For those unfamiliar with how a transverter works, basically you start with a local oscillator (LO) at frequency X. You then mix that with an intermediate frequency (IF) Y to get the desired operating frequency X + Y (or less commonly X - Y). So for example if you start with an LO running at 756 MHz and mix that with the output from an IF rig at 146 MHz, presto! you're operating at 902 MHz.
I have found out the hard way that transverters are fiddly things. The mixer that combines that IF and LO, for example, can only take a few milliwatts of power. More than once I've blown the mixer on my transverter because I thought I could hook up an IF rig with no attenuator, just to test the receive path. I won't accidentally transmit this time.....really, I won't (zork! smoke......$#%@&!)
So that's the interface. What about the rig itself? I'm using a Yaesu FT-817 because I think it makes just about the perfect IF rig. It can do 28, 144, or 432 MHz IF. It can be modified to transmit out-of-band for odd IF frequencies (legal to do if you're only generating that RF for a transverter intermediate frequency.) And of course it can do HF, VHF and UHF FM, satellite, and a bunch of other fun stuff. I managed to find a reasonably priced FT-817 non-D radio, which was just what I wanted. The non-D has had some problems with blown finals at full power, but I don't care about that because I'll only be transmitting at around 1 watt all the time.
I'm going to modify the FT-817 further to incorporate the N1JEZ/W1GHZ panadapter (I'll write up that project as it happens), which I'll then use with an inexpensive SDR-RTL (more on that later too) to get a waterfall display.
So finally I have an IF rig tightly interfaced to a transverter control. So now I just need to get a W1GHZ transverter on the air.