Filter hacking for 2395 ISS TV

S-Band DVB-S from the International Space Station
radiogareth
Posts: 1414
Joined: Wed Jan 06, 2016 9:46 am

Re: Filter hacking for 2395 ISS TV

Post by radiogareth » Mon Nov 10, 2025 9:28 am

From a construction point of view a comb filter does not need a tap feed into the 'first digit' (of an interdigital) so that makes reliable repeatable replication (3 'R's'??) easy by virtue of using pieces of wire, tubing, brake pipe etc basically anything you can solder to a centre pin.
Slots would indeed be possible, but software simulation would surely be a better way these days?
Gareth

G3YKI
Posts: 24
Joined: Tue Jul 19, 2022 3:07 pm

Re: Filter hacking for 2395 ISS TV

Post by G3YKI » Mon Nov 10, 2025 9:38 am

g4eml wrote:
Sun Nov 09, 2025 8:28 pm

I may try adding additional screws in between the posts. That is supposed to adjust the coupling. Might be worth a try.

Colin.
Yes, I have seen many filters that use that technique and it is easy to do. I believe from experiments on a similar filter that it increases the coupling, but I could be wrong. ( I cannot see any intuitive reasoning one way or the other) I have also seen (and made) filters where the resonators are partly screened by dividing walls. This, I am sure reduces the coupling and would enable considerable reduction the overall length. It may not easy to do in in practice in your tube filter.

Having said all that, your filter is probably doing what you need. If it passes the signal you want, whether or not the rest of the passband has the text book flat top response becomes an academic exercise.

g4eml
Posts: 789
Joined: Thu Apr 26, 2018 9:36 am

Re: Filter hacking for 2395 ISS TV

Post by g4eml » Mon Nov 10, 2025 10:08 am

Yes, from what I can find, tuning screws between the posts increase the coupling. Some texts recommend deliberately spacing the posts a little too wide and then using the coupling adjust to get the final result. It would probably be better if a design didn't need them as it makes the alignment more complicated.


Colin.

g0mjw
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Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2014 9:15 am

Re: Filter hacking for 2395 ISS TV

Post by g0mjw » Mon Nov 10, 2025 12:21 pm

The spacing on my filter is much less. 19mm between the input/output rod and the first post, then 38mm between the posts, which are interdigitally arranged. The in/out posts span the waveguide so are 32mm but approx 25mm long at 10mm dia. The other posts are about 8mm dia. Hart to tell how long but it looks like about 3mm of gap at the end. The tuning screw goes into the post so it must have a hole in it.

Given it is shorter, it might be a better route size wise.

Mike

g0mjw
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Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2014 9:15 am

Re: Filter hacking for 2395 ISS TV

Post by g0mjw » Mon Nov 10, 2025 1:33 pm

Many years ago, before NanoVNAs, I asked Bert Moddermann to make me a 13cm filter. It is fairly small, 110mmx40mmx20mm and excellently CNCd as usual from Bert. Here is the response.
13cm-5pole.jpg
13cm-5pole.jpg (93.16 KiB) Viewed 53 times
It has 5 tuning screws

Cavity width 31.8mm, length 103mm, depth 16mm, rods 6mm dia 27mm long, spacing 19mm, 21mm, 21mm, 19mm, tap 7mm up from ground. It uses M4 tuning screws, A2 stainless !!!

13_cm_filter_image.jpg
13_cm_filter_image.jpg (1.16 MiB) Viewed 53 times
The loss is low, so I assume the Q is also low. It is not what we want as the bandwidth is 150MHz or so. About right for covering the band, before we lost so much of it.

Mike

g4eml
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Joined: Thu Apr 26, 2018 9:36 am

Re: Filter hacking for 2395 ISS TV

Post by g4eml » Mon Nov 10, 2025 4:03 pm

I added some additional coupling adjustment screws between the 70mm spaced poles.

Winding in the two outer coupling screws effectively increased the coupling of the two outer pairs of resonators. So probably similar to an untuned spacing of 65 70 70 65.

The filter now tunes up with a reasonably flat passband and good return loss. The overall bandwidth is a bit wider at 22MHz as would be expected with higher coupling. Increasing all of the spacings should bring the bandwidth back down again but that would involve a lot of re-drilling.
IMG_20251110_154553.jpg
IMG_20251110_154553.jpg (131.35 KiB) Viewed 22 times
Smaller cross section tube should reduce the resonator spacing and hence the total length.

I will now wait until I have some of the smaller tube and repeat the process based on what we have learnt.

Colin G4EML

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