Glad the OP has found something suitable
However, I do feel a bit frustrated by the lack of spec/requirements data posted up. When the alternative was a precision splitter from HP costing $1400 I assumed you were looking for something very precise with a high spec. All my comments were aimed towards producing a 'precision' RF splitter up to many GHz.
Last year I did make what I would class as a precision splitter when I was evaluating my old (made in 1965?) HP RF voltmeter as it measures gain and phase to 1GHz. It was just a temporary lashup splitter but my target spec was:
VSWR better than 1.05:1 on all ports
Phase tracking <1 degree
Amplitude tracking << 0.1dB
The aim was to get this performance across the whole range of the instrument and I designed it using my own (measured) models of the chip resistors I used. I also did a full EM simulation of the PCB.
I used 100R resistors in parallel to make up the 50R resistors for a delta splitter because the parasitics were far better when compared to a single 50R chip resistor.
I can try and dig it out and remeasure it and post up the results if anyone is interested but this was very much a 'precision' splitter that was designed on a simulator and the measured results matched the simulator pretty much spot on.
The secret is to get accurate models of the chip resistors and I measured the 100R resistors right out to 3GHz to get a decent model to put into the simulator. I also select on tested each of the 100R resistors on a decent DMM to get as close to 100R as possible for each. I chose the best 6 resistors from a strip of maybe 30.
But I think it will be a lot tougher trying to make (let alone model) something decent that runs to 10GHz. I've never tried it.