US3311831A - Coaxial combiner-separator for combining or separating different electrical signals - Google Patents

Coaxial combiner-separator for combining or separating different electrical signals Download PDF

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US3311831A
US3311831A US386463A US38646364A US3311831A US 3311831 A US3311831 A US 3311831A US 386463 A US386463 A US 386463A US 38646364 A US38646364 A US 38646364A US 3311831 A US3311831 A US 3311831A
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B3/00Line transmission systems
    • H04B3/02Details
    • H04B3/44Arrangements for feeding power to a repeater along the transmission line
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q3/00Arrangements for changing or varying the orientation or the shape of the directional pattern of the waves radiated from an antenna or antenna system
    • H01Q3/005Arrangements for changing or varying the orientation or the shape of the directional pattern of the waves radiated from an antenna or antenna system using remotely controlled antenna positioning or scanning

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  • the present invention relates to electrical signal combiners and more particularly to a coaxial signal combiner or separator.
  • antennas are installed at distances from the transmitter or receiver, as is often true when receivers and transmitters are separately housed, the cable loss can be sufiiciently high to require amplifiers at the antennas. It is also commonly found that electrical power is needed at the antenna site. When these problems are encountered, it is the present practice to install a power line to the antenna. While laying a power cable is often the most practical solution at the time of original antenna site construction, Where the site is already established and additional power cables are needed, the added installation can be time consuming and expensive.
  • the general purpose of the present invention is to avoid the aforedescribed practice and its attendant disadvantages by providing a novel and relatively inexpensive arrangement whereby both operating power and intelligence signals may be simultaneously supplied to a remotely located antenna over a common conductive path.
  • lt is accordingly, an object of the present invention to provide a means for supplying power to distant antennas over existing signal cables.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a combiner for combining radio frequency and low frequency power signals to be transmitted together over the same coaxial cable.
  • Another object is to provide a separator for separating combined radio frequency and low frequency power signals transmitted over a single coaxial cable.
  • a further object of the present invention is to provide a coaxial combiner for combining high and low frequency signals for coaxial transmission.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a coaxial separator for separating combined high and low frequency signals transmitted over a coaxial line.
  • a bal-un consisting of two lengths of coaxial cable wound to form inductors, interconnected shield to inner conductor and terminated at one end shield to ground by capacitive coupling and at the other end by a resistor from the center conductor to :ground, provides the signal combining or separating function.
  • the center conductor at the free end of the first coaxial length is connected to a high frequency source, with a low frequency signal being applied to the outer conductor.
  • the terminal resistor provides a realization of these two combined signals as well as providing an impedance match for the circuit to result in a voltage standing wave ratio of 1.2 to 1. This necessary near distortion free characteristic is obtained by balanced impedance at the point of inter-connection of the two coaxial lengths.
  • the need for capacitive input coupling is obviated by the use of a coaxial length having a hollow inner conductor which houses a plurality of auxiliary signal conductors.
  • the auxiliary signals one of which may be low frequency power, are combined with the radio frequency signal for single coaxial cable transmission.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates, partly in block diagram and partly in schematic, a preferred embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is an end-view of coaxial length 12 as seen through a hole in the ground plane
  • FIG. 3 is a simplified radio frequency representation of the coaxial cable interconnection
  • FIG. 4 illustrates, partly in block diagram and partly in schematic, another embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 1 first and second coaxial lengths 12 and 13 interconnected at ends 12 and c, inner conductor to outer conductor, via lines 14 and 15. These two coaxial lengths are wound to form inductors.
  • the free end a of coaxial length 12 has its outer conductor 21 coupled to the electrical common or ground plane 23 by capacitors 11, while the center conductor 22 passes through a hole 21)- in this ground plane to receive radio frequency signals from source 18.
  • Radio frequency source 18 thus is applied across inner conductor 22 and ground via line 24.
