Create a Band Reject Filter using Coax - OPEN STUB VERSION (049a)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 84

  • @walteranderson7889
    @walteranderson7889 Год назад +5

    You sir are one of the RUclips "elite" when it comes to teaching and presentations. We are fortunate to have folks like you out there.
    73, KC2IQW

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Thank you so much for the encouragement! 🙂

  • @spaceshantynow1851
    @spaceshantynow1851 9 месяцев назад +2

    That was one of the most clearly explained examples of a radio related topic that I’m always on the verge of sorta understanding. Thanks for the focused instruction!

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  9 месяцев назад

      Thank you very much for the encouragement. I do try to make it reachable! 🙂

  • @ElPasoTubeAmps
    @ElPasoTubeAmps 2 месяца назад

    The magic of quarter wave stub tuning. Great demonstration.

  • @Dreamlgider
    @Dreamlgider Год назад +2

    i did this way back when. When i talked on 70cm repeater our tv would go bonkers, i made this band reject filter on the repeater freq and placed it on the tv/ant feedline. (i made one for 2m too just in case.)
    Worked a treat, i could talk on the repeater while the rest watched tv.

  • @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE
    @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE Год назад +1

    I'm a returning radio ham after a 4 decade plus break and am watching your videos in my 70s to refresh and relearn. Thank-you for producing and pitching them so well. Your videos explain basic and advanced information without talking down or going over the student's head. From my own teaching experience, that alone, is quite a skill. Thank-you.

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Thank you for the encouragement and you are very welcome. It is my pleasure to produce these videos. 🙂

  • @pasixty6510
    @pasixty6510 Год назад +1

    Thank you very much for this thorough tutorial. There’s much more to (coaxial) cables than the average user knows. I somehow feel tempted to call you Mr Cable…

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Glad you found it helpful! LOL on Mr. Cable! ;-D

  • @alfredoandrade2585
    @alfredoandrade2585 Год назад +1

    I learned a lot from your video Sir. You're the best. It all explains well and clear. Thank you very much.

  • @MrZerohour1967
    @MrZerohour1967 Год назад +1

    Great lesson, we well presented and easy to understand. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us.

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Thank you and you are very welcome! 🙂

  • @rfdave3980
    @rfdave3980 Год назад +2

    Mr. Gable thank you. So interesting.

  • @TigersToys
    @TigersToys Год назад +3

    Wow! You are fantastic! Such clear presentations and no wasted time. I just subscribed and I'm certainly going to share your channel with all my buddies. I don't understand why you don't have hundreds of thousands of subscribers. We need to get the word out. Keep up the great work!

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Thanks, man! 🙂 Welcome to the "family!"

  • @davideimprota5817
    @davideimprota5817 4 месяца назад

    Very clear and informative. I have learnt something more on the stubs I did not know before. Thanks!

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  4 месяца назад

      Thank you! I am so glad that this was helpful for you. 🙂

  • @izzzzzz6
    @izzzzzz6 Год назад +1

    Thanks. These two videos are exactly what i was looking for. Amazing teaching skills!

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      You're welcome and thanks, too! I am glad that you found them helpful! 🙂

  • @Kref3
    @Kref3 4 месяца назад

    Thanks a lot for your explanations. I am an electric engineer in the high voltage power transmission field (gas insulated high voltage switchgears) and while I have learned this more than two decades ago, I have not used it ever since and as we all know: use it or lose it.
    Now I had to dig into this again, because when we commission a new switchgear, we do a partial discharge measurement and we measure the PD signals by detecting their UHF signals. Sometimes there are background noises making the measurement in the time domain impossible, although this is required to check for particular patterns. So now I start using spec analyzers to determine the disturbances and build specific stub filters which then allow me to measure in the time domain without any interference.
    Your video was really helpful to bring the stuff back to mind.

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  4 месяца назад

      WOW! And, this stuff can be a bit of a head breaker! I'm so glad that these videos are helping to bring all this R.F. magic back into memory! 🙂

  • @junkman2758
    @junkman2758 Год назад +1

    Wow that’s some heavy knowledge there

  • @mi0hoz
    @mi0hoz Год назад +1

    I just built a 7 MHz version using your design with Westflex 103 and I am getting 60dB of attenuation on 7 MHz and 21 MHz. Exactly what I need for running on 2 bands next weekend.

  • @mbrun965
    @mbrun965 Год назад +1

    Love your videos, explanations and examples. Thank you.

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      You are welcome! We have *fun* together!

  • @mandh14
    @mandh14 Месяц назад

    Great presentation sir, subbed.

  • @dennisqwertyuiop
    @dennisqwertyuiop Год назад +1

    as always great information,,,get ready to shovel snow,, thur

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Thanks, Dennis. We'll see how much snow we *really* get.

  • @w2aew
    @w2aew Год назад +1

    Nice job!

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Thanks! It was great fun! And the next one will be just as much fun, but a bit tougher.

  • @M7XCB
    @M7XCB Год назад +1

    Very interesting information.

