Author |
Message |
Znut
| Posted on Saturday, May 03, 2003 - 12:15 pm: |
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I am looking for an affordable power/swr meter for six meters. Anybody seen any? (Hint, hint Copper, something to go with the 5054?) |
bruce
| Posted on Saturday, May 03, 2003 - 10:08 pm: |
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znut recal a copper cb one ive done it with cheep cb ones works fine...... if you want to spend .... get a bird with all the slugs... i got one with a few GASP its a lot of money |
Sandbagger106
| Posted on Sunday, May 04, 2003 - 10:23 am: |
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I've used a rated 1.8 thru 30 Mhz (C/B) meter all the way up to 148 Mhz and as along as it will calibrate it's going to be a useful measurement. I'm quite sure a C-B vswr meter will work fine at 50 Mhz, although I've never actually tried it. sb106 |
Znut
| Posted on Sunday, May 04, 2003 - 1:25 pm: |
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I've used mine. It won't quite cal, but I did the math to compensate. No way the power reading is close. Thanks guys for the replies! Take Care |
de
| Posted on Tuesday, May 06, 2003 - 7:14 pm: |
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Re Z Ol Sandie is correct. You can use an HF SWR Meter up to the 144 mhz range. BUT the accuracy falls off a bit. Sorry to tell you but SWR Meters specifically designed to VHF and UHF country have a tendency to be to the expensive side. If you wish to purchase a specific one you might check our good buddies at Copper Electronics in their on line catalog. If they do not have any you might find one on the Texas Towers web site. |
707
| Posted on Friday, May 09, 2003 - 1:39 am: |
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PDC-5 is fairly accurate on 50MHz. I used one on a TenTec transverter output. It showed about 7 watts while a Daiwa rated up to 150MHz showed 6.5 |
Znut
| Posted on Friday, May 09, 2003 - 6:23 pm: |
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Thanks 707. I appreciate you folks. Those of you who can, pls try 'em out. I'm looking for LOW budget! Thanks |