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#1
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Hi folks,
A little while ago, I was goofing around with the Long Wave band on my radio. I picked up Radio Havana, and some other stations that are usually found on Short Wave. Why? Can anybody explain this? Thanks!! Barry F. |
#2
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#3
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On Oct 29, 10:52*pm, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 10/29/09 21:50 , wrote: Hi folks, A little while ago, I was goofing around with the Long Wave band on my radio. I picked up Radio Havana, and some other stations that are usually found on Short Wave. Why? Can anybody explain this? Thanks!! Barry F. * *Which radio are you using for this? Hi, I'm using a new Roberts Revival R250 with slide rule dial. |
#4
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#5
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On Oct 29, 11:18*pm, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 10/29/09 22:00 , wrote: On Oct 29, 10:52 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/29/09 21:50 , wrote: Hi folks, A little while ago, I was goofing around with the Long Wave band on my radio. I picked up Radio Havana, and some other stations that are usually found on Short Wave. Why? Can anybody explain this? Thanks!! Barry F. * * Which radio are you using for this? Hi, I'm using a new Roberts Revival R250 with slide rule dial. * *Ok, that helps. A number of possibilities, here. Cross modulation product. And image. And overload product. Radio Habana is a strong signal, and on receivers with less headroom and substandard image rejection or filtration, overload is common on particularly strong signals. This can create images up and down the dial, even on different bands. * *You may have signal mixing somewhere in your local environment, with the lower product falling into the LW band. * *If the issue exists on all your LW receivers, it's less likely to be an issue that originates within the receiver. Hi, this morning I tried a different radio, and picked up an AM station on the lower end of the LW band. This time there no Short Wave stations on either radio's LW band both picked up the same AM station. By the way, this Roberts Revival Radio has the most sensitive AM and FM bands, it compares to my CC Radio. |
#6
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#7
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On Oct 30, 10:30*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 10/30/09 04:37 , wrote: On Oct 29, 11:18 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/29/09 22:00 , wrote: On Oct 29, 10:52 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/29/09 21:50 , wrote: Hi folks, A little while ago, I was goofing around with the Long Wave band on my radio. I picked up Radio Havana, and some other stations that are usually found on Short Wave. Why? Can anybody explain this? Thanks!! Barry F. * * *Which radio are you using for this? Hi, I'm using a new Roberts Revival R250 with slide rule dial. * * Ok, that helps. A number of possibilities, here. Cross modulation product. And image. And overload product. Radio Habana is a strong signal, and on receivers with less headroom and substandard image rejection or filtration, overload is common on particularly strong signals. This can create images up and down the dial, even on different bands. * * You may have signal mixing somewhere in your local environment, with the lower product falling into the LW band. * * If the issue exists on all your LW receivers, it's less likely to be an issue that originates within the receiver. Hi, this morning I tried a different radio, and picked up an AM station on the lower end of the LW band. This time there no Short Wave stations on either radio's LW band both picked up the same AM station. By the way, this Roberts Revival Radio has the most sensitive AM and FM bands, it compares to my CC Radio. * *Sounds like you've got a strong local signal in your area that's producing mix products in your receivers. Likely that AM. But it can also be a strong local FM, or even a stray signal from an unexpected source. Like another electronic device. * *Consumer grade receivers, like your Roberts, are designed and constructed to provide effective performance on anemic antennae. To make this work, the front end has to be quite sensitive. To meet a price point, manufacturers will cut corners. So, some assumptions are made about where and under what circumstances the radio will be used. Top of the list, is that high level signals are not expected to be encountered. So, high sensitivity input circuits are designed, with little room for the occasional high signal level that may never be encountered. These input circuits are usually run wide open, without provision for reducing input to prevent overload. Further savings are achieved by eliminating internal shielding between stages. What you end up with, is a receiver of high sensitivity that, under certain conditions, produces spurious signals up and down the dial. * *If the spurious signals on your LW band are different on each radio, the problem is one or more local signals with enough signal strength to produce non linearities in the first RF stage, which produces mix products of multiple signals that appear on more than just your LW band. They'll likely be on SW, as well. * *Eliminating these spurious signals may be as simple as reducing the amount of antenna available to your receiver. * *But strong local signals can also get in to your receiver though other paths than the antenna. If you're powering your radio with an A/C adaptor, disconnect it, and run your radio on battery power. If that eliminates the spurious signals, you've isolated the path by which the problem signal gets into your radio. Ferrite cores on the DC line to your radio from the wall wart will reduce this signal. As will using a filtered, regulated power supply with an effective ground. * *A little investigation will reveal what the offending signal is, and where it may be coming into your radios. With that, you can take measures to reduce spurious signals and enjoy your radio as it was intended to be enjoyed. Thank you for such an informative and interesting reply. Can you suggest a good filtered power supply with an effective ground? I use an AMT 3000 AM transmitter to broadcast vintage jazz records through my house (and up the street) over my restored tube radios, I've been dealing with an intermittent hum with the Zenith that sits on the counter in our kitchen. (same location as the Roberts by the way) The hum isn't really that bad, but if I could get rid of it that would be better! Thanks again. Barry F. |
#8
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#9
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On Oct 30, 9:30*am, "D. Peter Maus"
