O
onestone
Guest
Brian Goldsmith wrote:
question along the lines of why do I need a specialised part, and the
response was that standard parts exhibit loss, that effectively answered
my question without requiring any technical understanding. Loss is loss,
and generally undesirable, in the context given the implication is that
the loss is the undesirable side effect. The only requirement therefore
is a simple knowledge of English.
Al
Except that, even without knowledge in a specific field if I asked a"onestone" <onestone@bigpond.net.au> wrote
As Bruw noted conventional relays exhibit high losses at UHF, you can
use an antenna switch, specifically designed for this task. Clarke and
Severn stock them, Honeywell amongst others make them. If you can live
with the losses through a standard relay keep using it.
**By his own admission (Look I'm no electrical engineer, Why do I need a high frequency relay ?) the OP has
indicated that he wouldn't understand anything about the losses you are referring to.
question along the lines of why do I need a specialised part, and the
response was that standard parts exhibit loss, that effectively answered
my question without requiring any technical understanding. Loss is loss,
and generally undesirable, in the context given the implication is that
the loss is the undesirable side effect. The only requirement therefore
is a simple knowledge of English.
Al