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#11
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I'd like to thank everyone who responded to my inquiry regarding the "muffled"
transmit audio on my HTX-252! There is a lot of very useful information among those responses. I think I'll try listening to myself first. FWIW, I'd bought the rig used, and, not being a 2M FM guy, only used it this past weekend on a trip to my 45th high school reunion. The report came from a guy I'd known in high school. Again, thank you all! 73 Cal K4JSI |
#12
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I'd like to thank everyone who responded to my inquiry regarding the "muffled"
transmit audio on my HTX-252! There is a lot of very useful information among those responses. I think I'll try listening to myself first. FWIW, I'd bought the rig used, and, not being a 2M FM guy, only used it this past weekend on a trip to my 45th high school reunion. The report came from a guy I'd known in high school. Again, thank you all! 73 Cal K4JSI |
#13
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#14
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#15
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I'd like to be able to run the line
out audio from a scanner into the sound card and be able to display the audio envelope. The amplitude scale wouldn't need to be calibrated as long as I could count the number of divisions, I could compare the peak deviation from the 252 to other signals on the air. A quick and dirty deviation comparison checker. Mike- I have an old Heath deviation meter that uses a peak-reading meter to display deviation. It was necessary to calibrate it using the "Bessell null method" using a signal generator with sine-wave FM modulation. The signal is received on an SSB receiver with a fairly sharp filter. Modulation is adjusted for a carrier null, and the deviation is obtained from a table of bessell functions, based on the ratio of modulating frequency to peak deviation. This method is outlined in some ARRL publications that cover VHF-FM techniques. What you describe is very close to how other deviation meters work. They receive a signal, convert it to an intermediate frequency, FM detect and display the detector output on an oscilloscope. It is a lot easier to calibrate this kind of meter, since you only have to offset the transmitter's frequency by plus and minus one KHz increments, and adjust the oscilloscope to display the correct offset. Using a deviation meter, it is normal to use some loud sound such as whistling directly across the microphone, to adjust a radio's peak deviation control for about 5 KHz. Then you adjust the radio's microphone amplifier so average speech runs around 3 KHz. I have a Turner desk mic connected to the 252 at the moment. I don't really know if It's an improvement or not. I built a little adapter box with 6 push button switches so I can control the radio, The problem with the HTX-252, is there is no microphone amplifier adjustment, and some people think it should work when speaking some distance away from the microphone. Your Turner microphone may provide the extra amplification needed to talk at a greater distance. While I won't tell someone they shouldn't do that, I can at least partly justify keeping the adjustment set for talking very close to the microphone. By close, I mean about a quarter inch or one centimeter. At home in the shack, you probably don't have sound proofed walls and ceiling, but the ambient noise often consists of only an air conditioner blower or Television sound from the next room. Under that condition, it wouldn't hurt to have a little more gain so you keep the microphone at a comfortable distance. However, many uses of the HTX-252 involve mobile operation where there are a lot of loud noises from the engine, traffic and an even louder air conditioner blower. In a heavy rainstorm you may not realize how loud it becomes. The result is a decreased audio signal-to-noise ratio. The only way to overcome that is by close talking, which increases the signal level with respect to the background noise level. This condition is the basis of most Ham Radio and commercial communications equipment designs. Obviously many people don't subscribe to that philosophy, so there are a number of amplified microphones on the market! 73, Fred, K4DII |
#16
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I'd like to be able to run the line
out audio from a scanner into the sound card and be able to display the audio envelope. The amplitude scale wouldn't need to be calibrated as long as I could count the number of divisions, I could compare the peak deviation from the 252 to other signals on the air. A quick and dirty deviation comparison checker. Mike- I have an old Heath deviation meter that uses a peak-reading meter to display deviation. It was necessary to calibrate it using the "Bessell null method" using a signal generator with sine-wave FM modulation. The signal is received on an SSB receiver with a fairly sharp filter. Modulation is adjusted for a carrier null, and the deviation is obtained from a table of bessell functions, based on the ratio of modulating frequency to peak deviation. This method is outlined in some ARRL publications that cover VHF-FM techniques. What you describe is very close to how other deviation meters work. They receive a signal, convert it to an intermediate frequency, FM detect and display the detector output on an oscilloscope. It is a lot easier to calibrate this kind of meter, since you only have to offset the transmitter's frequency by plus and minus one KHz increments, and adjust the oscilloscope to display the correct offset. Using a deviation meter, it is normal to use some loud sound such as whistling directly across the microphone, to adjust a radio's peak deviation control for about 5 KHz. Then you adjust the radio's microphone amplifier so average speech runs around 3 KHz. I have a Turner desk mic connected to the 252 at the moment. I don't really know if It's an improvement or not. I built a little adapter box with 6 push button switches so I can control the radio, The problem with the HTX-252, is there is no microphone amplifier adjustment, and some people think it should work when speaking some distance away from the microphone. Your Turner microphone may provide the extra amplification needed to talk at a greater distance. While I won't tell someone they shouldn't do that, I can at least partly justify keeping the adjustment set for talking very close to the microphone. By close, I mean about a quarter inch or one centimeter. At home in the shack, you probably don't have sound proofed walls and ceiling, but the ambient noise often consists of only an air conditioner blower or Television sound from the next room. Under that condition, it wouldn't hurt to have a little more gain so you keep the microphone at a comfortable distance. However, many uses of the HTX-252 involve mobile operation where there are a lot of loud noises from the engine, traffic and an even louder air conditioner blower. In a heavy rainstorm you may not realize how loud it becomes. The result is a decreased audio signal-to-noise ratio. The only way to overcome that is by close talking, which increases the signal level with respect to the background noise level. This condition is the basis of most Ham Radio and commercial communications equipment designs. Obviously many people don't subscribe to that philosophy, so there are a number of amplified microphones on the market! 73, Fred, K4DII |
