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Re: [TenTec] Re: Model 253 Autotuner

To: tentec@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Re: Model 253 Autotuner
From: Ken Brown <ken.d.brown@verizon.net>
Reply-to: tentec@contesting.com
Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2004 14:31:10 -1000
List-post: <mailto:tentec@contesting.com>
Peg Haese wrote:

Chuck, would you or anyone else care to say exactly what 253 tuner
refinements are necessary? I got one several months ago for the Omni V and
Herc II but have never hooked it up. I did get a cable from Riley's for the
trio.


The Ten Tec 253 Auto Tuner has only 28 memory tune settings. These are arranged as 7 bands X 4 antennas. Depending upon how you choose to define the 7 band selections, seven may be enough for you. However, if you count all of the present day ham bands (not including the 5 MHz channels, they are channels and not a band.) your count will probably be greater than seven. Some people have worked around this limitation by either using the antenna switch to only select one of four memory banks, not using it as an antenna switch at all, or perhaps using it to select only two antennas, with 2 X 7 = 14 tune memories for each antenna.

If you interface the 253 to a Ten-Tec Omni or Paragon, for automatic band selection, the bands will be: 1.8-2.5, 2.5-4.0, 4.0-6.5, 6.5-12.5, 12.5-15.0, 15.0-22.5 and 22.5-30.0 MHz. That is only one memorized tuning for 160 meters, only one for 80 and 75 meters combined, only one for 40 meters and 30 meters combined, only one for 17 meters and 15 meters combined, and only one for 12 and 10 meters combined. Again, you could have as many as 4 memorized tunings for each of the above listed "bands" if you give up the antenna switch function, and just use that switch for a "memory bank" selector.

I would like to have two or three memories for 160 meters, and two or three for 80/75 meters. It would be nice to have two on 40 meters also. I would be happy with just one for each of the other bands, as long as each band is a separate band, not 17/15 combined or 12/10 combined.

Yes the 253 has an autotune function, so in theory you don't need any memories as long as you don't mind waiting for the process to complete and enduring the noise of the tuner going through it's paces to get tuned. You have to transmit to make the autotune function happen. I would like to switch bands, and have the tuner set up for each band, without having to transmit. That way I can listen to each band, with the antenna system tuned correctly, to decide whether I am interested in the way the propagation on a band is at any given time. The 253 can do that as long as you choose the seven bands you really want. If Ten-Tec had used those seven "band select" lines as seven bit parallel binary, instead of only one out of seven select, there could have been 128 memories per antenna,(with the right memory chips in the 253). Maybe the band frequency divisions could have been entered through some commands in the "User Options Menu" of the Omni.

DE N6KB




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