  • Capacitors 11 serve also as an input impedance across which a low frequency power signal, as from source 17, is applied. With reference to ground plane 23, it is preferred to encompass the circuit of FIG.
  • Capacitor 19 coupling the inner conductor of coaxial length 12 to the outer conductor of coaxial length 13, serves to improve the low frequency response of the circuit by tuning out the effects of the inductive reactance.
  • Free end d of coaxial length 13 has its outer conductor grounded and its inner conductor terminated by resistor 16 to ground.
  • Resistor 16 is an output impedance across which both the radio frequency signal and the power signal appear.
  • the coaxial transmission line to the antenna or other device to receive these signals is connected in place of this resistor, so that when the signals .are to be separated at the other end of the transmission line by the inverse circuit of that shown in FIG. 1, the characteristic impedance of each circuit serves as the load for the other and resistor 16 is not needed.
  • FIG. 2 shows the physical connection of capacitors 11 to the outer conductor 21 of free end a of coaxial length 12, seen through hole 20 in ground plane 23.
  • This figure shows the preferred embodiment of the capacitor coupling, in that three capacitors 11 equally spaced about conductor 21 cause this connection to appear as if there 3 were no break at all in the conductor to an R.-F. signal.
  • Also shown in this figure is the center or inner conductor 22 and the dielectric between the two conductors shown cross-hatched.
  • FIG. 4 illustrates an alternate embodiment of the present invention.
  • coaxial length 13 contains a hollow inner conductor 14'.
  • the interconnection of this coaxial length with coaxial length 12 is the same as that shown in the embodiment of FIG. l.
  • Inner conductor 14, however, does not terminate at end b of coaxial length 12, but continues along this length winding in parallel while length 12 forms an inductor and terminates at input end a.
  • This hollow inner conductor houses a plurality of control conductors 27, 28 and 29.
  • Sources 25 and .26 shown respectively with a ground return and an independent return, provide control signals or various power signals to be used by the antenna or other load means.
  • Source 25 could thus provide the power delivered by source 17, shown in FIG.
  • the terminal resistor 16 of the FIG. 1 embodiment is not shown in the circuit of FIG. 4 because of the particular coaxial cable used in this latter circuit.
  • the hollow inner conductor coaxial cable balun is preferably terminated by its inverse circuit, used as a separator, at the other end of the transmission line.
  • the inverse circuit is, the same as that shown in the drawings, with the exception of the free end of coaxial length 13 serving as the circuit input instead of the free end of coaxial length 12.
  • capacitors 11, necessary for the circuit of FIG. 1, are no longer needed, due to inner conductor 14 being brought out to the circuit input to directly receive the auxiliary signals from sources S and S
  • the transmission line receiving the combined radio frequency and control signals is in turn terminated by the circuit shown in FIG. 4.
  • the signals are separated, sources 1 8, 25 and 26 being replaced for this purpose by the devices to independently utilize these signals.
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram to aid in the understanding of the low frequency requirements of the present invention and will be used in the explanation of its operation.
  • This figure represents the radio frequency picture at end b of coaxial length 12. If the inductive reactances of the inductors formed by coaxial lengths 12 and 13 are equal and large compared to the characteristic impedance of these interconnected coaxial lengths, if the conductor so formed is terminated by a resistance equal to this characteristic impedance, and if the output impedance of the radio frequency source is matched to this line, the circuit is said to-be balanced, and radio frequency signal source 18 and resistor 16 will appear to be across conductors 14 and 15 at the point of interconnection.
  • inductor 12 With source 18 appearing to be across these conductors, inductor 12 appears to couple the outer conductor to ground while inductor 13 appears in the path of the inner conductor from end b to ground. Since the resistive load 16 also appears across conductors 14 and 15 at end b, it is readily seen that the frequency-dependent reactances of these inductors 12 and 13 determine the low frequency limit of the high frequency signal to be passed by the circuit as these react'ances decreasein value with frequency, approaching a short circuit in the limit. At low radio frequencies capacitor 19 will appear in this figure in series with inductor 13. This capacitor, of a value selected to resonate with inductors 12 and 13 at the lower frequencies, compensates for the low frequency limiting effect of these inductors.
