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Hello Nathaniel!
Cavity versus SAW:
SAW filters can be very narrow and have very steep flanks, almost "brick wall" style, so if a (not too strong) interferer is close to your desired signal, a SAW filter might be the solution.
But SAW filters have considerable losses, and can not be used ahead of the LNA. Also, the far away attenuation is pretty miserable, at most 40dB, and it does not get better as you go further from their center frequency, even by hundreds of MHz, so strong signals, like transponders and DME from nearby aircraft can penetrate them.
Cavity filters have lower loss if reasonably wide, and their out of band attenuation tends to keep going lower the further you go, down to 100dB or more, if well made. Coaxial cavities will usually have a strong spurious response at triple frequency, but a simple lowpass can take care of that. So if you have very strong interfering signals, not too close in frequency, a cavity filter might save your day.
1dB less sensitivity versus totally swamped receiver, is not a bad bargain, so putting the filter before the LNA should not be an anathema.
Marko Cebokli
2023-12-27 15:40, je Nathaniel Butts napisal
Hello Nathaniel!
Cavity versus SAW:
SAW filters can be very narrow and have very steep flanks, almost "brick wall" style, so if a (not too strong) interferer is close to your desired signal, a SAW filter might be the solution.
But SAW filters have considerable losses, and can not be used ahead of the LNA. Also, the far away attenuation is pretty miserable, at most 40dB, and it does not get better as you go further from their center frequency, even by hundreds of MHz, so strong signals, like transponders and DME from nearby aircraft can penetrate them.
Cavity filters have lower loss if reasonably wide, and their out of band attenuation tends to keep going lower the further you go, down to 100dB or more, if well made. Coaxial cavities will usually have a strong spurious response at triple frequency, but a simple lowpass can take care of that. So if you have very strong interfering signals, not too close in frequency, a cavity filter might save your day.
1dB less sensitivity versus totally swamped receiver, is not a bad bargain, so putting the filter before the LNA should not be an anathema.
Marko Cebokli
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The LaNA may be overdriving the SAWBird with out of band RF from more 'spillover' pickup in the '1m' vs horn.
Nathaniel Butts
1:42 PM (1 hour ago)to Society of Amateur Radio AstronomersI have a NanoVNA, and enough knowledge to use 1% of its capabilities, lol. Still might give it a shot.
I'm starting to wonder if I'm not overloading the filter and causing these issues, then interpreting it as noise.....I don't see the same interference on my pyramid horn, and it's right next to the 1m. My current noise traces relatively nicely with the galactic h1, almost like a harmonic.
I currently have antenna --> LaNA <--> Bias T --> Sawbird H1+ --> DC Block --> SDR
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Receivers can be desenced by any close or adjacent RF signal.So the elimination of the unwanted signals needs to be done before the first RF amplifier in a receiver or before a Preamplifier or LNA.
in the third document some cut and paste on the different kinds of filters.I have used a lot of cavities building RF Repeaters.Cavities isolate the transmitter from the receiver so that one antenna can be used.They also are used to block adjacent transmitters and other signals.The secret is a thing called the "Q" factor or the selectivity of the filter. The higher the Q the narrower the filter.
So Take a look at the Picture and the Filters document and see if any of this helps a day late but hey better then never.
Doug K5WMT
On Thursday, December 28, 2023 at 2:26:17 PM UTC-6 b alex pettit jr wrote:
1) Non-auto-scaled data is beneficial for comparing/adjusting/improving the performance of your system,( dB relative to Cold Sky ) & Plot via Excel , etc.
2) 18.25hrs*60mins_per_hr / 2489samples = 26 second avgs. .. 4 minute averages will improve S/N
Alex====================================================
Yep.The weird rf is gone in the doppler graph.
Raw antenna average power is much cleaner as well. I'm actually getting better power measurements from only using 1 LNA.
Lesson learned.
Thanks,
Nathan ButtsWannabe AstronomerBowling Green, KY
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I will agree. Where I live , In a City\Urban area sometimes the fm stereo and the tv stations are over whelming near here. The dish and its set up helps to block some out. The gain and beam width of the 1 meter dish is low. A 2 meter dish should do better and will have a different feedhorn. All good information. Surprised I do as well as I do with what I have and where I am at...
Tks.
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On Dec 27, 2023, at 2:11 PM, Marko Cebokli <s57...@hamradio.si> wrote:
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Perhaps one should include a few tens of degrees of spillover temperature in this calculation.
Also I believe that a good bandpass filter can be obtained with
perhaps 0.3 or 0.4 dB of attenuation.
If you are stuck in a noisy urban environment (RFI Hell) you may have no choice but to put a filter in front of the LNA to prevent overload and desense.
Richard
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Perhaps one should include a few tens of degrees of spillover temperature in this calculation.
Also I believe that a good bandpass filter can be obtained with perhaps 0.3 or 0.4 dB of attenuation.
If you are stuck in a noisy urban environment (RFI Hell) you may have no choice but to put a filter in front of the LNA to prevent overload and desense.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/8531dbb8-69f4-479d-b420-78dbfe3f8da2%40hawaii.rr.com.
A tuned cylindrical waveguide ( Cantenna ) provides ~ 40dB atten at CellTower freqs with minimal effect at 1.42GHz.


Perhaps one should include a few tens of degrees of spillover temperature in this calculation.
Also I believe that a good bandpass filter can be obtained with
perhaps 0.3 or 0.4 dB of attenuation.
If you are stuck in a noisy urban environment (RFI Hell) you may have no choice but to put a filter in front of the LNA to prevent overload and desense.