The internet has no shortage of people arguing whether LMR400 is junk or not, and I am trying to get to the bottom of why because I know a few people that use it without issue (myself included).
I think the issue can be narrowed down to one of four things.
1) water ingress
2) damage from too much power
3) the braid over foil PIM issue.
4) counterfeit products
The first could likely be eliminated with a TDR trace of the coax to see the location and nature of the damage. Is it the last third that is wet, are the connectors good (you'll need a jumper to avoid the blind spot). I have two TDR tools, but my LMR400 is just fine, so I cannot test this. Is it a burnt spot (which won't appear on TDR at that low of power, might need a HV breakdown tester for that). The third would need a spectrum analyzer to identify. The fourth could be identified by close inspection/comparison to a known good cable.
A little more on the third possibility as it is usually encountered during duplex operation (TX and RX at the same time) when the TX forward biases any diode junction formed between the braid and foil, and the non-linearity causes mixing with the RX signal. This can happen on it's own or where something makes a dent in the cable and pushes the braid against the foil. I have long believed that this cannot be a problem on 11m as it is mostly simplex operation, but then I thought of all the splatterboxes out there transmitting on more than one frequency...
If you have bad LMR-400, can you either do some tests and report back here or mail your junk coax to someone who will? Lets solve this!
I think the issue can be narrowed down to one of four things.
1) water ingress
2) damage from too much power
3) the braid over foil PIM issue.
4) counterfeit products
The first could likely be eliminated with a TDR trace of the coax to see the location and nature of the damage. Is it the last third that is wet, are the connectors good (you'll need a jumper to avoid the blind spot). I have two TDR tools, but my LMR400 is just fine, so I cannot test this. Is it a burnt spot (which won't appear on TDR at that low of power, might need a HV breakdown tester for that). The third would need a spectrum analyzer to identify. The fourth could be identified by close inspection/comparison to a known good cable.
A little more on the third possibility as it is usually encountered during duplex operation (TX and RX at the same time) when the TX forward biases any diode junction formed between the braid and foil, and the non-linearity causes mixing with the RX signal. This can happen on it's own or where something makes a dent in the cable and pushes the braid against the foil. I have long believed that this cannot be a problem on 11m as it is mostly simplex operation, but then I thought of all the splatterboxes out there transmitting on more than one frequency...
If you have bad LMR-400, can you either do some tests and report back here or mail your junk coax to someone who will? Lets solve this!
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