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MFJ-945E Mobile Tuner

 

MFJ-945E MOBILE TUNER 

General Information: 

The 

MFJ-945E Mobile Tuner

 is a compact tuner designed for mobile operation in cars, trucks, 

RV's, and boats.  Covering 

1.8

 to 

30 MHz

, it will match virtually any transmitter to almost any 

mobile whip antenna.  It will also match almost any antenna for home station operation such as 
dipoles, inverted-vees, verticals, beams, random wires, and others fed by coax lines or single wire.  
The 

MFJ-945E

 employs a cross-needle meter so forward power, reflected power, and SWR may 

be read simultaneously.  The meter lamp can be powered by a 12Vdc, 300mA source, such as the 

MFJ-1312B

 for home-station operation.  The meter lamp 

ON/OFF

 switch will activate the meter 

lamp.  Use a 2.1mm coaxial plug with the center conductor of the plug connected to the positive 
and the sleeve connected to ground.  Optional mobile mounting bracket (

MFJ-20

) is available. 

 

Cross-Needle SWR/Wattmeter:

 

The 

MFJ-945E

 utilizes a cross-needle meter to read 

FORWARD

 power, 

REFLECTED

 power and 

SWR

 simultaneously in either 

HI

 (300 Watts) or 

LO

 (30 Watts) power ranges.  Set the power 

range switch to 

HI

 or 

LO

.  Next read the 

FORWARD

 power on the 

Forward Scale

.  

REFLECTED

 

power is shown at the same time on the 

Reflected Scale

.  

SWR

 is read by observing where the two 

needles cross. No 

SWR

 sensitivity adjustment needed to read 

SWR

.  The 

HI

 range is 

300

 Watts 

FORWARD

 and 

60

 Watts 

REFLECTED

.  The 

LO

 range is 

30

 Watts 

FORWARD

 and 

6

 Watts 

REFLECTED

.  The 

MFJ-945E

 is factory calibrated on the 

LO

 scale at 

10

Watts 

FORWARD

 and 

2

Watts 

REFLECTED

, and on the 

HI

 scale at 

100

Watts 

FORWARD

 and 

20

Watts 

REFLECTED

Installation: 

1. 

Place the tuner in a convenient location at the operating position.  Avoid placing the tuner 
near microphones, speech processors, TNC's or other RF sensitive devices. 

2. 

Install the 

MFJ-945E

 between your transmitter and antenna. Connect a coax line from your 

transmitter to the SO-239 connector labeled 

TRANSMITTER

 on the rear panel of the tuner.  

Connect your antenna to the SO-239 connector labeled 

ANTENNA

 on the rear panel of the 

tuner.  A random wire antenna may be connected to the center connection of the 

ANTENNA

 

connector.  The random length wire should be long, high, and as clear of surrounding 
objects as possible!  For optimum operation, the wire antenna should be a 

1/4-wavelength

 

or longer at the operating frequency.  Do 

not 

ground the random wire antenna.  Ensure that 

the tuner is well grounded to the transmitter!  A post labeled 

GROUND

 is provided for 

ground connection(s). 

NOTE: 

If random wire operation is desired, position the tuner so that the rear panel terminals 
can not be contacted by persons or conductors!  When transmitting with random wire, 
the rear panel connectors can operate with high RF voltages.  These voltages may 
cause serious burns and may also damage anything contacting or within 1/2" of the 
terminals!

 

Summary of Contents for MFJ-945E

Page 1: ...ded to read SWR The HI range is 300 Watts FORWARD and 60 Watts REFLECTED The LO range is 30 Watts FORWARD and 6 Watts REFLECTED The MFJ 945E is factory calibrated on the LO scale at 10Watts FORWARD and 2Watts REFLECTED and on the HI scale at 100Watts FORWARD and 20Watts REFLECTED Installation 1 Place the tuner in a convenient location at the operating position Avoid placing the tuner near micropho...

Page 2: ...une as described in Steps 1 and 2 1 Set the TRANSMITTER and ANTENNA controls to position 5 The tuning capacitors are half opened at this setting 2 Rotate the INDUCTOR control until maximum noise is obtained with your tranceiver in the receiving mode WARNING Never transmit while changing the INDUCTOR setting 3 While transmitting a steady state carrier CW alternately adjust the ANTENNA and TRANSMITT...

Page 3: ...e 160 meter band it may be necessary to reduce transmitter output power Antenna Matching Problems Most matching problems occur when the antenna system presents an extremely high impedance to the tuner When the antenna impedance is much lower than the feedline impedance an odd quarter wavelength feedline converts the low antenna impedance to a very high impedance at the tuner A similar problem occu...

Page 4: ...ecessary to accommodate higher bands WARNING To avoid problems a dipole antenna should be a full half wave on the lowest band On 160 meters an 80 or 40 meter antenna fed the normal way will be extremely reactive with only a few ohms of feedpoint resistance Trying to load an 80 meter or higher frequency antenna on 160 meters can be a disaster for both your signal and the tuner The best way to opera...

Page 5: ......

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