  • the requirement that the inductive reactance be much greater than the characteristic impedance also requires that the high frequency signal be at least several orders in magnitude higher than the low frequency si-gnal.
  • Effective length is defined to be the electrical length or the length that inductors 12 and 13 appear to be when considering dis tributed capacitance due to the spacing between the windings of these inductors, the effect of the capacitive reactance thereof with frequency, the actual length of these coaxial conductors, and the number of turns.
  • This effective length must be less than one-half the wavelength of the highest frequency passed, since at a length equal to one-half wavelength the transmission line appears to be a short circuit to the signal at this frequency.
  • radio frequency transmission by the present circuit has a low frequency limit determined by the inductive reactance of inductors 12 and 13 and :a high frequency limit at the frequency at which inductors 12 and 13 become half-wave resonant.
  • capacitors 11 be very low compared to the characteristic impedance of this transmission line. It is necessary for these capacitors to serve as a high impedance for the low frequency signal supplied by source 17, and at the same time to maintain electrical continuity between the outer conductor of coaxial length 12 and the ground plane 23 to form a return path for the radio frequency signal.
  • Actual values selected for a characteristic impedance of 50 ohms was an inductive reactance of 200 ohms and a capacitive reactance of approxi-mately 2 /2 ohms at the low frequency limit.
  • the present invention while described as a signal combiner, is equally utilizable as a signal separator. Indeed, when used in the preferred embodiment, to combine power with the radio frequency signal on the coaxial line to an antenna, it will be necessary to separate these two signals at the antenna site for their independent use.
  • An electrical circuit for simultaneously transmitting a plurality of discrete signals of different frequencies comprising:
  • the inner and outer conductors of one of said cables being coupled respectively to the outer and inner conductors of the other of said cables;
  • first conductive means connected to the free end of said one cable to permit conduction of one of said second conductive means connected to the free end of said one cable for permitting at least one of .the others of said plurality of signals to be conducted along the outer conductor thereof;
  • said hollow conduct-or being wound with said one cable to the free end thereof
  • An electrical circuit suitable for combining or separating signals comprising:
  • the outer conductor of said first coaxial length being coupled to the inner conductor of said second coaxial length
  • capacitor means coupling the inner conductor of said first coaxial length to the outer conductor of said second coaxial length
  • theinner conductor of said second coaxial length be- I ing hollow and containing a plurality of conductors
  • said hollow inner conductor being wound with said first coaxial length to the free end thereof, where said plurality of conductors provide; electrical conduction for some of said signals, the other of said signals being conducted by the inner conductor of said first coaxial length;
  • An electrical circuit suitable for combining or separating high and low frequency signals comprising:
  • resistance means coupling the inner conductor of said second coaxial length to said electrical common at the free end thereof, the outer conductor being directly connected to said electrical common

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Description

March 28, 1967 COAXIAL COMBINEfE-SEPARATOR FOR COMBINING OR SEPARATING DIFFERENT ELECTRICAL SIGNALS Filed July 50.
M L. LEPPERT 1964 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 FIG.
POWER I NVENTOR MELVIN L. LE'PPERT BY m ATTORNEY March 28, 1967 Filed July 30, 1964 M. L. LEPPERT 3,311,831
COAXIAL COMBINER-SEPARATOR FOR COMBINING OR SEPARATING DIFFERENT- ELECTRICAL SIGNALS 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTOR MEL VIN L. LEPPERT ATTORNEY United States Patent 3,311,831 COAXIAL CQMEINER-SEPARATOR FOR COMBIN- ING 0R EPARATING DIFFERENT ELECTRICAL SEGNALS Melvin L. Leppert, Washington, D.C., assignor to the United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Navy Filed July 30, 1964, Ser. No. 386,463 13 Claims. (Cl. 325-178) The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.
