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Old March 6th 06, 09:47 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.antenna
Roy Lewallen
 
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Default Vertical vs Horizontal shootout part one

Ed wrote:

The bottom line for the Rx, all it cares about since it doesn't know
what kind of antenna is feeding it, is the signal strength at the
input.... so I'd say a calibrated microvolt reading reflecting that
strength is not very meaningless at all. Any changes in the antenna
system will of course change that, but the whole point of any antenna
work is to maximize the signal voltage to that rx input, so I'd think a
calibrated reading would be extremely useful over an S meter alone.


I'm afraid it might require more than simple calibration. The S-meter
typically just shows the AGC voltage. The AGC response is only
approximately logarithmic, and depends on the gain characteristics of
the various stages being controlled. Gain characteristics are commonly
very temperature sensitive, so any calibration scheme would have to take
that into account, as well as the common deviation from true logarithmic
response of the various stages. Calibration would also be different on
different bands, with and without preamplifier or attenuators, etc.

Of course, you could make a receiver with very nearly true logarithmic
response, by use of one of the excellent, wide dynamic range log amps
which are available these days. But however much you or I might like
one, the vast majority of amateurs couldn't care less about what their S
meter is really indicating, so they wouldn't pay the added cost for it.

On top of that, most amateurs would consider a 6dB-per-S-unit meter to
be "dead", and would rather have it wiggle more.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL