User Manual

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DIAGNOSTICS GUIDE
The BDA provides long term, carefree operation and requires no periodic maintenance.
There are no user-serviceable components inside the BDA.
This section covers possible problems that may be related to the installation or operating
environment.
a. Gain Reduction
Possible causes: Bad RF cables and RF connections to antennas, damaged antennas.
b. Excessive Intermodulation or Spurious
Possible causes:
Amplifier oscillation caused by insufficient isolation. The isolation between two antennas is
given by the equation:
Isolation = 92.5 + 20 Log (F x D) – Gt – Gr
Where:
F = frequency (GHz)
D = separation (Km)
Gt = transmit antenna gain (in the direction of the receive antenna).
Gr = receive antenna gain (in the direction of the transmit antenna).
For example, at the CELL B frequencies, the antenna isolation at 100 m separation is
about 71 dB for omni-directional antennas (0 dB gain). To increase isolation, the antennas
should have higher directivity and must be pointed away from each other.
c. Occasional Dropout of some Channels
Possible causes: One channel with very strong power dominates the RF output of the
amplifier.