The present invention relates to electrical signal combiners and more particularly to a coaxial signal combiner or separator.
Where antennas are installed at distances from the transmitter or receiver, as is often true when receivers and transmitters are separately housed, the cable loss can be sufiiciently high to require amplifiers at the antennas. It is also commonly found that electrical power is needed at the antenna site. When these problems are encountered, it is the present practice to install a power line to the antenna. While laying a power cable is often the most practical solution at the time of original antenna site construction, Where the site is already established and additional power cables are needed, the added installation can be time consuming and expensive.
The general purpose of the present invention is to avoid the aforedescribed practice and its attendant disadvantages by providing a novel and relatively inexpensive arrangement whereby both operating power and intelligence signals may be simultaneously supplied to a remotely located antenna over a common conductive path.
lt is accordingly, an object of the present invention to provide a means for supplying power to distant antennas over existing signal cables.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a combiner for combining radio frequency and low frequency power signals to be transmitted together over the same coaxial cable.
Another object is to provide a separator for separating combined radio frequency and low frequency power signals transmitted over a single coaxial cable.
It is another object to provide a combiner for combining a radio frequency signal and a plurality of other signals for single coaxial line transmission.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a coaxial combiner for combining high and low frequency signals for coaxial transmission.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a coaxial separator for separating combined high and low frequency signals transmitted over a coaxial line.
It is another object to provide a separator for separating a plurality of combined signals received from a single coaxial transmission line.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a bal-un, consisting of two lengths of coaxial cable wound to form inductors, interconnected shield to inner conductor and terminated at one end shield to ground by capacitive coupling and at the other end by a resistor from the center conductor to :ground, provides the signal combining or separating function. The center conductor at the free end of the first coaxial length is connected to a high frequency source, with a low frequency signal being applied to the outer conductor. The terminal resistor provides a realization of these two combined signals as well as providing an impedance match for the circuit to result in a voltage standing wave ratio of 1.2 to 1. This necessary near distortion free characteristic is obtained by balanced impedance at the point of inter-connection of the two coaxial lengths.
In a second embodiment, the need for capacitive input coupling is obviated by the use of a coaxial length having a hollow inner conductor which houses a plurality of auxiliary signal conductors. The auxiliary signals, one of which may be low frequency power, are combined with the radio frequency signal for single coaxial cable transmission.
The advantages and manner of operation of the in vention will become more fully apparent and better understood from the following detailed description of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 illustrates, partly in block diagram and partly in schematic, a preferred embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is an end-view of coaxial length 12 as seen through a hole in the ground plane;
FIG. 3 is a simplified radio frequency representation of the coaxial cable interconnection; and
FIG. 4 illustrates, partly in block diagram and partly in schematic, another embodiment of the present invention.
Referring now to the drawings wherein like reference characters designate like parts throughout, there is shown in FIG. 1 first and second coaxial lengths 12 and 13 interconnected at ends 12 and c, inner conductor to outer conductor, via lines 14 and 15. These two coaxial lengths are wound to form inductors. The free end a of coaxial length 12 has its outer conductor 21 coupled to the electrical common or ground plane 23 by capacitors 11, while the center conductor 22 passes through a hole 21)- in this ground plane to receive radio frequency signals from source 18. Radio frequency source 18 thus is applied across inner conductor 22 and ground via line 24. Capacitors 11 serve also as an input impedance across which a low frequency power signal, as from source 17, is applied. With reference to ground plane 23, it is preferred to encompass the circuit of FIG. 1, excluding signal sources 17 and 18, within an electrically conductive box so that hole 20 is actually a hole in the wall of this box. Capacitor 19, coupling the inner conductor of coaxial length 12 to the outer conductor of coaxial length 13, serves to improve the low frequency response of the circuit by tuning out the effects of the inductive reactance. Free end d of coaxial length 13 has its outer conductor grounded and its inner conductor terminated by resistor 16 to ground. Resistor 16 is an output impedance across which both the radio frequency signal and the power signal appear. The coaxial transmission line to the antenna or other device to receive these signals is connected in place of this resistor, so that when the signals .are to be separated at the other end of the transmission line by the inverse circuit of that shown in FIG. 1, the characteristic impedance of each circuit serves as the load for the other and resistor 16 is not needed.
