I am fairly new to both electronics in general and ham radio in particular, and this seems like something that should be common, but I can't figure it out yet. This may belong in the beginners section, if so, please let me know and I'll move it there.
I'd like to experiment with transmitters and receivers without broadcasting. So I need a way to feed the output of a transmitter to the input of a receiver. At this point, I'm looking at fairly low power transmitters (certainly under 5W, mostly under 1W), but I would like to be able to work with VHF (2m) and UHF (70cm) bands, as well as HF (mostly 40-10m). The transmitters is what I'm experimenting with at the moment, the plan is to use commercially produced receivers to "receive" the signal. The current plan for VHF/UHF is to use a USB receiver like the RTL-SDR or a FunCubePro+, and to use my Flex 6500 for HF.
Every receiver I've seen says, in large warning letters, to not connect a Tx directly to the antenna input, which makes sense. So what's the solution?
I had one fellow ham tell me that there are dummy loads available with a tap to which a receiver can be connected, but I've not found one yet (there are plenty with taps for attaching a meter to check output power, but that's obviously not the same). So what's the solution?
Poking around, it seems that one option is to use a BNC (or similair) T-connector to connect the radio to a dummy load, and then use the an attenuator to connect the receiver to the T. Or do you just go Tx->attenuator->Rx?
If using a T, how do you determine how much attenuation is required?
From what I can find, the RTL-SDR dongle has a max input of 10dBm (0.01W) (based on
http://superkuh.com/gnuradio/R820T_datasheet-Non_R-20111130_unlocked.pdf). If my output power is, say, 100mW, then for the Tx->attenuator->Rx I would need a 10 dB attenuator. If output power was 1W I'd need 20dB. Can I do that by using two 10dB attenuators in a row? And for the setup with a T, I simply don't have any clue on how to calculate this...
I've also seen mention of directional couplers used for this, and found this one via google:
https://www.rfparts.com/splitter/zfdc-20-5-23.html which seems to be relvant. If I understand it correctly, the signal at the tap will be 19.5dB lower than the power output of the Tx. Is that correct? If so, this may be overkill for very low power transmitters (100 mW range).
Also, while I don't currently own a spectrum analyzer, that's something I'm planning on getting eventually. If I understand things correctly, a similair attenuator analysis needs to be done when connecting the SA to a Tx, right? If so, I might as well buy components that are sufficiently high-quality to be useful with an SA later.
Help much appreciated. Sources for components (US) also much appreciated.