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#1
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Hello All,
I was wondering what are the differences between a preamp, RF amp and an LNA. I was thinking they are all one and the same. Are there any subtle differences among them for these names? Thanks. |
#2
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![]() sjones wrote: Hello All, I was wondering what are the differences between a preamp, RF amp and an LNA. I was thinking they are all one and the same. Are there any subtle differences among them for these names? Thanks. They all refer to amplifiers, and might be used interchangeably in some cases. A "preamp" is generally a low-level amplifier, and to be practical I'd expect it would have reasonably low noise. Like the name suggests, it goes at the front of a signal chain. It's a name used at RF, but also for audio and even sub-audio work. An RF amp presumably amplifies radio frequencies. That's a pretty broad frequency range, and the particular amplifier might well be tuned to a very narrow band, or optimized for some modest range of frequencies (such as 140-150MHz). There's nothing in the name that says it's low power. It could be an RF power amplifier, delivering kilowatts of output. The term isn't very descriptive, but you could add adjectives to narrow it down, like "a low-noise 2-meter mast mounted receiver RF amp." A LNA -- low noise amplifier -- generally refers to an RF preamp with good to very good noise figure, commonly mounted at the antenna so as to not degrade the system noise figure with the loss from a transmission line. Because they are most useful at frequencies where the atmospheric noise is low, you probably wouldn't find LNAs for use at 4MHz, but they are very commonly used on dishes at microwave frequencies. But again, there's nothing in the name that really tells you the frequency range. The name could reasonably be adopted by audio folk dealing with tiny signals from transducers like moving-coil phono cartridges. And of course, others may have slightly different (or even very different) slants on the meanings. Cheers, Tom |
#3
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On 20 Oct 2006 09:46:01 -0700, "sjones" wrote:
Hello All, I was wondering what are the differences between a preamp, RF amp and an LNA. I was thinking they are all one and the same. Are there any subtle differences among them for these names? Thanks. AFIK a Preamp is used when referring to HF and VHF communciation receivers. An RF Amp refers to the final stage of a transmitter and an LNA is generally used when referring to Microwave or sattelite receiver. I note that the preamp/frontend of the R2 is referred to as an LNA. |
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