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#1
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Any recommendations on the best products to achieve as complete a range of
reception and transmission as possible? All band, all mode, CW, VLF, Low Band, VHF, UHF, AM aircraft, etc.? Kenwood TS-2000? Harris? Is there an all-in-one radio? I've got six old radios (tube sets mostly) to accomplish this, and would like to get more space and tech efficient. I just don't know the new products. Suggestions? |
#2
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On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 06:17:41 GMT, "Steve Cohen"
wrote: Any recommendations on the best products to achieve as complete a range of reception and transmission as possible? All band, all mode, CW, VLF, Low Band, VHF, UHF, AM aircraft, etc.? Kenwood TS-2000? Harris? Is there an all-in-one radio? I've got six old radios (tube sets mostly) to accomplish this, and would like to get more space and tech efficient. I just don't know the new products. Suggestions? These days it is not so much of a problem to construct a receiver that can be tuned to any frequency between 9 kHz and 9 GHz, the problem is building a receiver that is actually usable in that frequency range:-). If such large frequency range would be attempted, the local oscillator phase noise would kill the performance completely. Wide open receiver front ends will also very easily overload, producing a huge number of spurious responses. Doing a high quality DC to daylight receiver would require at least 3 or 4 different receiver topologies. One perhaps from 9 kHz to 1500 kHz, one from 1 MHz to 200 MHz, one from 100 MHz to 10 GHz and one for frequencies above 10 GHz (if needed). Each subreceiver would require at least a dozen of fixed input filters or at least 4-5 tunable front end filters each, since it is hard to make a tunable filter with a frequency range larger than 1:3. Even with strong mixers a selective front end filter will help in keeping the spurious responses at a reasonable level. I would strongly recommend that you keep your old tube equipment, since they will very clearly outperform any "DC to daylight" all in one units at least in LF and MF. In HF, a DC to daylight receiver will outperform the tube set in frequency display accuracy and frequency stability, but _definitively_ not in spurious response. At frequencies above 15-30 MHz a new rig may outperform a tube rig in sensitivity. Above 50-100 MHz even a mediocre modern receiver may outperform an old tube receiver. Paul OH3LWR |
#3
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On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 06:17:41 GMT, "Steve Cohen"
wrote: Any recommendations on the best products to achieve as complete a range of reception and transmission as possible? All band, all mode, CW, VLF, Low Band, VHF, UHF, AM aircraft, etc.? Kenwood TS-2000? Harris? Is there an all-in-one radio? I've got six old radios (tube sets mostly) to accomplish this, and would like to get more space and tech efficient. I just don't know the new products. Suggestions? These days it is not so much of a problem to construct a receiver that can be tuned to any frequency between 9 kHz and 9 GHz, the problem is building a receiver that is actually usable in that frequency range:-). If such large frequency range would be attempted, the local oscillator phase noise would kill the performance completely. Wide open receiver front ends will also very easily overload, producing a huge number of spurious responses. Doing a high quality DC to daylight receiver would require at least 3 or 4 different receiver topologies. One perhaps from 9 kHz to 1500 kHz, one from 1 MHz to 200 MHz, one from 100 MHz to 10 GHz and one for frequencies above 10 GHz (if needed). Each subreceiver would require at least a dozen of fixed input filters or at least 4-5 tunable front end filters each, since it is hard to make a tunable filter with a frequency range larger than 1:3. Even with strong mixers a selective front end filter will help in keeping the spurious responses at a reasonable level. I would strongly recommend that you keep your old tube equipment, since they will very clearly outperform any "DC to daylight" all in one units at least in LF and MF. In HF, a DC to daylight receiver will outperform the tube set in frequency display accuracy and frequency stability, but _definitively_ not in spurious response. At frequencies above 15-30 MHz a new rig may outperform a tube rig in sensitivity. Above 50-100 MHz even a mediocre modern receiver may outperform an old tube receiver. Paul OH3LWR |
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