Balanced Combiners deliver unmatched felixibility, allowing scalable solutions that allow Chain-Combiner configurations.
Wideband Port
The Wideband input delivers a unique versatility to Balanced Combiners, allowing to expand their combining possibility, cascading multiple Balanced Combiners to create a chain configuration of n modules that features:
- One Wideband input (at the beginning of the chain), which can further be connected to another Combiner (or Bandpass Filter) to integrate additional frequencies; or terminated with a Load, preserving the option for future system expansion
- n Narrowband inputs (one per module in the chain)
- One Antenna Output (at the end of the chain, combining the frequencies of the Wideband input and Narrowband inputs)
Extension
The Wideband input can be optimized in two ways:
- Frequency-Optimized: Return Loss and performances optimized for specific frequencies, but limited extension beyond optimized frequencies
- Whole-Band Optimized: Return Loss balanced across the entire band, allowing broader extension, but with moderate limitations. MultiStep technology ensures superior performance, achieving near-optimal Return Loss across the full band.
A Balanced Combiner can be extended, adding a new Combiner (or Filter) in two possible positions:
- In the Wideband input side: the existing Balanced Combiner must have its Wideband port unused, able to accept the new frequencies, and withstand the increased power. The new combiner can be a Starpoint, Manifold, Balanced (or a single Filter), and it generally smaller. The integration requires reduced mechanical work.
- In the Antenna output side: the new Combiner type must be Balanced, is generally bigger, and needs to be optimized to accept the existing frequencies. The integration requires significant mechanical work.
Performances
Tuning data reported on the Datasheets refers to one single Balanced Combiner module. The performances of Chain Combiners are affected by different factors, such as: number of combined frequencies, frequency order and assortment, and Adjacency.
1. Wideband Power
COM-TECH chain combiners are dimensioned to withstand the overall output power, even in Wideband mode (the Wideband input power having a double impact on hybrid couplers), thus making the calculation of the Wideband Input power extremely easy:
WB Input Power = Maximum Output Power – Sum of NB Input Powers
2. Peak Voltage
The composition of several digital signals undergoes to a complex statistical process, which deviates from the theoretical voltage composition. COM-TECH chain combiners are dimensioned to sustain the increased voltage peaks caused by the vector composition of several signals (up to 10 frequencies).
3. Insertion Loss
The overall insertion loss of a Balanced Combiner chain is the sum of the insertion loss of the single module, increased by the sum of the Wideband insertion losses of the succeeding modules:
Overall I.L. = Single Module I.L. + (n x Wideband I.L.)
4. Return Loss
The combination of several Balanced Combiner modules involves a derating of the overall Return Loss (indicative values for frequency-optimized Wideband tuning):
- 1 Module: 26 dB (VSWR 1.11)
- 2-5 Modules: 25 dB (VSWR 1.14)
- 6-8 Modules: 24 dB (VSWR 1.16)
- 9-10 Modules: 23 dB (VSWR 1.18)