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And we can look at it going the other way. I can
run my FT-817 with its 5 watt signal for a lot less money than my friend Jim can operate his kilowatt. If the band is open The difference between my 5 watt signal and his 1000 watt signal is 2 or three S units at the far end of the circuit. Not enough to be really noticeable. If the band is closed, nobody is talking long distance, the band is closed. Now when conditions are marginal he has a decided advantage. Right now I am happy burning a kilowatt of power purchased from the electric company every 15 hours while he gets about 20 minutes operating time for his station for the same dollars. -- 73 es cul wb3fup a Salty Bear "Ian White, G3SEK" wrote in message news ![]() Reg Edwards wrote: Suppose when he's using 100 watts you can hear only 25% of words (or morse characters). So you can't copy him. If he doubles power to 200 watts you will still read only 40% of what he says. So you still can't copy. If he doubles power again to 400 watts you will be able to copy 60% of what he says. You will still be in big trouble. At 800 watts 80% of words (or characters) will be OK but it's not solid copy. Requests to repeat will be common. At 1600 watts 99% of words (or characters) will be OK and that's solid enough. There are many assumptions in the foregoing crude analysis. But as many have experienced it is typical. Typical for a machine, but not for a human being. For humans, "copying" very weak speech or Morse is mostly about *understanding* it as language. In conversational speech, we don't always hear every word. Our minds are remarkably good at filling in gaps by using the broader context of the whole sentence. Even if you don't hear a word clearly, you can hear a word was there and your mind will automatically make a good guess, based on what we did hear before and after. It happens all the time, in conversations both on and off the air, and you don't even notice yourself doing it. It's more obvious when copying Morse, where we more often fill in individual letters, but sometimes also whole words. We make very clever guesses about what the letter could have been, based on what we did manage to hear. Often there is a threshold effect. Below that threshold, you can hear quite a lot but it doesn't make sense as language. Just above the threshold, it clicks into context and you can understand a whole stretch... and then maybe we lose it again. It's also like listening to a language we only "half" know. That doesn't mean we understand a certain percentage of individual words, as a machine might. The way it really works with human beings, we're suddenly delighted to find ourselves understanding whole sentences... and then, just as suddenly, we lose it again completely. The exceptions are for certain key items like a callsign, name, QTH or contest exchange. These items come one by one (without context) and must be logged with 100% accuracy, so then it's rather more mechanical like Reg describes. But even for key words like phonetics, there is a threshold between hearing a sound, and that sound resolving itself into a recognisable word. As any DXer knows, the threshold between "getting it" and "losing it" can indeed be as little as 1dB. The more serious you are about working right down to that threshold, the more that last 1dB matters. -- 73 from Ian G3SEK 'In Practice' columnist for RadCom (RSGB) Editor, 'The VHF/UHF DX Book' http://www.ifwtech.co.uk/g3sek |
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