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On Sat, 12 May 2007 20:48:44 -0700, Roy Lewallen
wrote: It would be really neat if we had a tuner that would selectively tune the signal and noise. But alas, we don't. At HF, the signal and noise are both coming from outside the antenna, so anything we do at the tuner -- or anywhere between the antenna and receiver -- affects both equally. The tuner won't affect the received s/n ratio unless you get it so badly mistuned that you start hearing receiver noise, which isn't likely at HF. So tune it any way you want. For transmitting, you're always best off getting as much power to the antenna as you can. (I mean actual power, not "forward power".) What you're trying to do is make the best s/n ratio at the other guy's receiver. You can't do anything about his noise, but for every dB you increase your signal, you get a one dB improvement in the s/n ratio at his end. This means having an SWR low enough that your rig doesn't shut down. Unless you have an extraordinarily lossy transmission line, any SWR below the shutdown point will get the same amount of power to the antenna for practical purposes. At VHF and above, receiver noise is usually greater than atmospheric noise, so the rules change for receiving antennas. There, you do want to get as much signal from your antenna as you can in order to get the best s/n ratio. The rule for transmitting is still the same, though. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Thanks, Roy, A friend of mine suggests I setup a field strength meter and tune for maximum fs. I don't usually use baluns so I would wonder how accurate that would be. Currently, I am tuning my gutters up for HF. I checked it with an analyzer the other day and found it is an excellent 160 meter and 20 meter antenna without the tuner (swr-wise). In the meantime I am building a vertical for 20 and up. Thanks again, 73 for now, BUck N4PGW -- 73 for now Buck, N4PGW www.lumpuckeroo.com "Small - broadband - efficient: pick any two." |
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