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16dB In-line Pad High Return Loss Attenuator FAM-16HR

Price$2.75
Qty
1-9
10+
Price
$2.75
$2.45
Manufacturer CodeFAM-16HR
Qty
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 Hrs

Highlights

Freq. Range- 5 MHZ to 3 GHz
Attenuator Values- 3,6,8,10,12,16,20 dB
Accuracy- +/- 0.5 dB
Flatness- 0.6 dB
Return Loss- 20 to 26 dB
Voltage- 35 VDC 750 mA

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Holland Electronics FAM-16HR 16dB Inline Attenuator Pad with HIGH RETURN LOSS
16dB F type In-line Attenuator can be inserted in coaxial cable feeds to reduce signal levels up to 3 GHz. in Frequency with High Return Loss. Reduce UHF/VHF/FM and Digital signal sources such as TV Antennas, Cable TV, Broadband Internet, FM Antenna and Satellite TV (WITHOUT DC Voltage being present). Combinations of attenuators may be used in conjunction to add up to the exact signal loss needed. High Return Loss means a Higher VSWR, more Accurate Readings and better Impedance Match with Minimal Reflections back to Signal Source.
For Power Passing Applications, please use the FAMP-*HR version also listed in this category.

Note

There is such a thing as too much signal sometimes. Receivers of all kinds require signal present within a specific window range for proper operation. Sometimes forcing an Impedance match is the best way to maximize power delivery to Load.

Specification Sheet
Spec. Sheet:

Pre-Amplifiers are mistakenly used with the rational that it will bring in Stations that weren´t there before... It won´t, and what´s worse, using the same antenna and pre-amp with FM and TV stations close by (0-30 miles) may overdrive the amp and actually impede your ability to provide goods signals to your TVs. If you desire to use a pre-amplifier, don´t use a high gain when you have local stations, get one with a FM trap to keep FM radio stations from over-driving the amp and remember that today´s Digital Signals don´t need to be high to get a picture. Some Pre-amps come Band Selective as well, realizing that the difference in antenna UHF/VHF gain means that one band needs to be amplified as opposed to the other. Use them to maintain Signal level to noise at the origin (your antenna) so that low signal levels from far away stations are not lost in a longer than average cable run to the location in the house where the signals would be further distributed to the TVs desired.

Amplifiers come with various gain numbers. Old Analog signals needed a high Carrier to Noise to get a high Signal to Noise Ratio of the Picture on your TV set, it was a one to one relationship and more was sometimes better. Digital Signals are lower in amplitude in comparison to Analog (a benefit) and that commensurately, the threshold at the TV is lower for a perfectly good picture. Very little in between, you either get a good picture or you don´t. Snow in the old analog pictures has been replaced by "Tiling" or little blocks within the picture not keeping up with the scene changes in today´s Digital TV viewing. Tiling is therefore today´s Digital Snow. It means (more often than not) that you are not far enough above the threshold of signal level into your TV to prevent little hiccups, drop-outs and interferences in signal from interrupting the Stream of Data. Remember that lots of things can happen from the Station on the way to your TV set!

The gain of a Line Amplifier should be selected to zero out the loss that follows it. In other words, if you have fifty feet of cable and a two-way splitter, then a 10 db amplifier will be fine. Conversely, if you have an eight-way splitter and hundreds of feet of cable, you will need an amplifier with a higher gain. Just as in the case of a Pre-Amplifier, however, bigger is not always better.