Showing posts with label 5.6GHz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5.6GHz. Show all posts

Sunday, May 22, 2022

ICOM SHF Microwave Project for the 2.4 GHz & 5.6 GHz bands


In 2021, ICOM announced that they were developing a transceiver for the microwave bands. At the time, it seemed like a highly unusual but welcome development.

See the Addendum at the bottom of the post for updates...

In April of 2022, they announced more details. They write... "Under the theme of “ICOM SHF Project – Super High Frequency Band Challenge –”, we started to develop a new amateur radio available for use in the 2.4 GHz and 5.6 GHz bands.

Icom engineers are working hard to research and develop a number of never cleared challenges within the SHF band, such as large cable loss and higher frequency stability requirements. The ultimate goal is to bring it to the market as a new radio product. Icom is striving to bring to you a new era in fun and possibilities of an SHF band amateur radio, which to date has had high technical and equipment hurdles to overcome, and we hope to make these bands more attractive and active so that anyone can easily operate on them. We are developing an epoch-making SHF band amateur radio that no one has never imagined before."


The microwave radio is essentially a box that this designed to be fitted at the top of a mast or roof of a house. This will keep any coax losses to an absolute minimum.

Saturday, October 3, 2020

Successful 5.6 GHz ATV test in Cork Harbour

As part of the ongoing Cork VHF Group nets on Tuesday evenings, we hold an experimental night whenever there is a fifth Tuesday in the month. On a previous evening, we experimented with sending and receiving Slow-Scan TV pictures on 2-metres FM using apps on Smartphones. For the fifth Tuesday of September 2020, the group experimented with Amateur TV signals at 5.6 GHz.

For the experiment, Jim, EI8GS went portable to the town of Cobh and set up his ATV gear to point at Don, EI8DJ in Crosshaven. After discovering that there was no reception through a glass patio window, Don took his gear outside and successfully received an ATV signal from Jim at 5.6 GHz. The distance of the path across Cork Harbour was 4.7 kms.


The photo above looks a bit crude but it's a screenshot from my PC from a Zoom meeting of a phone pointing at another screen! What it shows are the lights from the oil refinery at Whitegate in Cork Harbour and the small string of lights to the left is the village of Whitegate itself. The tests were done when it was dark so the picture would be more relevant and clearer if it was in daylight.

The lines in the foreground are in fact superimposed by the camera. The unit is supposed to be used as an aid for vehicles reversing and the lines show the 'safe' distance areas. In this case, it was used for sending an ATV signal across Cork Harbour!


The photo above shows what Jim, EI8GS was using in Cobh. He was located at a well known viewing point high above the town allowing a good line of sight path across to EI8DJ in Crosshaven.

Jim was using 0.6 watts output power into a 40cm dish with a dipole at the feed point. 


Next it was Jim's turn to try and receive an ATV signal from Don. The receiver module is shown above and a photo of the signal received by Jim in Cobh is shown below.

Don sent a number of different test cards and this is another screen shot...


The photo below shows the set-up as used by EI8DJ...


The grey box (top left) contained a Raspberry Pi Zero which generated the sequence of test cards. 

The module in the centre with the display is a portable screen that is used by drone pilots. It has its own 5.6 GHz receiver built in.

The top right box contains the 5.6 GHz transmitter module and the antenna mounted on the outside of the box is a 4 element Bi-Square with a reflective plate behind.


The photo above shows the box containing the transmitter module with a microwave relay on the left for switching from receive to transmit. The PCB in the background with the toroid is a voltage upconverter to generate 28 volts for the coil of the changeover relay.

The FM ATV signal from the transmitter has a measured output of 0.6 watts.

In conclusion... The purpose of this initial experiment was more of a proof of concept than anything else - i.e. could an ATV signal at 5.6 GHz be sent over a line of sight path and over a modest distance of about 5 kms. The answer was a conclusive yes!

The next steps the group are looking at is maybe to look at increasing the distance and exploring more paths.

About 20 years ago, there was a small but active group on 23cms (1.2 GHz) using ATV in the Cork area. Hopefully these new experiments might reignite some interest in the mode.