HappilyRetired
Member
I have picked up a couple more antennas much to my wife's disliking. I have one for low-band CHP, one for VHF High for the Forest Service and Cal Fire, and the UHF for LACoF or SCBoF. Currently they are on a switch so I can't keep changing the antennas.
A ham radio friend of mine told me to get something called a "triplexer" and reverse it. A Diamond MX2000 Triplexer, Low 1.6-60 MHz, Mid 110-170 MHz, High 300-950 MHz seems to be the one. He says the laws of physics will take over from there if I plug the low band into the low band porch, the VHF High into the middle court and the UHF for 800 end of the third port.
Does this really work? I can use three band specific antennas on one radio and physics will pick the correct antenna? I was terrible at math and sure didn't take physics in school.
A ham radio friend of mine told me to get something called a "triplexer" and reverse it. A Diamond MX2000 Triplexer, Low 1.6-60 MHz, Mid 110-170 MHz, High 300-950 MHz seems to be the one. He says the laws of physics will take over from there if I plug the low band into the low band porch, the VHF High into the middle court and the UHF for 800 end of the third port.
Does this really work? I can use three band specific antennas on one radio and physics will pick the correct antenna? I was terrible at math and sure didn't take physics in school.