Charlie, et al,
I am not familiar with all the products on the market, but
offer the following suggestion, based on my observations. This could
be a "work around" if you already had any of these parts.
For a number of years, I have used Icom "Pro" series
transceivers, which have two RF ports, and each is configurable to be
active on certain bands. In a matter of seconds, one could easily
have all "regular" contest bands on port A and the warc bands all on
port B. I believe most current generation radios can do this. Next, I
have used band decoders from Top Ten devices. Mine have the source
driver mod, which allows me to switch the two ICE 419 bpf's with the
"sink" side and switch the Array Solutions "six-pack" with the source
side. Both Top Ten and Array Solutions (and probably others) offer
band decoders that translate the warc bands now, as well as the
contest bands. A second BPF, either specifically designed for warc,
or a slightly tweaked ICE 419 could be switched from the same band
decoder, and RF routed from radio port B, and accomplish what you
want. A simple 3 or 4 position remote antenna switch would be used
for the warc band antenna. It would be a little more bulky than a
single 9 (or 10) band bpf on each side, but it is all off the shelf
parts and would give you fully automated switching, with manual
over-ride if needed.
I realize this means two bpf's per side, but particularly if
purchasing used, may be able to find for less that "all in one" box.
Wish you luck on your project.
73,
Mark, K5ER
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The results of my search for one integrated automatic switching bandpass
filter unit indicates.....
Both Dunestar (Top Ten Devices also needed) and Array Solutions sell a
separate unit for the six contest bands and separately a unit for the WARC
bands. It is possible to route RF from the transceiver to the first
contest band unit AND then with a bypass on it, the RF can then be routed
by that unit to a separate unit for WARC.
The key is for the contest band unit to have a BYPASS switch position.
All these products operate from band data provided by the transceiver (or
computer) and will follow the band switch on the radio to automatically
select the correct band. I did not investigate how to connect multiple
units to the same band date socket on the radio.
The prices of both suppliers run over $1,200USD per radio, needing at least
about $2,400 (or more) for a full system of two radios on ALL HF bands. I
did not find ONE integrated unit.
Most contesters say they only want the 6 contest bands but surely some want
to use the WARC bands on the same radios without doing plug-unplug manual
changes.
Note, there may be more than these two suppliers.
73
Charly, HS0ZCW
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