// SVC Services & Pricing / Duplexer & Filter Tuning

Duplexer & Filter Tuning

// Repeater filter system analysis

See the passband, notch, isolation, and loss.

A duplexer can look fine and still cost receiver sensitivity, leak transmitter energy, or miss the intended notch. Arcovex RF uses swept measurements to characterize and tune amateur VHF/UHF duplexers, cavity filters, and repeater filter systems.

Reports focus on measurable performance: insertion loss, rejection, isolation, and return loss where applicable. Final scope depends on frequency, connector type, cavity design, condition, and available fixtures.

// 01 · Measurements

What may be measured

The measurement plan is matched to the filter topology, intended frequency pair, and service requested.

M-01 · LOSS

Pass-frequency loss

Insertion loss at the intended transmit and receive pass frequencies.

M-02 · NOTCH

Notch depth

Rejection at the unwanted frequency and across the nearby response.

M-03 · TX→RX

Forward isolation

Isolation from the transmitter path into the receiver path when applicable.

M-04 · RX→TX

Reverse isolation

Isolation in the opposite direction for the accepted test configuration.

M-05 · MATCH

Return loss

Port-match measurements where the device and fixture support them.

M-06 · Δ

Before / after response

Swept plots documenting measurable change when tuning is performed.

// 02 · Sweep logic

What the response tells you

Useful duplexer performance is a balance: low loss where signals should pass and deep rejection where they should not.

PASS

Preserve wanted signal

Insertion loss shows how much transmit power or receive sensitivity is sacrificed through the filter path.

STOP

Reject unwanted energy

Notch depth and isolation show how effectively the system separates transmit and receive energy.

MATCH

Control reflections

Return loss helps document how well a port is matched at the frequencies that matter.

// 03 · Pricing

Characterization first. Tuning when needed.

Starting prices reflect bench work on accepted amateur VHF/UHF equipment. Complex, damaged, commercial, or site-installed systems are quoted separately.

One filter

Single filter sweep report

$75 starting

A focused swept response for an individual cavity or RF filter.

  • Pass or notch response
  • Selected markers
  • Summary findings

Characterization only

System baseline

Duplexer characterization

$125–175

Document the current response before deciding whether adjustment is needed.

  • Insertion loss
  • Rejection / isolation
  • Swept plots

No tuning included

Complex systems

Commercial or site work

Quote

Special configurations, repeater-site work, unusual fixtures, or commercial equipment.

  • Scope review required
  • Travel quoted separately
  • Site conditions apply

Accepted case by case

Final pricing depends on frequency, connector type, cavity count, condition, access, required adapters, prior modifications, and requested documentation.

// 04 · Use case

Useful data for repeater decisions

A clear sweep helps distinguish a tuning problem from feedline, antenna, shielding, desense, or site-related issues.

A good fit for

  • Amateur repeater owners and clubs
  • GMRS repeater owners where allowed
  • Used duplexers with unknown history
  • Cavity and pass/reject filters
  • Bench-level repeater troubleshooting

What the report may include

  • Insertion-loss and rejection markers
  • Isolation measurements as applicable
  • Before and after sweep plots
  • Test setup and condition notes
  • Plain-language summary findings
Duplexer responsefrequency →