23 CM Band FM Repeater Specs Rev 2014
23 CM Band FM Repeater Specs Rev 2014
Mt. Climie is a high elevation site north of the Capital city of Wellington, New Zealand.
The altitude above sea level is 867 meters or 2845 feet.
A superb site for a 23 cm band FM repeater.
The following is a sequence of events leading to the construction of the repeater and its
antenna.
Construction detail is published below to assist anyone wanting to make there own
home base antenna.
A 23 cm FM Repeater 1271.2 MHz was already operational for many years from a central
Wellington site of Mt Victoria. Very limited coverage and QRM prevented this repeater
from being useable to the majority of active amateurs.
A group consisting of Jens ZL2TJT, Chris ZL2DX, Paul ZL2UGR, Michael ZL2BPL and John
ZL2TWS were all having difficulty making contacts through the 1271.2 MHz repeater.
In August 2008 Jens ZL2TJT sent out an email to active and potentially active 23 cm band
users simply titled “Show of hands, 23 cm repeater?”
The response was unexpected. By March 2009 there were twelve people wanting to be
involved. Branch 63 NZART were prepared to host the new repeater. Power needed to
be connected to the North Hut at Mt Climie and the 19 inch rack secured to the floor.
The old 860 4 dipole stack pole was chosen as a suitable antenna location
Mark ZL2UFI, as repeater administration trustee, became the project manager.
Many hours of work were required to both build a repeater from scratch drawings and
have an antenna constructed to withstand the ice and high wind loading at Mt Climie.
John ZL2TWS and Chris ZL2UKT connected a 230V feed cable and switchboard. Phil
ZL2HF, Mark ZL2UFI and Mark ZL2UP secured the 19 inch rack in position.
The club membership became fully involved in this new project.
New member Simon ZL2BRG became involved and soon after was elected to be repeater
trustee filling the position previously held by Neil ZL2TNG.
Many donations of equipment, expertise and labour were received by the club.
This had become a Wellington regional project encouraging new membership.
John ZL2TWS and Simon ZL2BRG headed the technical team and set about purchasing
suitable 23 cm RF / VHF IF equipment. Minikits Australia was chosen for the 23 cm RF
deck as they sold a repeater package. Simon ZL2BRG built the RF deck while John
ZL2TWS built the VHF IF deck consisting of a surplus Tait VHF repeater.
John also built the linear PSU, donated the 23 cm duplexer and antenna package.
Chris ZL2DX supplied RF cables and filters for the final RF deck assembly.
Paul ZL2UGR completed the VK5DJ repeater controller donated by Neil ZL2TNG.
Jens ZL2TJT and Malcolm ZL2UDF worked on restoring the antenna pole.
Malcolm ZL2UDF took his turn at grinding the heavy rust layer off the standing lower
section of the pole. It was then primed with anti rust paint.
Jens ZL2TJT took the top section home, ground it clean, cut it into two to one
proportions for later determination of which to use.
Phil ZL2HF welded blanks on both cut ends.
One omission was not seeing that the large holes in the two flanges were not
the same pitch circle, only the smaller holes matched up.
On the day of installation this omission meant that Peter ZL2HM, also repeater Trustee,
had to go back down the hill to scratch up another set of smaller bolts and nuts.
Mark ZL2UFI, Peter ZL2HM and Jens ZL2TJT got the cable fed through an existing PVC
conduit after cleaning a bit of debris out of it, by dragging bits of rag through with the
aid of very handy electricians "snake" borrowed from Chris ZL2UFT.
The pre-terminated 10m length of Heliax was just long enough to reach from the
antenna and securely inside the hut.
In 1986 Peter Williams ZL2ARW had made a design to work on the first Wellington
23 cm repeater 1271.2 MHz. This was based on the CQ Ham Journal Summer 1981
“1200 MHz Collinear Antennas”. This antenna worked well for many years in a harsh
environment. It failed due to a mechanical corrosion at the base N connector mount.
I decided to improve on this design where the mechanical failure had occurred. This was
done by extending the lower section of the antenna shroud, turning it into a solid base
with coax feeder connection tail. Two antennas were built. The first one with a short tail
(pictured here), the second was finally installed at Mt. Climie with the longer tail.
Silver plated wire was wrapped around the connection point for sweat soldering to the
copper sleeve balun. A hot plumbers iron was used for a quick solder. This avoids over
heating the coax braid and melting the coax dielectric. The antenna is now complete and ready for
fitting to the PVC shroud.
“Plasticast” Epoxy resin cable jointing compound was used to fill the PVC pipe encasing
the assembled coax collinear. My method to do this was to cap the end of the cut length
of high pressure water pipe. The pipe is a 17.5mm ID and 21mm OD. Available from
plumbing merchants. A cut off plastic soft drink bottle fits perfectly over the top of the
open end of the pipe. Note the pipe has to be on an angle to allow the air to escape.
Resin is mixed in a tin can and poured in to half fill the pipe. The assembled coax
collinear is then pushed down to the end of the pipe cap. Air and excess resin escapes
back into the funnel. The resin starts to harden after 15 minutes so planning is essential.
I used a heat gun to warm the outside of the tube causing it to expand before the
collinear was pushed down the pipe. This helps as the clearance is not great. The aim
here was to increase the gap between coax and pipe to ensure resin had settled around
all coax elements and air could escape. The next day the end cap was cut off to reveal a
solid resin knob. I was convinced that all the resin had surrounded the coax element.
With a high speed cutting disk the resin knob was cut
off. The tuning stub could now be adjusted. A sliver
plated 3mm diameter wire was used to fine tune the
antenna. After tuning a new cap is resin filled and
placed back on top. A small 2mm
hole is required to release the air as it
is pushed on. Tape around the hole
until the resin has hardened.
After switch on contacts logged were ZL2BRG, ZL2TJT, ZL2DX, ZL2TWS, ZL2UFI, ZL2UGR,
ZL2NN, ZL2UGL, ZL2BPL, ZL2HI. Soon after ZL2ADP joined the list of users. ZL2TDN and ZL2BPS have
joined the users group in 2012 and 2014. ZL2TNG has been worked sometimes when in Upper Hutt
with his portable.
MK2 Antenna (side mounted May 2013)
After two years of service and many severe winter storms the base of the antenna snapped off.
Somewhat of a surprise as this new antenna was supposed to be stronger! Not to be beaten I build
yet another antenna but this time side mounted it. The short stub pipe shown above was removed
and replaced with a longer pipe. I did not use epoxy resin this time because when the broken
antenna was opened up for inspection I found contamination of the copper braid from the epoxy
resin. Clean copper has better conduction at these frequencies. Each coax section was changed to
use a standard VF of 0.66 but retained 2% down tilt as seen in the plots. (Higher resonant frequency
but used lower causes down tilt) The new antenna was installed May 2013 and has now completed
18 months of trouble free service. Network analyzer sweeps showed the frequency response varied
due to feeder cable length. The antenna choke was not working perfectly and not easily adjusted.
The return loss reduced after installing at Climie but was still acceptable with 10m of LDF-450 feeder
connected. Field strength testing showed an increase in signal in some areas in front of the antenna.
This indicated a gain from the mounting pipe acting as a reflector. The antenna pipe length was
extended so that the top SS pipe clamp and metal cap did no influence the antenna tuning.
Reference 1:
“A High Gain Collinear for 1296MHz” Peter Williams ZL2ARW (May 1986)