Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I am soon to take the Foundation licence test and I'm considering either an
Icom TS50 or the Icom IC - 703. I dony know enough yet to come to a decision - What in the opinion of the newsgroup would be a wise choice for a complete Novice ? I realise the learning will continue AFTER I get the pass certificate - but I dont want to make an expensive mistake before I even get started.... Any help would be most welcome.... John |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 17:11:27 +0000 (UTC), "Simon Smith"
wrote: I am soon to take the Foundation licence test and I'm considering either an Icom TS50 or the Icom IC - 703. I would go for the Icom TS50... unless you mean Kenwood TS-50... then I would go for that.. ;-) The TS50 is a great radio but lacks modernday filtering/dsp. Bye Maurice -- Hamradio: ON4BAM / M0CIL / 9H3Z http://www.on4bam.com/ Travelstories from Alaska, Scotland, South Africa,Iceland, Faroe Isl., Australia, Norway, Svalbard and IOTA activations |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 17:11:27 +0000 (UTC), "Simon Smith"
wrote: What in the opinion of the newsgroup would be a wise choice for a complete Novice ? Hi John, I know the TS-50 (Kenwood) and it is a good, small rig. Try to get the companion power supply from Germany (sorry, don't know the product name) which is a switching power supply (equally as small, but suitable and a lot lighter than big linear supplies). I realise the learning will continue AFTER I get the pass certificate The downside with this, or any other "small" rig is that you will indeed be continuing to learn. This is because there's not enough buttons and knobs to go with all the functionality and you have to learn how to navigate their software menus (not always intuitive) and cryptic displays. There are two roads that this offers. For someone who doesn't want to fiddle with knobs and such, you can figure out the menus, set your options, and simply talk on the rig for ever after. For someone who does want to tune, tweak, and adjust - you really need something bigger; and if that means outside of your budget, it then suggests older. Another point to consider, if you stay with this hobby long enough, you will eventually get at least two of everything. So don't approach a decision thinking you won't be facing that choice again. As such, buy something affordable that leaves you enough money from your budget to buy the other things that go with it - mike, key, speaker, antenna tuner, power meter, and certainly enough transmission line, wire, then insulators, some rope and pulleys and so on. Oddly enough, most of these secondary items will be with you longer than your rig. Older transistorized rigs that still work, will undoubtedly work for as long as you own them and pass them on. If you want to bury your hands in the guts, try tube sets. They are bigger yet, and don't mind your first time mistakes on fixing things. Plus all the voltages are much higher, and touching the wrong lead lends a sort of zest to this past time. Cheaper than gambling and you get the thrills of javelin catching without needing to get out of your house. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The TS50 is a great radio but lacks modernday filtering/dsp.
=================================== How much, if any, is digital filtering better than the old-fashioned Xtl filter. ---- Reg |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi John
A very hard decision indeed as it depends on what you want to do with amateur radio, but need experience to make such a decision! Have you made contact with other amateurs in your area? Like through a club? You may be able to do hands on comparison of various radios both recent and old. You will also then be able to apply this to understanding what the listed specifications mean and whether they are important or not. (Like good receiver sensitivity on 80M is pretty pointless given the amount of general band noise) If you are comparing DSP the only real good indicator is your own ears! You could of course buy something super cheap and old, learn from it and then go to something more expensive.. Cheers Bob VK2YQA Simon Smith wrote: I am soon to take the Foundation licence test and I'm considering either an Icom TS50 or the Icom IC - 703. I dony know enough yet to come to a decision - What in the opinion of the newsgroup would be a wise choice for a complete Novice ? I realise the learning will continue AFTER I get the pass certificate - but I dont want to make an expensive mistake before I even get started.... Any help would be most welcome.... John |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Reg Edwards wrote:
How much, if any, is digital filtering better than the old-fashioned Xtl filter. What makes DSP filtering better than Xtal filters is that it is programmable, not hardwired. The parameters of a DSP filter are continuously variable although not usually implemented that way in most amateur radio receivers. Given the processing power necessary for a filter, one can theoretically have any of a near-infinite number of filter configurations. Reg, you could probably program a DSP audio filter that runs on a PC and outputs audio through the sound card like the ClearSpeech speaker systems. PSK-31 software packages for the PC certainly contain a number of DSP filters and other DSP algorithms. Note that Digital Signal Processing is not limited to filters. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 18:59:25 +0000 (UTC), "Reg Edwards"