  • @washingtonstatepicker3460
    @washingtonstatepicker3460 Год назад

    Love your videos! Thank you!

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      Thank you so much! I am glad you are finding them helpful! 🙂

  • @louiskatzclay
    @louiskatzclay Год назад

    This was great,, it fit my limited knowledge perfect.

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад

      I'm so glad you found it helpful! Thanks! 🙂

  • @pcmultimedia1
    @pcmultimedia1 11 месяцев назад +1

    I remember years ago I used an inductor and a trim capacitor , tuned it to the 7Mhz sound subcarrier on a tv signal,, put it in the aerial line with a T piece , this confused the hell
    out of a tv engineer when I said I’m have trouble with my tv , I don’t
    have sound but good pictures .

  • @jasonfrankovich1378
    @jasonfrankovich1378 Год назад

    Any info on the variable capacitor? Did you make it or buy it? Any part numbers would be great. I want to create some stubs to reject my CW on field day. Great video!

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад +2

      Thanks! The variable capacitor that I showed in the video actually came off of an old hybrid ring duplexer which sports one of them for each ring/cavity. I do not know where someone would buy one. I'm sure they are out there. But the design is simple enough, a home brew version shouldn't be too hard to come up with using similar techniques. :-)

  • @thed8229
    @thed8229 Год назад

    I made some stubs for our WFD HF ops coming up this weekend. This video gave me a much greater understanding & ideas. That variable cap is awesome! I'm going to make one. K0ATV

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад +1

      Way cool! The one I showed on the video I salvaged off an old, decommissioned hybrid ring duplexer. Let me know how your DIY variable caps work out. 🙂

  • @shizzle666440
    @shizzle666440 7 месяцев назад +1

    How would you calculate the size of the stub if it has a different velocity factor to the coax from the antenna and to the transceiver.

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  7 месяцев назад +1

      Fortunately, what really matters is the electrical length, not the physical length of the coax. Your filter could be made up of coax with a variety of velocity factors. No one piece of coax really cares about the velocity factor of the others. So, you determine the physical length of coax A with the velocity factor of coax A to give you the electrical length you need for coax A. The same for all of the others. Hope I made sense. 🙂

  • @fnordist
    @fnordist 5 месяцев назад +1

    can you use 12th wavelenght stubs instead? maybe they have a higher Q factor?

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  5 месяцев назад

      Interesting thought...the problem I see is that you will not get the impedance conversion through the coax that is required to do the job. 🙂

  • @mholzer54
    @mholzer54 Год назад

    Hi: I really enjoy your work. I had two questions: 1. 15 meters is taking my antenna TV offline. Can I do the "stub" thing with RG-6? I am thinking I could filter out the 15 meters; and 2. I built an End-Fed, Half-Wave antenna. I wound the 49:1 on a T140-43 and have the wire cut for 80 meters. I guess I shouldn't complain, but I don't get why not only do I get my bands and their harmonically related bands, but it works great on 30, 17 and 12 meters. It amazes me as I don't need a tuner at all for any of these bands. Does this make sense? I bought another T140 and will be winding that one too to check if it is the toroid or something else.
    Thanks,
    Marc

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад +1

      Thank you! 🙂
      1. Yes, you can do the stub thing with *any* transmission line you choose.
      2. A lot a strangeness goes on with antennas. Of course, a good dummy load works on every band. So, the question is, "Is it all working as a dummy load or a real antenna?" ie. "What is its radiation efficiency on those 'extra bands?' "
      I know that I do not have a handle on a *lot* of what antennas work. I do a LOT of modelling with 4NEC2 ... virtual antenna experiments. You could try modelling it and see what it should theoretically do. 4NEC2 is **FREE** and I have some videos on how to use it starting with the one here:
      ruclips.net/video/Zd6BT558YRA/видео.html
      If you are using a 4:1 BALUN to feed an antenna, you put 200 Ohms in for the characteristic impedance.
      Hope this helps. 😁

    • @JayN4GO
      @JayN4GO 8 месяцев назад

      Your radiated power on 30,17 and 12 is very very low. The 100-150pf capacitor is showing your radio decent vswr but your power out is probably 20w at 100w. Check out that capacitor under a thermal camera on these bands and see how much they glow. 🤩

  • @johanvisagie7044
    @johanvisagie7044 Год назад +1

    How .......did u measure ? Swr ? Logmag . PHASE ? Show us the way u connect the coax please onto the meter ...

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  Год назад +2

      You are right, I didn't explicitly state how I connected stuff up (oops). My apologies. I measured the rejection using, S21, through/response with source on port 1 going to the "input" side of the filter assy and measurement on port 2 going to the "output" side of the filter assy.
      I used log magnitude display after having set up the frequency limits for the frequencies of interest and performed the appropriate calibration. I hope this answers your questions.