#17
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I had a KDK two meter FM rig that drove all of us nuts with a similar
problem. It turned out that it was just off frequency from the factory. No one thought to check its frequency until lots of other things had been tried. Talk about red faces. Ed, NM2K "Fred McKenzie" wrote in message ... I'd like to be able to run the line out audio from a scanner into the sound card and be able to display the audio envelope. The amplitude scale wouldn't need to be calibrated as long as I could count the number of divisions, I could compare the peak deviation from the 252 to other signals on the air. A quick and dirty deviation comparison checker. Mike- I have an old Heath deviation meter that uses a peak-reading meter to display deviation. It was necessary to calibrate it using the "Bessell null method" using a signal generator with sine-wave FM modulation. The signal is received on an SSB receiver with a fairly sharp filter. Modulation is adjusted for a carrier null, and the deviation is obtained from a table of bessell functions, based on the ratio of modulating frequency to peak deviation. This method is outlined in some ARRL publications that cover VHF-FM techniques. What you describe is very close to how other deviation meters work. They receive a signal, convert it to an intermediate frequency, FM detect and display the detector output on an oscilloscope. It is a lot easier to calibrate this kind of meter, since you only have to offset the transmitter's frequency by plus and minus one KHz increments, and adjust the oscilloscope to display the correct offset. Using a deviation meter, it is normal to use some loud sound such as whistling directly across the microphone, to adjust a radio's peak deviation control for about 5 KHz. Then you adjust the radio's microphone amplifier so average speech runs around 3 KHz. I have a Turner desk mic connected to the 252 at the moment. I don't really know if It's an improvement or not. I built a little adapter box with 6 push button switches so I can control the radio, The problem with the HTX-252, is there is no microphone amplifier adjustment, and some people think it should work when speaking some distance away from the microphone. Your Turner microphone may provide the extra amplification needed to talk at a greater distance. While I won't tell someone they shouldn't do that, I can at least partly justify keeping the adjustment set for talking very close to the microphone. By close, I mean about a quarter inch or one centimeter. At home in the shack, you probably don't have sound proofed walls and ceiling, but the ambient noise often consists of only an air conditioner blower or Television sound from the next room. Under that condition, it wouldn't hurt to have a little more gain so you keep the microphone at a comfortable distance. However, many uses of the HTX-252 involve mobile operation where there are a lot of loud noises from the engine, traffic and an even louder air conditioner blower. In a heavy rainstorm you may not realize how loud it becomes. The result is a decreased audio signal-to-noise ratio. The only way to overcome that is by close talking, which increases the signal level with respect to the background noise level. This condition is the basis of most Ham Radio and commercial communications equipment designs. Obviously many people don't subscribe to that philosophy, so there are a number of amplified microphones on the market! 73, Fred, K4DII |
#18
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I had a KDK two meter FM rig that drove all of us nuts with a similar
problem. It turned out that it was just off frequency from the factory. No one thought to check its frequency until lots of other things had been tried. Talk about red faces. Ed, NM2K "Fred McKenzie" wrote in message ... I'd like to be able to run the line out audio from a scanner into the sound card and be able to display the audio envelope. The amplitude scale wouldn't need to be calibrated as long as I could count the number of divisions, I could compare the peak deviation from the 252 to other signals on the air. A quick and dirty deviation comparison checker. Mike- I have an old Heath deviation meter that uses a peak-reading meter to display deviation. It was necessary to calibrate it using the "Bessell null method" using a signal generator with sine-wave FM modulation. The signal is received on an SSB receiver with a fairly sharp filter. Modulation is adjusted for a carrier null, and the deviation is obtained from a table of bessell functions, based on the ratio of modulating frequency to peak deviation. This method is outlined in some ARRL publications that cover VHF-FM techniques. What you describe is very close to how other deviation meters work. They receive a signal, convert it to an intermediate frequency, FM detect and display the detector output on an oscilloscope. It is a lot easier to calibrate this kind of meter, since you only have to offset the transmitter's frequency by plus and minus one KHz increments, and adjust the oscilloscope to display the correct offset. Using a deviation meter, it is normal to use some loud sound such as whistling directly across the microphone, to adjust a radio's peak deviation control for about 5 KHz. Then you adjust the radio's microphone amplifier so average speech runs around 3 KHz. I have a Turner desk mic connected to the 252 at the moment. I don't really know if It's an improvement or not. I built a little adapter box with 6 push button switches so I can control the radio, The problem with the HTX-252, is there is no microphone amplifier adjustment, and some people think it should work when speaking some distance away from the microphone. Your Turner microphone may provide the extra amplification needed to talk at a greater distance. While I won't tell someone they shouldn't do that, I can at least partly justify keeping the adjustment set for talking very close to the microphone. By close, I mean about a quarter inch or one centimeter. At home in the shack, you probably don't have sound proofed walls and ceiling, but the ambient noise often consists of only an air conditioner blower or Television sound from the next room. Under that condition, it wouldn't hurt to have a little more gain so you keep the microphone at a comfortable distance. However, many uses of the HTX-252 involve mobile operation where there are a lot of loud noises from the engine, traffic and an even louder air conditioner blower. In a heavy rainstorm you may not realize how loud it becomes. The result is a decreased audio signal-to-noise ratio. The only way to overcome that is by close talking, which increases the signal level with respect to the background noise level. This condition is the basis of most Ham Radio and commercial communications equipment designs. Obviously many people don't subscribe to that philosophy, so there are a number of amplified microphones on the market! 73, Fred, K4DII |
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Amateur Radio Newslin(tm) Report 1385 – February 27, 2004 | Dx | |||
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