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ALUNOR RF
Solution

Combining multiple UHF transmitters onto a single antenna

Tower owners and operators need to host multiple transmitters on one antenna without sacrificing transmit power or generating intermodulation products.

Why combiners exist

Every additional antenna on a tower costs leasing fees, wind load, and installation time. A combiner consolidates many radios onto one feedline at the cost of insertion loss — a tradeoff that is almost always worth it.

What to look for

A serious transmitter combiner has three properties: (1) per-port ferrite isolators that prevent reverse power from killing PAs, (2) per-port bandpass cavities that suppress harmonics and broadband noise, and (3) a calibrated sweep report from the manufacturer.

Recommended product

For 4-channel UHF combining at 380-470 MHz, the UHF 4-Channel Cavity Combiner (8-Inch) is the production-tested choice. For 8-channel high-density deployments, UHF 8-Channel Cavity Combiner (8-Inch). For broadband combining where channel spacing is tighter than cavity Q allows, the hybrid family — UHF 3-Channel Hybrid Combiner / UHF 4-Channel Hybrid Combiner — gives > 100 dB isolation across a 20 MHz window.

Need engineering review of your system?

Send us a system diagram or band plan and our application engineers will recommend a configuration.