50/60hz or dc shouldn't matter. the only way to get molten cables is by too
much current, you can do that with either ac or dc, but you need some kind of
high current source to do it.
There are commercial injectors available, but the old heathkit remote switch
box used nothing more than a 100mh coil to connect the ac or half wave dc to
the coax and a .1uf cap to block it from the tx and antenna. you do have to be
sure that the capacitor will handle the max voltage AND current at the highest
frequency, so don't just pick any old audio cap out of the junk box, get a good
ceramic or tx rated cap.
Jan 14, 2014 07:28:16 PM, felipeceglia2@gmail.com wrote:
Hello folks,
I need to inject AC or DC into a run of CATV hardline (.860)
I've been told by a CATV technician that it isnt a good idea to inject DC
into it, he couldn't explain why. He mentioned seeing molten cables when
someone tried to do it.
I got a pair of AC injection boxes, but when measured on the VNA each of
them presents more than 35dB insertion loss on 1.5MHz...
Do you guys have any expertise on this issue? If AC is really needed, any
particular diagram? 60hz seems to be fairly close to 1.5MHz to isolate it
using a single capacitor as done with DC. Maybe a highpass filter should
help?
73,
Felipe Ceglia - PY1NB
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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http://dxwatch.com /// http://reversebeacon.net /// http://riodxgroup.com
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