Thomas,
I would recommend you do both. The diodes may not take the all power from
your other antenna.
Yes the two diodes in parallel are connected between pin 12 of k1 and
ground. Both diodes should be
connected in opposite polarity. The line marking the cathode of one
should go to ground and
the other diode's cathode should got to pin 12 (Rx antenna line). This
will limit the voltage to
less than one volt and that wont damage the Rx.
The bulb is useful for preventing the diodes from blowing up by
dissipating excess incoming power.
I used to run a 10M packet bbs link and another antenna was for my base
HF. When one transmitted
the other rig lamp used to glow.
You can check the power received by connecting a QRP power meter on the
40M antenna and
the other port of the meter to a dummy load. You will find out? how
much power is picked up by the
40M antenna when you transmit on the main winlink antenna.
I forget a lot too @ 60! The doctor asked to visit again when I start to
forget my XYLs name!
Cheers
Raj
vu2zap
At 17/12/2016, you wrote:
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?
Raj,
Thank you for the response. You confirm my fear that the danger of damage
is real and present.
I am very much a beginner at this sort of work. I have excellent
mechanical and soldering skills, but know little of circuit elements
beyond what was required for my license.
I believe you have offered two possible ways to mitigate the risk -
either the diodes OR the incandescent bulb. Correct?
If I choose the diodes in parallel, I assume one lead of each goes to pin
12 of K1 relay. Does the other lead of each go to ground? Or where? Be
gentle please!
If I choose the miniature bulb, does that bulb function as a sacrificial
element like a gas discharge arrestor cartridge? Or is it able to absorb
and limit the voltage? I can do either, and it seems you are saying the
second option is better.
I?€?m learning as fast as I can!
Thomas W Noel
KF7RSF
On Dec 16, 2016, at 9:07 PM, Raj
vu2zap@... [BITX20]
<BITX20@...
> wrote:
Thomas,
At pin 12 of K1 relay solder 2 4148 diodes in parallel but in opposite
polarity. This will limit the receiver from getting high RF voltage.
Also if you cut the track between K1 pin 12 and K2 pin 14 and insert a
12v 60 or 40 ma miniature incandescent bulb it would be better. This is
common protection method in commercial transceivers and amps. This track
seems to be on the component side.
cheaper still!
73 Raj vu2zap
At 17/12/2016, you wrote:
?
How likely is this to happen? Bitx40 connected to 40M resonant antenna
perpendicular to another antenna with a 100W transceiver running a
Winlink gateway.
I fully expect front-end overload and nasty noises, but will the coupling
cause actual damage> I would like to leave the bitx40 running but
volume minimized to lessen drift during warm-up period.
Currently I leave it running but antenna dis-connected, but it is only a
matter to time until my feeble brain forgets.
Thomas W Noel
KF7RSF