While the drawings show coaxial lengths 12 and 13 separated by a relatively large length compared to the depicted length of these conductors, this is only for the purpose of showing the interconnection and is not to be interpreted as representative of the physical dimensions. The interconnection of these two conductors must be physically small in order for there to be high frequency conduction.
FIG. 2 shows the physical connection of capacitors 11 to the outer conductor 21 of free end a of coaxial length 12, seen through hole 20 in ground plane 23. This figure shows the preferred embodiment of the capacitor coupling, in that three capacitors 11 equally spaced about conductor 21 cause this connection to appear as if there 3 were no break at all in the conductor to an R.-F. signal. Also shown in this figure is the center or inner conductor 22 and the dielectric between the two conductors shown cross-hatched.
FIG. 4 illustrates an alternate embodiment of the present invention. Here, coaxial length 13 contains a hollow inner conductor 14'. The interconnection of this coaxial length with coaxial length 12 is the same as that shown in the embodiment of FIG. l. Inner conductor 14, however, does not terminate at end b of coaxial length 12, but continues along this length winding in parallel while length 12 forms an inductor and terminates at input end a. This hollow inner conductor houses a plurality of control conductors 27, 28 and 29. Sources 25 and .26, shown respectively with a ground return and an independent return, provide control signals or various power signals to be used by the antenna or other load means. Source 25 could thus provide the power delivered by source 17, shown in FIG. 1, while source 26, connected across control conductors 27 and 28, can provide servo control information. Conductors 27, 28 and 29 are shown at the output end d of coaxial length 13 where they, along with this coaxial length, connect to a hollow inner conductor coaxial transmission line.
The terminal resistor 16 of the FIG. 1 embodiment is not shown in the circuit of FIG. 4 because of the particular coaxial cable used in this latter circuit. The hollow inner conductor coaxial cable balun is preferably terminated by its inverse circuit, used as a separator, at the other end of the transmission line. The inverse circuit is, the same as that shown in the drawings, with the exception of the free end of coaxial length 13 serving as the circuit input instead of the free end of coaxial length 12.
It should benoted that in addition to the increased signal handling flexibility of the embodiment of FIG. 4, capacitors 11, necessary for the circuit of FIG. 1, are no longer needed, due to inner conductor 14 being brought out to the circuit input to directly receive the auxiliary signals from sources S and S The transmission line receiving the combined radio frequency and control signals is in turn terminated by the circuit shown in FIG. 4. At this end the signals are separated, sources 1 8, 25 and 26 being replaced for this purpose by the devices to independently utilize these signals.
FIG. 3 is a diagram to aid in the understanding of the low frequency requirements of the present invention and will be used in the explanation of its operation. This figure represents the radio frequency picture at end b of coaxial length 12. If the inductive reactances of the inductors formed by coaxial lengths 12 and 13 are equal and large compared to the characteristic impedance of these interconnected coaxial lengths, if the conductor so formed is terminated by a resistance equal to this characteristic impedance, and if the output impedance of the radio frequency source is matched to this line, the circuit is said to-be balanced, and radio frequency signal source 18 and resistor 16 will appear to be across conductors 14 and 15 at the point of interconnection. With source 18 appearing to be across these conductors, inductor 12 appears to couple the outer conductor to ground while inductor 13 appears in the path of the inner conductor from end b to ground. Since the resistive load 16 also appears across conductors 14 and 15 at end b, it is readily seen that the frequency-dependent reactances of these inductors 12 and 13 determine the low frequency limit of the high frequency signal to be passed by the circuit as these react'ances decreasein value with frequency, approaching a short circuit in the limit. At low radio frequencies capacitor 19 will appear in this figure in series with inductor 13. This capacitor, of a value selected to resonate with inductors 12 and 13 at the lower frequencies, compensates for the low frequency limiting effect of these inductors.