  • @kriswotipka104
    @kriswotipka104 2 месяца назад

    What are those tuning capacitors called and are they available commercially? I have searched around but couldn't find them. Thx

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  2 месяца назад

      The only place I have found them is attached to a Hybrid-Ring Duplexer. Thats where I got mine from ... an old duplexer whose cavities had developed internal mechanical issues. One could DIY them, I suppose, with some effort. 🙂

  • @denis_w1wv131
    @denis_w1wv131 5 месяцев назад

    If I have 3 tv channels; in my case 7,8 & 12, do I space each stub set with a 1/4 wave length of coax for the particular tv channel?

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  5 месяцев назад +1

      Incoming coax and stub ch7, next coax and stub ch8, next coax and stub ch12. This is the way I would do it. Hope this helps. 🙂

  • @clownworld7763
    @clownworld7763 9 месяцев назад +1

    Will this stop at just the desired frequency or will you have multiple harmonics as well throughout the higher spectrum?

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  9 месяцев назад +1

      It will continue to multiple harmonics with lesser and lesser effectiveness for higher harmonic frequencies. With open stub it will be at frequencies where the stub is an odd multiples of 1/4 wavelength. With shorted stub where the stub is multiples of 1/2 wavelength. 🙂

    • @clownworld7763
      @clownworld7763 9 месяцев назад

      How are notch filters that don't have harmonics made?

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  9 месяцев назад +1

      @@clownworld7763 The very simplest form of this is putting a parallel tuned circuit in series with the signal with some finite resistance to follow. This finite resistance might be just all the circuitry that follows such as the input impedance of the circuit that follows. At resonance the parallel tuned LC circuit acts as an open circuit. I'll warn you, here, it is a pretty wide banded filter.
      You could also add a properly chosen series tuned LC circuit across that resistor. This one acts as a short at resonance. Remember, that resistor could be just the impedance of the circuits to follow, so an overt, physical resistor may not be needed.
      I threw one together using LTSpice. MUCH narrower response that the parallel tuned circuit only. I simulated it from 1MHz to 100 MHz with an fo of ~5 MHz. No harmonic interaction.
      If you are intending this for anything that will be handing any sort of power (e.g. transmitting), then you need to be careful to choose components that can handle the currents and voltages associated with that application.
      Hope this helps. 🙂

  • @t0nito
    @t0nito 7 месяцев назад

    Is it possible to create a very narrow notch filter? Either with this method or any other? I'm receiving Meteor and NOAA weather satellites, from 137.1 to 137.9 MHz, but there are strong VDL2 blips that ruin the reception due to overload, especially for Meteor since it's digital and loses sync when a strong blip happens. I've tried reducing the gain but then the reception always becomes weaker. The VDL2 interference is at around 136.7 MHz.
    It would be great to eliminate or greatly attenuate thr 136.7 interference without compromising thr 137.1 reception

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  7 месяцев назад

      Really good question! I had similar questions when I first started playing with these years ago.
      Unfortunately, by stacking these (adding more stubs) I was able to get deeper and deeper notches, but the "skirt" remained just as wide....too wide for what I was hoping to do.
      Maybe put a pre-amp before the filter to overcome the loss anticipated by the filter at the desired frequency(?) The over all response at the desired frequency is 0 dB, but still -60 dB at the reject frequency. It might be worth a try.
      There are some inexpensive duplexers out there that you could retune to do the job, too. 🙂
      I cannot recommend anything, but I see several options on eBay for around $99.

    • @t0nito
      @t0nito 4 месяца назад +1

      @@jim9930 If I understood correctly, in this case the frequency I want to attenuate is 136.7 so I should mix in 126 MHz to have an IF of 10.7 and use the crytal filter?

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  4 месяца назад

      @@jim9930 Cool idea! 🙂

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  4 месяца назад

      @@t0nito I think what he is saying is that this mixer/filter combination is for singling out the signal you want to receive and, in doing so, attenuating the adjacent signals you do not want. 🙂

    • @t0nito
      @t0nito 4 месяца назад

      @@eie_for_you
      Oh, that wouldn't work for me, I need 1 MHz bandwidth as some satellites sometimes transmit simultaneously.

  • @alejandrolozano1162
    @alejandrolozano1162 10 месяцев назад

    Excelente explicación. 100% undestand
    able XE2AAI

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much! Glad it was helpful! 🙂

  • @SteveWrightNZ
    @SteveWrightNZ 3 месяца назад +1

    I am surprised at your cable length calculations - have you tried this directly? The theory is good, until you discover the VF changes with frequency, that frequency incidentally not specified by the manufacturer... Try it on your VNA and see - you will see the VF change dramatically away from the manufacturers spec as you go up in freq. The calculations are only useful at the manufacturers specified frequency, if you can find that anywhere... Just use the VNA in impedance mode to cut to electrical lengths, not the calcs. Top video otherwise, thanks for teaching.

    • @eie_for_you
      @eie_for_you  3 месяца назад +1

      This is why I measure the velocity factor for myself for these kinds of projects. 🙂

  • @G0USL
    @G0USL Год назад +1

    Great tutorial, Thanks de GØUSL