wrote: On 10/30/09 04:37 , wrote: On Oct 29, 11:18 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/29/09 22:00 , wrote: On Oct 29, 10:52 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/29/09 21:50 , wrote: Hi folks, A little while ago, I was goofing around with the Long Wave band on my radio. I picked up Radio Havana, and some other stations that are usually found on Short Wave. Why? Can anybody explain this? Thanks!! Barry F. * * *Which radio are you using for this? Hi, I'm using a new Roberts Revival R250 with slide rule dial. * * Ok, that helps. A number of possibilities, here. Cross modulation product. And image. And overload product. Radio Habana is a strong signal, and on receivers with less headroom and substandard image rejection or filtration, overload is common on particularly strong signals. This can create images up and down the dial, even on different bands. * * You may have signal mixing somewhere in your local environment, with the lower product falling into the LW band. * * If the issue exists on all your LW receivers, it's less likely to be an issue that originates within the receiver. Hi, this morning I tried a different radio, and picked up an AM station on the lower end of the LW band. This time there no Short Wave stations on either radio's LW band both picked up the same AM station. By the way, this Roberts Revival Radio has the most sensitive AM and FM bands, it compares to my CC Radio. * *Sounds like you've got a strong local signal in your area that's producing mix products in your receivers. Likely that AM. But it can also be a strong local FM, or even a stray signal from an unexpected source. Like another electronic device. * *Consumer grade receivers, like your Roberts, are designed and constructed to provide effective performance on anemic antennae. To make this work, the front end has to be quite sensitive. To meet a price point, manufacturers will cut corners. So, some assumptions are made about where and under what circumstances the radio will be used. Top of the list, is that high level signals are not expected to be encountered. So, high sensitivity input circuits are designed, with little room for the occasional high signal level that may never be encountered. These input circuits are usually run wide open, without provision for reducing input to prevent overload. Further savings are achieved by eliminating internal shielding between stages. What you end up with, is a receiver of high sensitivity that, under certain conditions, produces spurious signals up and down the dial. * *If the spurious signals on your LW band are different on each radio, the problem is one or more local signals with enough signal strength to produce non linearities in the first RF stage, which produces mix products of multiple signals that appear on more than just your LW band. They'll likely be on SW, as well. * *Eliminating these spurious signals may be as simple as reducing the amount of antenna available to your receiver. * *But strong local signals can also get in to your receiver though other paths than the antenna. If you're powering your radio with an A/C adaptor, disconnect it, and run your radio on battery power. If that eliminates the spurious signals, you've isolated the path by which the problem signal gets into your radio. Ferrite cores on the DC line to your radio from the wall wart will reduce this signal. As will using a filtered, regulated power supply with an effective ground. * *A little investigation will reveal what the offending signal is, and where it may be coming into your radios. With that, you can take measures to reduce spurious signals and enjoy your radio as it was intended to be enjoyed.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Great post Peter as usual. |
#10
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On 10/30/09 15:31 , Gregg wrote:
On Oct 30, 9:30 am, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/30/09 04:37 , wrote: On Oct 29, 11:18 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/29/09 22:00 , wrote: On Oct 29, 10:52 pm, "D. Peter wrote: On 10/29/09 21:50 , wrote: Hi folks, A little while ago, I was goofing around with the Long Wave band on my radio. I picked up Radio Havana, and some other stations that are usually found on Short Wave. Why? Can anybody explain this? Thanks!! Barry F. Which radio are you using for this? Hi, I'm using a new Roberts Revival R250 with slide rule dial. Ok, that helps. A number of possibilities, here. Cross modulation product. And image. And overload product. Radio Habana is a strong signal, and on receivers with less headroom and substandard image rejection or filtration, overload is common on particularly strong signals. This can create images up and down the dial, even on different bands. You may have signal mixing somewhere in your local environment, with the lower product falling into the LW band. If the issue exists on all your LW receivers, it's less likely to be an issue that originates within the receiver. Hi, this morning I tried a different radio, and picked up an AM station on the lower end of the LW band. This time there no Short Wave stations on either radio's LW band both picked up the same AM station. By the way, this Roberts Revival Radio has the most sensitive AM and FM bands, it compares to my CC Radio. Sounds like you've got a strong local signal in your area that's producing mix products in your receivers. Likely that AM. But it can also be a strong local FM, or even a stray signal from an unexpected source. Like another electronic device. Consumer grade receivers, like your Roberts, are designed and constructed to provide effective performance on anemic antennae. To make this work, the front end has to be quite sensitive. To meet a price point, manufacturers will cut corners. So, some assumptions are made about where and under what circumstances the radio will be used. Top of the list, is that high level signals are not expected to be encountered. So, high sensitivity input circuits are designed, with little room for the occasional high signal level that may never be encountered. These input circuits are usually run wide open, without provision for reducing input to prevent overload. Further savings are achieved by eliminating internal shielding between stages. What you end up with, is a receiver of high sensitivity that, under certain conditions, produces spurious signals up and down the dial. If the spurious signals on your LW band are different on each radio, the problem is one or more local signals with enough signal strength to produce non linearities in the first RF stage, which produces mix products of multiple signals that appear on more than just your LW band. They'll likely be on SW, as well. Eliminating these spurious signals may be as simple as reducing the amount of antenna available to your receiver. But strong local signals can also get in to your receiver though other paths than the antenna. If you're powering your radio with an A/C adaptor, disconnect it, and run your radio on battery power. If that eliminates the spurious signals, you've isolated the path by which the problem signal gets into your radio. Ferrite cores on the DC line to your radio from the wall wart will reduce this signal. As will using a filtered, regulated power supply with an effective ground. A little investigation will reveal what the offending signal is, and where it may be coming into your radios. With that, you can take measures to reduce spurious signals and enjoy your radio as it was intended to be enjoyed.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Great post Peter as usual. Thanks. Although, I'm sure this will start another barfight. Grab a beer and enjoy the show. |
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