From the foregoing, it is readily seen that it is neces- 4 sary that the inductive reactance of inductors 12 and 13 be large compared to the characteristic impedance of the coaxial line forming these two inductors. This requirement prevails only for the R.-F. signal and is not a limitation for the low frequency power signal. This signal has therefore, no low frequency restriction and can be a direct current signal.
The requirement that the inductive reactance be much greater than the characteristic impedance also requires that the high frequency signal be at least several orders in magnitude higher than the low frequency si-gnal.
Another requirement in the relationship between inductors 12 and 13 and the other operating parameters of the circuit of the present invention is that the individual effective length of coaxial lengths 12 and 1'3 be less than onehalf wavelength at the highest frequency to be passed. Effective length, for the purposes of the present circuit, is defined to be the electrical length or the length that inductors 12 and 13 appear to be when considering dis tributed capacitance due to the spacing between the windings of these inductors, the effect of the capacitive reactance thereof with frequency, the actual length of these coaxial conductors, and the number of turns. This effective length must be less than one-half the wavelength of the highest frequency passed, since at a length equal to one-half wavelength the transmission line appears to be a short circuit to the signal at this frequency. While it is possible to choose an effective length greater than one-half wavelength at the highest frequency to be passed, but less than the next multiple half-wavelength, this will not provide continuous frequency band transmission. Thus, radio frequency transmission by the present circuit has a low frequency limit determined by the inductive reactance of inductors 12 and 13 and :a high frequency limit at the frequency at which inductors 12 and 13 become half-wave resonant.
Another operating requirement of the circuit of the preferred embodiment of the present invention is that the capacitive reactance of capacitors 11 be very low compared to the characteristic impedance of this transmission line. It is necessary for these capacitors to serve as a high impedance for the low frequency signal supplied by source 17, and at the same time to maintain electrical continuity between the outer conductor of coaxial length 12 and the ground plane 23 to form a return path for the radio frequency signal. Actual values selected for a characteristic impedance of 50 ohms was an inductive reactance of 200 ohms and a capacitive reactance of approxi-mately 2 /2 ohms at the low frequency limit.
The present invention, while described as a signal combiner, is equally utilizable as a signal separator. Indeed, when used in the preferred embodiment, to combine power with the radio frequency signal on the coaxial line to an antenna, it will be necessary to separate these two signals at the antenna site for their independent use.
Since various changes and modifications may be made in the practice of the invention herein described without departing from the spirit or scope thereof, it is intended that the foregoing description shall be taken primarily by way of illustration and not in limitation except as may be required by the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. An electrical circuit for simultaneously transmitting a plurality of discrete signals of different frequencies, comprising:
a pair of coaxial cables, each having inner and outer conductors,
said cables being wound to form separate inductors,
the inner and outer conductors of one of said cables being coupled respectively to the outer and inner conductors of the other of said cables;
first conductive means connected to the free end of said one cable to permit conduction of one of said second conductive means connected to the free end of said one cable for permitting at least one of .the others of said plurality of signals to be conducted along the outer conductor thereof;
and an electrical common connecting said first and second conductive means with the outer conductor of said other cable at the free end thereof.
2. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 1, including capacitor means to couple the inner conduct-or of said one cable to the outer conductor of said other cable.
3. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 1, wherein said second conductive means is a plurality of capacitors connecting the outer-conductor of said one cable to said electrical common.
4. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 1, wherein the inner conductor of said other cable is hollow and houses a plurality of auxiliary signal conductors,
said hollow conduct-or being wound with said one cable to the free end thereof,
whereby said plurality of auxiliary signal conductors form said second conductive means.