wrote: How much, if any, is digital filtering better than the old-fashioned Xtl filter. Hi Reggie, DSP, depending on the artistry of the programmer, can do very well with removing periodic (coherent) noises like birdies and heterodynes. It can also reduce some incoherent noise. Some filters are adaptable in that they can recognized (mostly coherent) noises and automatically reduce them. As for filtering, DSP filters are capable of skirt selectivity that is impossible to achieve with any other means. Here too, they are user configurable (if the option is available) to tailor the skirt slopes and bandwidth independently and maintain a very low pass band ripple. All of this is performed through discrete Fourier math, with the routines in software called IIR or FIR filters. IIR is Infinite and FIR is Finite Impulse Response. The software routine, tied to an ADC chip, takes samples and feeding a delay line, taps that line to feed the same signal (in proportions) back to the input. Some of this might be compared to the Analog BiQuad filters but this delay line I speak of actually exists entirely in software as an algorithm (although early examples in a hybrid design did this in hardware with greater sophistication than the BiQuads). The downside is the quality of the audio has that hollow pipe sound or exhibits obvious sampling clock signal fed into the audio stream. As with all digital design, it must be preceded by analog filters to prevent spectrum folding (high frequency components being translated into low frequency products) and post filters to smooth out the product (if the software can't cope). The sampling rate is the limiting factor. Early DSPs sampling at least twice the highest audio frequency expected (the Nyquist limit) established the clock rate and the processor had to perform all the instructions between those samples. Later DSPs pushed the sampling rate higher such that you could design filters in the IF range. This was the second generation DSP of about 10 years ago. Of course, that IF range was in the 10s of KHz, perhaps as high as 100KHz. Traditional Analog IF design in this range was already perfectly suited to razor thin filters with steep skirts, so the advantage was in the adaptability. Cheap, external, audio DSPs easily make up for any receiver's lack and the IF DSP is arguably worth the cost for the beginner. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Simon Smith" wrote in message ...
I am soon to take the Foundation licence test and I'm considering either an Icom TS50 or the Icom IC - 703. I dony know enough yet to come to a decision - What in the opinion of the newsgroup would be a wise choice for a complete Novice ? I realise the learning will continue AFTER I get the pass certificate - but I dont want to make an expensive mistake before I even get started.... Any help would be most welcome.... I've had a Kenwood TS-50 for years. It's a basic, very rugged and reliable good performer. Other HF xcvrs come and go here but my TS-50 is a keeper. I've used it for both fixed station and pack 'n go operations and have never had a problem with it. Which is more than I can say about some other much more expensive xcvrs I've used. I don't have any hands-on experience specifically with an IC-703 but I have used other Icom compact xcvrs. I'm completely underwhelmed by their strong-signal handling capability. While the TS-50 is not a "competition grade" xcvr it's receiver front-end is much better than the any of front ends of compacted Icom xcvrs I've used so far. As a CW dxer front end performance matters particularly in the pileups so I'm rather fussy about how much overload and intermod I'll put up with. The TS-50 is acceptable here on this basis but the baby Icoms are not. The 703 is a nice package which includes an autotuner, a memory keyer and here in the U.S. it can operate on six meters. It's also considerably more complex than the TS-50. For those who are big into fiddling with bells and whistles. The TS-50 on the other hand is a bare-bones basic HF xcvr without a tuner, keyer or 6M. In your case as a soon-to-become 10 watt Foundation licensee you might look ahead to the day when you upgrade and will be allowed to use much higher powers. With a 703 you'll still be stuck with ten watts out. With a TS-50 you'd be able change one menu setting and go from 10W to 100+W out on the spot. Hre's a couple links to user reviews which you might find interesting. TS-50: http://www.eham.net/reviews/detail/411xed IC-703 http://www.eham.net/reviews/detail/2787 John w3rv |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Maurice ON4BAM wrote in message . ..
On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 17:11:27 +0000 (UTC), "Simon Smith" wrote: I am soon to take the Foundation licence test and I'm considering either an Icom TS50 or the Icom IC - 703. I would go for the Icom TS50... unless you mean Kenwood TS-50... then I would go for that.. ;-) The TS50 is a great radio but lacks modernday filtering/dsp. Which is an *advantage* for a beginner. Bye Maurice w3rv |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Brian Kelly" wrote in message om... Maurice ON4BAM wrote in message . .. On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 17:11:27 +0000 (UTC), "Simon Smith" wrote: I am soon to take the Foundation licence test and I'm considering either an Icom TS50 or the Icom IC - 703. I would go for the Icom TS50... unless you mean Kenwood TS-50... then I would go for that.. ;-) The TS50 is a great radio but lacks modernday filtering/dsp. Which is an *advantage* for a beginner. Definitely. I've seen my students totally overwhelmed by the fancier radios. If they haven't got one already, I recommend that they start with something simple, basic, and used while they get their feet wet. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
w.t.b icom 70 cm rigs ic-2340 ,ic-2350, ic-2400a ,ic-2400 ,eic-2410e ,ic-2410h | Antenna | |||
ICOM R-71A For Sale | Antenna | |||
Dipole and Icom AH-4 | Antenna | |||
Icom 229H help | Antenna | |||
HELP: Icom IC-RP1220 (1.2GHz) repeater drifted. | Antenna |