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Can a Power Divider Be Used as a Combiner?
Apr , 25 2026
In RF system design and deployment, one common question often arises: Can a power divider be used in reverse as a power combiner? From a theoretical standpoint, the answer is yes. However, in real-world engineering applications, this practice comes with several hidden risks. If not handled properly, it can degrade system performance or even damage critical components. In this article, we’ll break ...
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How to Deploy a DAS System in a 1200-Meter Mining Tunnel
May , 23 2026
A complete guide to underground DAS deployment for reliable 4G/5G coverage in mining tunnels using leaky feeder systems and RF engineering principles. Why Mining Tunnels Need DAS Coverage Underground mining environments are among the most difficult RF scenarios. Signal attenuation caused by rock layers, concrete, humidity, and metal equipment makes wireless coverage extremely challenging. In a 120...
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Passive DAS vs. Active DAS Pros, Cons & Best Use Cases — A Technical Deep Dive
Jun , 06 2026
1. Why compare these two architectures? Over 80% of mobile communications happen indoors. Office concrete, shopping mall metal structures, hospital shielding — all block signals. You need a way to bring the signal from outside to the inside. A Distributed Antenna System does exactly that. It takes one signal source and distributes RF via coaxial cable or fiber to every antenna inside a building. B...
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Low PIM Components: The Real Engineering Math From link budget to selection traps
Jun , 16 2026
Anyone who has worked on distributed antenna systems will eventually have a head‑on fight with PIM. This post skips the fluff and only shows the engineering math. 1. Where PIM comes from — the formula Two frequencies f1, f2 pass through a non‑linear node (loose connector, oxidized plating, magnetic material) and generate intermodulation products: 3rd order: 2f1-f2 , 2f2-f1 5th order: 3f1-2f2 , 3f2...
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Why Can’t a Power Divider Replace a Tapper in Indoor DAS?
Jun , 23 2026
Anyone who has worked on in‑building DAS eventually hits this problem: the main line signal is strong, but by the time it reaches the far‑end antenna port, there's almost nothing left. If you split it with power dividers all the way, each split makes it weaker, and the far end can't even get a phone registered. Then someone tells you — use a tapper. But what exactly is a tapper? How is it differen...
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