5. An electrical circuit suitable for combining or separating signals, comprising:
first and second lengths of coaxial cable wound to form separate inductors,
the outer conductor of said first coaxial length being coupled to the inner conductor of said second coaxial length;
capacitor means coupling the inner conductor of said first coaxial length to the outer conductor of said second coaxial length,
theinner conductor of said second coaxial length be- I ing hollow and containing a plurality of conductors,
said hollow inner conductor being wound with said first coaxial length to the free end thereof, where said plurality of conductors provide; electrical conduction for some of said signals, the other of said signals being conducted by the inner conductor of said first coaxial length;
and an electrical common connecting said hollow inner conductor and the outer conductor of said first coaxial length at the free end thereof,
whereby signals applied to the free end of said first coaxial length and to the conductors contained within said hollow conduct-or will be combined, and combined signals appearing at the free end of said second coaxial length will be separated.
'6. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 5, wherein said inductors formed by said coaxial length have a combined reactance. greater than the characteristic impedance of the coaxial lengths, and the indivdiual effective length of said coaxial lengths is less than one-half wavelength at the highest frequency to be passed by said electrical circuit.
7. An electrical circuit suitable for combining or separating high and low frequency signals, comprising:
first and second lengths of coaxial cable wound to form inductors and interconnected inner conductor to outer conductor; capacitor means coupling the outer conductor 'of said first coaxial length at its free end to an electrical common and forming a high impedance allowing the conduction of said low frequency signal along the outer conductor thereof, the inner conductor of said first coaxial length to conduct said high frequency signal; and
resistance means coupling the inner conductor of said second coaxial length to said electrical common at the free end thereof, the outer conductor being directly connected to said electrical common,
whereby separate signals received at the free end of said first coaxial length will be combined across said resistance means, or combined signals received by said resistance means will be separated, the low frequency signal being conducted by the outer conductor of said first coaxial length and the high frequency signal being conducted by the inner conductor of said first coaxial length.
-8. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 7, wherein the 'value of said capacitor means is selected to present a low impedance to said high frequency signal and a high impedance to said low frequency signal.
9. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 7, wherein said inductors formed by said coaxial length have a combined reactance greater than the characteristic impedance of the coaxial lengths, and the individual effective length of said coaxial lengths is less than one-half wavelength at the highest frequency to be passed by said electrical circuit. 1
10. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 7, wherein said low frequency signal is a direct current signal.
11. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 7, wherein said low frequency signal is alternating current power and said high frequency signal is in the radio frequency spectrum.
12. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 7, wherein said interconnection between said first and second coaxial lengths contains frequency sensitive means.
13. An electrical circuit as recited in claim 12, wherein said frequency sensitive means is a capacitor, and the voltage standing wave ratio of said electrical circuit is no greater than 1.2 to 1.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,006,994 7/1935 Hopkins 325-308 X 2,008,279 7/1935 Hopkins 325-308 Xv 2,094,360 9/1937 Landon 325-308 X 3,054,858 9/1962 Reid 325-308 X 3,064,195 11/1962 Freen 325308 DAVID G. REDINBAUGH, Primary Examiner. JOHN W. CALDWELL, Examiner,

Claims (1)

1. AN ELECTRICAL CIRCUIT FOR SIMULTANEOUSLY TRANSMITTING A PLURALITY OF DISCRETE SIGNALS OF DIFFERENT FREQUENCIES, COMPRISING: A PAIR OF COAXIAL CABLES, EACH HAVING INNER AND OUTER CONDUCTORS, SAID CABLES BEING WOUND TO FORM SEPARATE INDUCTORS, THE INNER AND OUTER CONDUCTORS OF ONE OF SAID CABLES BEING COUPLED RESPECTIVELY TO THE OUTER AND INNER CONDUCTORS OF THE OTHER OF SAID CABLES; FIRST CONDUCTIVE MEANS CONNECTED TO THE FREE END OF SAID ONE CABLE TO PERMIT CONDUCTION OF ONE OF SAID PLURALITY OF SIGNALS ALONG THE INNER CONDUCTOR THEREOF, SECOND CONDUCTIVE MEANS CONNECTED TO THE FREE END OF SAID ONE CABLE FOR PERMITTING AT LEAST ONE OF THE OTHERS OF SAID PLURALITY OF SIGNALS TO BE CONDUCTED ALONG THE OUTER CONDUCTOR THEREOF; AND AN ELECTRICAL COMMON CONNECTING SAID FIRST AND SECOND CONDUCTIVE MEANS WITH THE OUTER CONDUCTOR OF SAID OTHER CABLE AT THE FREE END THEREOF.
