lilroop
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- Location
- Monticello, Illinois
Are you required to terminate any unused taps on a coax splitter with a terminator cap?
Required-no. Good idea-yes.
Here is a similar thread that discusses the topic.
http://forums.mikeholt.com/showthread.php?t=124019
All that an unterminated port on a splitter will do is mess up the impedance of the transmission line leading to the splitter, causing ghosting there. But a cable attached to a port that is then left unterminated can cause an apparent short circuit at spaced RF frequencies, and only the presence of the splitter will keep that from messing up the other ports totally.Required-no. Good idea-yes.
Here is a similar thread that discusses the topic.
http://forums.mikeholt.com/showthread.php?t=124019
Pay it forward when you are able.That is a lot of good information! Thank you to all that responded, I really appreciate your time, and the good information.
It isn't a short that is caused -- it is a standing wave is caused. That standing wave can totally disrupt one particular frequency, but it's not like only one frequency is affected. That standing wave has its peak at X-frequency, but it's a sine wave. Adjacent and nearby frequencies are affected as well -- just not to the same degree.All that an unterminated port on a splitter will do is mess up the impedance of the transmission line leading to the splitter, causing ghosting there. But a cable attached to a port that is then left unterminated can cause an apparent short circuit at spaced RF frequencies, and only the presence of the splitter will keep that from messing up the other ports totally.
A coaxial cable at RF frequencies is a transmission line with a characteristic impedance, which also acts like an impedance transformer in some situations.
If you have a piece of coax which is exactly 1/4 wavelength (or any odd multiple of 1/4) long at a particular frequency, then an open circuit at one end of the cable looks like a short circuit at the other and vice-versa (at that one signal frequency). Whereas for a multiple of 1/2 wavelength a short looks like a short and an open looks like an open. But any length with a proper terminator on one end looks just like a terminator at the other end.
The chances of causing a problem later that will be a royal pain for you or someone else to fix argues very strongly for using terminators.
(The above detail was not in the other thread.)
It isn't a short that is caused -- it is a standing wave is caused. That standing wave can totally disrupt one particular frequency, but it's not like only one frequency is affected. That standing wave has its peak at X-frequency, but it's a sine wave. Adjacent and nearby frequencies are affected as well -- just not to the same degree.
See a more detailed discussion below.
As for unterminated ports being a source of ingress: Several years ago, I read an exchange in a CATV forum (S.C.T.E.-List) between 2 CATV industry engineers with differing opinions. One was an engineer for an equipment manufacturer (who argued that unterminated ports do cause ingress) while the other is a leading engineer in the industry. He lectures and authors the technology column in an industry magazine. He argued that unterminated ports do not cause ingress. Both gave convincing arguments.
Unterminated cables (especially Type F connectors assembled with a really long center conductor sticking out) can be much more of a problem, even if they do not accidentally touch something.
I think the answers given so far make a major assumption: that some coax of >= 1/4wavelength is attached to the unterminated port. In that case, sure, terminate it to prevent reflections/stand-waves/ghosts.
But if it is a splitter with NOTHING attached to the unused ports, why in heaven would you want to cut your signal down by terminating them?
My vote goes to leave unused ports alone, no wire attached, no terminator attached to be a signal sucker.
Quite likely you never needed a splitter unless you separated your transmit and receive antennas. Splitters on high power feeds don't make much sense.i've edumacated myself after ur post gold. - thanks for correcting my gut feel wrong answer. u'd think as an extra class ham & old first class commercial licensee i'd know better! 73, ac8v
But if it is a splitter with NOTHING attached to the unused ports, why in heaven would you want to cut your signal down by terminating them?
My vote goes to leave unused ports alone, no wire attached, no terminator attached to be a signal sucker.
The voltage is reduced by half (if it's a 2-way, 1/4th if a 4-way, and so on, exponentially) merely by virtue of the splitter. Whether ports are terminated or unterminated doesn't change that.
While I've not used splitters on transmit antennas, I have on receive antennas. Doing so increases the received signal quite a bit, which you then cut down by ~3.5dB, but you also increase the SNR by that same 3.5dB. Makes a world of difference.
If the splitter drops the signal and the noise by the same amount, it does not change the SNR at all. It may help reduce overload in the receiver stages if there is a strong local signal, but if you drop the level too far you get to where the noise floor on the input stage will cause the SNR to increase as you drop the signal further.One of the things that causes the SNR to increase is the splitter itself. It drops not only the desired signal, but the undesired signals (noise) as well.