Love it Scott. As a fellow 12v electronics fan love seeing your integration in the GTi. Great work as always my friend. Love the evolution of your channel.
Thanks! It doesn't help that the manufacturers market and sell them as "duplexers." I'm not sure why they do that unless it's a language issue (most are Japanese units). Thanks for visiting!
Glad you enjoyed it! Oddly enough, my recent overhaul removed this setup. I'm working on its replacement now. Having NINE antennas mounted has expanded my options. HAHA! Thanks for visiting!
No diagrams, unfortunately. I sort of pulled a "mad scientist" execution to make things work. These days, though, I have enough antennas on the roof that I no longer need this network of diplexers. Instead, I have them spread out in different ways to cover more bands and more radios. Thanks for visiting!
Agreed! At the time, my priority was to hide the fact that I'm packing ham gear by minimizing my antenna count. Today, my setup is far more conspicuous and has more antennas. See my channel's main page for more info. It's a bit insane. Thanks for visiting!
Two radios, one vhf and one uhf. Using this with a single dual band antenna, can I transmit at the same time on both radios? Reason I ask is I’m going to use the vhf for aprs so it may beacon while I’m on uhf
I THINK it will work. Well, I know they'll both transmit. What I don't know is whether the receivers are exposed to anything at the time. Send an e-mail to Comet. I found them to be very responsive to technical e-mail questions. Let me know what they say. Thanks for visiting.
So many adapters, so much loss. It would be illegal (even if the FCC doesn't enforce it) to mars mod your ham radio and TX in GMRS, but it would remove so much loss. Maybe getting a part 90 radio that does all of 70cm so you can do both ham and GMRS on that legally would allow you to use both in those rare times, but I don't know of any part 90 mobile radios that also does 2m. Anyway, cool to see. I haven't played with diplexers so it's interesting to see how you're using them.
I thought about the losses, too. The insertion loss is 0.2-dB per box (0.1-dB on VHF). The CF-706 is the worst, at 0.4-dB. The HF path loses just 0.2-dB before exiting beneath the car. Given my short transmission paths, I wonder if the 0.8-dB (max) is similar to what home owners might see with longer coax lengths. I honestly don't know. But I can say that I could not measure a difference in received FM repeater signals on the radio. That's not to say there are not losses... but I do not perceive them. Should I find myself contesting and looking to maximize my signals, I'd take the time to bypass all diplexers and use straight coax. I might even remove the CF-706 since its only purpose is to combine 6m with the rest. I almost never use 6m. Thanks for visiting.
Appreciate the ham radio content… as well as how power and cables are run through the GTI! 👏👏👏
I'm glad you find the content helpful! Thanks for watching!
Love it Scott. As a fellow 12v electronics fan love seeing your integration in the GTi. Great work as always my friend. Love the evolution of your channel.
Thanks 👍 It's still evolving, too. Each coming video seems to show more things that I'm stuffing into this little car! LOL!
Great video to go along with your great installation!
Thanks! 👍 I appreciate your comment!
Glad you know the what a diplexer is, a lot of hams don't no the difference! (they would call it a duplexer)
Thanks! It doesn't help that the manufacturers market and sell them as "duplexers." I'm not sure why they do that unless it's a language issue (most are Japanese units). Thanks for visiting!
@@StealthGTI I think it's hype, makes the part sound very important. But you and I know better.
Beautiful
Thank you! Cheers!
Another fantastic video thanks 73 from kb2uew
Glad you enjoyed it! Oddly enough, my recent overhaul removed this setup. I'm working on its replacement now. Having NINE antennas mounted has expanded my options. HAHA! Thanks for visiting!
Do you have a Diagram of that build?
No diagrams, unfortunately. I sort of pulled a "mad scientist" execution to make things work. These days, though, I have enough antennas on the roof that I no longer need this network of diplexers. Instead, I have them spread out in different ways to cover more bands and more radios. Thanks for visiting!
Interesting setup, the only negative I see is the (likely substantial) amount of loss from all of those cables and connections, especially on UHF.
Agreed! At the time, my priority was to hide the fact that I'm packing ham gear by minimizing my antenna count. Today, my setup is far more conspicuous and has more antennas. See my channel's main page for more info. It's a bit insane. Thanks for visiting!
Two radios, one vhf and one uhf. Using this with a single dual band antenna, can I transmit at the same time on both radios? Reason I ask is I’m going to use the vhf for aprs so it may beacon while I’m on uhf
I THINK it will work. Well, I know they'll both transmit. What I don't know is whether the receivers are exposed to anything at the time. Send an e-mail to Comet. I found them to be very responsive to technical e-mail questions. Let me know what they say. Thanks for visiting.
Dig the ham radio content!
Thanks!
So many adapters, so much loss. It would be illegal (even if the FCC doesn't enforce it) to mars mod your ham radio and TX in GMRS, but it would remove so much loss. Maybe getting a part 90 radio that does all of 70cm so you can do both ham and GMRS on that legally would allow you to use both in those rare times, but I don't know of any part 90 mobile radios that also does 2m.
Anyway, cool to see. I haven't played with diplexers so it's interesting to see how you're using them.
I thought about the losses, too. The insertion loss is 0.2-dB per box (0.1-dB on VHF). The CF-706 is the worst, at 0.4-dB. The HF path loses just 0.2-dB before exiting beneath the car. Given my short transmission paths, I wonder if the 0.8-dB (max) is similar to what home owners might see with longer coax lengths. I honestly don't know. But I can say that I could not measure a difference in received FM repeater signals on the radio. That's not to say there are not losses... but I do not perceive them. Should I find myself contesting and looking to maximize my signals, I'd take the time to bypass all diplexers and use straight coax. I might even remove the CF-706 since its only purpose is to combine 6m with the rest. I almost never use 6m. Thanks for visiting.
And here i am with my tyt and a diamond quad band antenna 😢
HAHA! Check out my KE4WMF playlist. Things have gotten out of control since making this video. ;-) Thanks for visiting!