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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4017845A (en) * 1975-06-16 1977-04-12 Fmc Corporation Circuitry for simultaneous transmission of signals and power
US4258332A (en) * 1976-10-15 1981-03-24 Wheelock Signals, Inc. Loudspeaker amplifier
US4303875A (en) * 1978-05-31 1981-12-01 Salvatore Montorio Device for the remote control of the angular position of an aerial rotor
FR2557717A1 (en) * 1983-12-30 1985-07-05 Thomson Csf Remote power supply and command transmission device for a mobile radio link station
US4881058A (en) * 1988-10-25 1989-11-14 Audiosone, Inc. Combined audible and visual alarm system
US5495212A (en) * 1994-12-19 1996-02-27 Bh Electronics, Inc. Coupling device connecting an unbalanced signal line to a balanced signal line
US6150896A (en) * 1994-12-19 2000-11-21 Bh Electronics, Inc. Coupling device connecting an unbalanced signal line to a balanced signal line

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US2006994A (en) * 1932-05-10 1935-07-02 Rca Corp Radio frequency distribution system
US2008279A (en) * 1932-05-10 1935-07-16 Rca Corp Program distribution for trains
US2094360A (en) * 1928-11-14 1937-09-28 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Radio receiving system
US3054858A (en) * 1959-05-12 1962-09-18 Ar & T Electronics Inc Signal distribution arrangement for closed-circuit communications systems
US3064195A (en) * 1960-05-05 1962-11-13 Benco Television Associates Lt Signal distribution system

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2094360A (en) * 1928-11-14 1937-09-28 Westinghouse Electric & Mfg Co Radio receiving system
US2006994A (en) * 1932-05-10 1935-07-02 Rca Corp Radio frequency distribution system
US2008279A (en) * 1932-05-10 1935-07-16 Rca Corp Program distribution for trains
US3054858A (en) * 1959-05-12 1962-09-18 Ar & T Electronics Inc Signal distribution arrangement for closed-circuit communications systems
US3064195A (en) * 1960-05-05 1962-11-13 Benco Television Associates Lt Signal distribution system

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4017845A (en) * 1975-06-16 1977-04-12 Fmc Corporation Circuitry for simultaneous transmission of signals and power
US4258332A (en) * 1976-10-15 1981-03-24 Wheelock Signals, Inc. Loudspeaker amplifier
US4303875A (en) * 1978-05-31 1981-12-01 Salvatore Montorio Device for the remote control of the angular position of an aerial rotor
FR2557717A1 (en) * 1983-12-30 1985-07-05 Thomson Csf Remote power supply and command transmission device for a mobile radio link station
US4881058A (en) * 1988-10-25 1989-11-14 Audiosone, Inc. Combined audible and visual alarm system
US5495212A (en) * 1994-12-19 1996-02-27 Bh Electronics, Inc. Coupling device connecting an unbalanced signal line to a balanced signal line
US5633614A (en) * 1994-12-19 1997-05-27 Bh Electronics, Inc. Unbalanced to balanced signal line coupling device
US6150896A (en) * 1994-12-19 2000-11-21 Bh Electronics, Inc. Coupling device connecting an unbalanced signal line to a balanced signal line

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