jacktech
Computer
- Oct 10, 2002
- 3
I'm having a problem with an audio signal being degregated too much (-18db) transversing a pair of audio fiber modems and 150ft of multimode fiber optic cable. This application is a two-way radio system used for office personel to communicate with crews out in the field. I'm using the fiber to isolate the RF tower and its associated equipment from my inhouse wiring/communications equipment. The two rooms are 100ft apart and I didn't want a copper path between the two rooms. The RF room has the radio base station equipment and a 200ft antenna tower (lightning rod). The desktop radio remotes communicate to the base station via an audio signal on a single pair of copper cable. In a normal installation the single audio signal pair is bridge-tapped to all the radio remotes in the office. To provide electrical isolation I installed the audio fiber modems and the fiber between the base station and the bridge-tapped connection point for the office remotes. The fiber modems are set up as two wire transmit-only (always off-hook). Things work but the audio signal is getting 18 db of loss going through the two fiber modems which makes the audio quality poor.The radio technicians/engineers have no way to compensate for the signal loss. The fiber modem manufacturer has tried but according to his calculations the components in his modems should be producing this amount of loss. Does anyone have any experience in this type of application or know of a fiber optic modem that doesn't degrade the audio signal so much?