filter).

Bandpass Filters are used in Contesting to avoid interference with others on adjacent bands (and vice-versa).

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Ok. Thanks. I thought a band pass filter would be good to keep out everything that wasn't 11m with the hope of making 11m quieter. I guess my ignorance is showing.


CB Radio had a reputation of causing interference with close-by television station reception. A reputation that lingered after radio circuitry additions and changes after the 1960s. A Low Pass Filter was used to avoid interference from HF to VHF & UHF.

TV “gone digital” removed the affected portion of radio spectrum to ones higher. To the point most LPF manufacturers no longer offer these devices (see used market).

I’d have one in a mobile (assuming it checked out for operation; wasn’t damaged), except that physical size means a more difficult installation.

The quite-small BP filter I’m using makes no manufacturers claim to harmonics attenuation. It has worked so far as I’m concerned in cleaning up what the transceiver has to deal with (amateur gear has far more “ability” built-in to filter signal).

Between the DSP filter and the BP filter, the former is an outstanding success in this experiment of trying some amateur gear with CB radios. The BP, less so. A marginal versus MAJOR addition.

The amp brand I’ve been using claims LP attenuation, but I’ve not had that tested. The RM ITALY 27/586 LPF “may” be the same circuitry, and when available is about $45.00.

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tried this 27mHz band filter out just now between the radio and the amp. SWR is now bad on the radio side and the antenna side with <10w input.

The low pass filter on the radio side fixed the radio-to-amp SWR, (SWR with or without LPF is always fine on antenna side) but this thing ruins both radio and antenna sides. :(

more noodlin on this is required....
 
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tried this 27mHz band filter out just now between the radio and the amp. SWR is now bad on the radio side and the antenna side with <10w input.

The low pass filter on the radio side fixed the radio-to-amp SWR, (SWR with or without LPF is always fine on antenna side) but this thing ruins both radio and antenna sides. :(

more noodlin on this is required....


Ran the provided exterior studs with woven, braided strap to ground?

.
 
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