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#161
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"Pete KE9OA" wrote:
Hey Eric................anytime you have any questions, feel free to shout me down, and I will be glad to answer them as clearly as I know how! The coolest thing about knowledge it that it can be shared. Someday, I will write a comprehensive book all about radio design...............I just need to learn more than the .00000000000000000000000001% that I know right now! Pete, Thanks for the offer! We've talked in the past, but I must say that part of the problem is being able to frame the question coherently. Take care, Eric Pete "Eric F. Richards" wrote in message ... "phil ![]() hi Eric: i am responding here as my reader ate the thread... Quite true, but that's not what you said -- you said it was "resonant." A nit-pick, perhaps, at 3/4 wavelenghts resonance is at 736-kHz. as a 2 wavelengths beverage: 1.9-MHz. your antenna is quite capable on MW. Oh, I don't argue *that*, I just argue that it wasn't resonant. Not that it matters, really, my WR-G303i reports its signal strength as 30 mV 120 miles away on a 400 foot wire broadside to the antenna. Flamethrower, indeed. As for the "flamethrower" at the end of the wire, they are in violation of 47 CFR 22.369, which explicitly lays out the field strength limits on Table Mountain. They may get grandfathered in, but now that the feds are reopening Table Mountain for NIST projects, the local HDTV wannabes are chafing at the restrictions -- even though their antennas would be about 40 miles away. what frequency are they on? Dunno. I don't keep up with the local doings of the broadcasters much. I assume they are in the old standard TV UHF band; 47 CFR 369 says that from 470 to 890 MHz, field strength on Table Mountain must be less than 30 mV/m. radios are black boxes: feed them signals within specs and they perform predictably. ICOM probably left off the LW BPF to save $1. companies are cheap. Actually I got word from someone who said that the '75 was considered a work in progress that never progressed. i know what the R75 is and is not. Then all I ask is that you remember that when you brag on it. Good bargain? definitely. Ultimate radio? No. i am lucky to have Pete as a mentor. That you are. I wish I was fluent enough in electronics to be able to speak the same language as Pete. if you gain access to that antenna try your RX340 and bring along a 7030 owner. No radio is perfect; the '7030 wouldn't hold up out there... To me the question would be whether or not the '340 would. Eric -- Eric F. Richards, "Nature abhors a vacuum tube." -- J. R. Pierce, Bell Labs, c. 1940 -- Eric F. Richards, "Don't destroy the Earth! That's where I keep all of my stuff!" - Squidd on www.fark.com |
#162
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Pete KE9OA wrote:
The only way that this should happen is if either the receiver is very conservatively rated (do we know exactly what method was use to make this measurement?), or if the measurements were incorrectly done. I am not sure that real world performance would reflect those measurements, unless you are in an area where there are several strong signals that are only 5kHz apart. When I am measuring the overload point on the receiver that I am developing, it is very easy to drive the system into overload with a signal generator, yet with a 100 foot longwire in the presence of three 50kW MW broadcasters, no overload is present. I think that specs do tell the story, if the measurement system is properly set up. As an example, on one project, I needed to make some desense measurements from 5kHz to several hundred MHz away from the desired signal. The desired signal level was -140dBm. Using an HP8657 or an 8640B, the broadband noise from these two units was so high, even a 300MHz away from the desired signal, that I had to run the generators through a K&L tunable filter. The only generator that was slightly usable was an HP8642B. This is the one that uses the Modulated Fractional Divider, with the Sigma-Delta modulation. In reference to you statement about the receiver working better than its rated specs, I just don't think so, unless as I said earlier, the measurements were done incorrectly. The only way to really to a close-in IP3 measurement is to run the interfering signal through a very selective, deep skirted crystal filter. You need the interfering signal to have almost non-existant close-in phase noise; otherwise, the measurement is meaningless. Pete, As you know the receiver testing for 'Passport' is done by Sherwood Engineering. Do you know anything about the equipment they use and how the test specs are generated? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#163
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hi Telamon:
Actually I got word from someone who said that the '75 was considered a work in progress that never progressed. That's an understatement if I ever heard one! Welcome to the real world. Engineers will play with a design until they are happy with it but management runs the show. As soon as the pointy haired boss thinks that the design has met its goals the effort ends. sounds like the voice of experience. regards, phil ![]() |
#164
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hi starman:
As you know the receiver testing for 'Passport' is done by Sherwood Engineering. Do you know anything about the equipment they use and how the test specs are generated? go he http://www.mini-circuits.com/application.html regards, phil |
#165
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hi Telamon:
You can mark the group unread or un-subscribe and re-subscribe to the group to get all messages on the news server. thanks, i tried. the HDD has errors. Blindly reading specifications can lead you astray on how the radio will perform. Some measurements require the radio be in a non-optimum reception state. there is also creative spec writing. i'd rather view a schematic, do you have the RX340's? I'm going to play devil's advocate and ask the question "why do some radios work much better than the IP3 @ 5KHz measurement would indicate?" during usage, antenna can help: if we use a LW loop and that station 5 kHz away is being nulled by 50 dB because of its direction then we've solved the problem before it got inside the radio. regards, phil ![]() |
#166
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hi Eric:
