Short answer: sometimes yes, but only in specific situations. In many hydrogen-line setups it gives little improvement and can even slightly reduce sensitivity.
What the SAWBird H1 already does
The Nooelec SAWbird+ H1 already contains:
- Two low-noise amplifiers
- A SAW band-pass filter centred at 1420 MHz
- ≈65 MHz passband (about 1388–1453 MHz)
- ≈40 dB gain and ~0.8 dB noise figure
So it already rejects most signals outside the hydrogen-line region.
What a 1415–1425 MHz cavity filter adds
A cavity filter is much narrower and higher-Q than the SAW filter. Advantages:
1. Stronger rejection of nearby interference
- LTE, radar, or other L-band signals
- Out-of-band energy that could overload the LNA
2. Prevents LNA overload
- If strong signals exist near 1.4 GHz, filtering before the LNA helps avoid intermodulation.
3. Cleaner spectrum
- Narrower passband around the hydrogen line.
The downside
Cavity filters introduce insertion loss (typically 1–3 dB).
If the filter is before the LNA, that loss directly worsens system noise figure.
Example:
| Configuration | Effect |
|---|---|
| Antenna → SAWBird → SDR | Best raw sensitivity |
| Antenna → cavity filter → SAWBird | Slightly worse noise figure |
| Antenna → LNA → cavity filter → SAWBird | Often best compromise |
Measurements from a hydrogen-line setup showed the cavity filter narrowed the passband but reduced gain by ~3 dB due to insertion loss.
When it does help
Add the cavity filter before the SAWBird if:
- You are near cell towers or radar
- Your SDR spectrum shows strong signals around 1.3–1.5 GHz
- The SAWBird overloads or compresses
When it won’t help much
If:
- Your RF environment is quiet
- The spectrum near 1420 MHz is clean
- The SAWBird is not saturating
then the cavity filter may reduce SNR slightly instead of improving it.
Typical radio astronomy configuration
Many hydrogen-line setups use:
Antenna
↓
Low-noise LNA (mast-mounted)
↓
Cavity filter
↓
SAWBird H1
↓
SDR
This keeps the first LNA noise figure low while still filtering interference.
✅ Practical advice:
Before buying/adding a cavity filter, check the wideband spectrum (1–2 GHz) on your SDR. If you see large peaks near the band, a cavity filter will likely help.