Oh, I don't argue *that*, I just argue that it wasn't resonant. if you knew that then why use this antenna for LW? Not that it matters, really, my WR-G303i reports its signal strength as 30 mV 120 miles away on a 400 foot wire broadside to the antenna. Flamethrower, indeed. 30mV at what frequency? can you fault the R8B and R75 for overloading? Dunno. I don't keep up with the local doings of the broadcasters much. I assume they are in the old standard TV UHF band; 47 CFR 369 says that from 470 to 890 MHz, field strength on Table Mountain must be less than 30 mV/m. that PAR LPF should severely attenuate UHF. spectral analysis of that wire is needed. low frequencies or potent RF energy can cause PIN diodes to rectify. No radio is perfect; the '7030 wouldn't hold up out there... To me the question would be whether or not the '340 would. the 7030 uses an SD5400 first mixer and has 40 dB of attenuation on tap... add a $50 homebrew LW BPF: your RX340 will overload first. either way an R75 hooked to a LW loop will hear more NDBs. Eric, you remind me of Captain Ahab, fighting that whale of an antenna, Moby Dick. man versus nature, a classic... but the SOB already bit off your leg. shake the obsession... build a LW loop. regards, phil ![]() |
#167
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"phil
![]() hi Eric: Oh, I don't argue *that*, I just argue that it wasn't resonant. if you knew that then why use this antenna for LW? Sigh... round and round we go... because it was very effective for my needs, specifically picking up NDBs east of the site. Which it did very well. Not that it matters, really, my WR-G303i reports its signal strength as 30 mV 120 miles away on a 400 foot wire broadside to the antenna. Flamethrower, indeed. 30mV at what frequency? can you fault the R8B and R75 for overloading? ....what are you, totally thick or what? The MW station that was causing the problems. Dunno. I don't keep up with the local doings of the broadcasters much. I assume they are in the old standard TV UHF band; 47 CFR 369 says that from 470 to 890 MHz, field strength on Table Mountain must be less than 30 mV/m. that PAR LPF should severely attenuate UHF. spectral analysis of that wire is needed. low frequencies or potent RF energy can cause PIN diodes to rectify. The PAR LPF has no relevence to the federal regulations regarding Table Mountain. What's your point? HDTV broadcasters at Lookout Mountain are griping about the regs. My point, in case you missed it, again, is that the flamethrower is in violation of the regs in 47 CFR 369. No radio is perfect; the '7030 wouldn't hold up out there... To me the question would be whether or not the '340 would. the 7030 uses an SD5400 first mixer and has 40 dB of attenuation on tap... add a $50 homebrew LW BPF: your RX340 will overload first. either way an R75 hooked to a LW loop will hear more NDBs. Of course. The R75 solves all. Can't imagine that if you use your LW loop with another radio, that it'll outperform that R75, can you? Come on, this is really simple. Take whatever crutches you add to your R75, apply them to nearly ANY other radio on the market, and it'll leave your R75 in the dust. (Notably, your dream radio, the Racal 6790, would be left in the dust as well. What's your affinity to radios with crappy front-ends?) Eric, you remind me of Captain Ahab, fighting that whale of an antenna, Moby Dick. man versus nature, a classic... but the SOB already bit off your leg. shake the obsession... build a LW loop. Actually I'll probably purchase what Pete comes up with, since his loop probably will have a low NF and resistance to overload. Just a guess. We'll see. regards, phil ![]() So, what's the deal with the R75 schematic on Yahoo? I've been trying to retrieve it for a week and the server acts dead. Is Yahoo that lax in running their servers? -- Eric F. Richards, "The most likely way for the world to be destroyed, most experts agree, is by accident. That's where we come in; we're computer professionals. We cause accidents." - Nathaniel S. Borenstein |
#168
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Eric F. Richards wrote:
[...] Dunno. I don't keep up with the local doings of the broadcasters much. I assume they are in the old standard TV UHF band; 47 CFR 369 says that from 470 to 890 MHz, field strength on Table Mountain must be less than 30 mV/m. that PAR LPF should severely attenuate UHF. spectral analysis of that wire is needed. low frequencies or potent RF energy can cause PIN diodes to rectify. The PAR LPF has no relevence to the federal regulations regarding Table Mountain. What's your point? HDTV broadcasters at Lookout Mountain are griping about the regs. My point, in case you missed it, again, is that the flamethrower is in violation of the regs in 47 CFR 369. Ack! phil completely drives me to distraction. The above two entries should read 47 CFR 22.369 Part 22, 369. I should've kept my R75 and put a "Hello, my name is phil" tag on it so I could give it a good kick every time he posts more pro-R75 drivel... |
#169
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hi Eric:
...what are you, totally thick or what? The MW station that was causing the problems. at what *frequency* is that MW station transmitting? Of course. The R75 solves all. Can't imagine that if you use your LW loop with another radio, that it'll outperform that R75, can you? Come on, this is really simple. Take whatever crutches you add to your R75, apply them to nearly ANY other radio on the market, and it'll leave your R75 in the dust. (Notably, your dream radio, the Racal 6790, would be left in the dust as well. What's your affinity to radios with crappy front-ends?) the R75 was used to drive home a point: ANY tabletop using the LW loop i suggested will outperform your antenna. only you cannot admit you were wrong. thinking is a crutch! rip on the 7030 and Racal all you want genius. who could not figure out that a simple $50 homebrew LW BPF in front of either will smoke your $4000 RX340 in terms of IP3, dynamic range, phase noise, ultimate rejection, etc. explain how your radio will leave any tabletop "in the dust" when both are hooked to a LW loop? quote specs. regards, phil ![]() |
#170
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![]() I should've kept my R75 and put a "Hello, my name is phil" tag on it so I could give it a good kick every time he posts more pro-R75 drivel... pandering Captain Ahab? when Moby Dick overloaded an R8B and R75 you just blamed the radios: "Get a real radio, and notice the difference. And if you can't afford a real radio, get a Drake." so Steve, Les, Ken, me, and others told you to stick it. instead of building a LW loop you went out and "showed all us idiots" by buying a $4k radio LOL. what did you ask those TenTec engineers Eric? directions to the bathroom? in the words of President Bush: "THE GAME IS OVER" regards, phil ![]() |
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