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Indoor FM boost with no cables?
On 8/2/2014 8:50 PM, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
On 8/2/2014 7:48 PM, wrote: Jerry Stuckle wrote: On 8/2/2014 5:53 PM, Rob wrote: Lostgallifreyan wrote: Jerry Stuckle wrote in news:lrio4f$fs4$1@dont- email.me: Nope. I'm talking about what is commonly used here. But there are some people from the U.K. who think they are experts on everything. To be fair to him, I'm in the UK and he may well have aimed that point at me, knowing this from the message header or some earlier post of mine. I'm also interesed in how the US conventions differ from ours. I think you should be careful not to mistake Jerry's conventions for US conventions. It looks a lot like Jerry makes many assumptions that are not based on signal theory or common practice, but mainly on his own experience as a cable fitter. Cabling is not the only thing I do - nor the only thing I have done in the past. It is just one of the things my company does. But like other trolls, you think you know everything, when you actually know nothing. So much for the anonymous troll who uses a fake email and probably doesn't even have a call sign. And here he goes off into his usual "stupid troll" rant with yet a person who had the umitigated audacity to imply Jerry Stuckle does not know everything about everything. You ignorant peasants just don't understand; Jerry Stuckle has done everything, knows everything and is NEVER, EVER wrong about anything. To even hint otherwise is blasphemy and you shall be severely reprimanded and totally disparaged as you well deserve. And here's one of the other anonymous trolls without a call sign on this newsgroup. If I didn't know some REAL hams in the U.K., I would have a VERY DIM VIEW of the people there. You, "Rob", Gareth and a couple of others - all cut from the same form. But trolls can't stand the truth, can you? Once again, you can have the last word - as trolls need Actually, that statement is unfair - to Gareth. At least he isn't afraid to let people know who he is. So Gareth, I apologize for mixing you in with the anonymous trolls. You're better than that. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
amdx wrote in :
I probably missed something in this thread, but where are you going to get an FM transmitter that isn't designed to work with FM radios? A CB no-longer-wants-to-be? :) Ok, facetious answer, but there's a point to this, they do exist. For all I know, if the microtransmitters have slightly narrower bandwidth deliberately to reduce encroachment on other signals (wise maybe, given that many of these devices may be built and used), then the loss of SNR and quality for music listening may be acceptable for some, but not to me. I wouldn't use one if they haven't got good quality sound. If intended for use in a car, there's much less likely a demand that they should. |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
Rob wrote in :
Deviation is something different than bandwidth. To receive an FM signal, as a rule of thumb you require a receiver with a bandwith of about twice the deviation plus twice the maximal audio frequency. So to receive a signal with 15kHz audio and 75kHz deviation, you require a bandwitdh of about 180kHz. This is not "to make things less critical". It is a requirement because of the characteristics of FM modulation, where sideband frequencies are determined by a Bessel function. The ratio between deviation and maximal audio frequency, the modulation index, determines the signal/noise ratio after demodulation for a strong signal. That's useful. It ties in with things I have read about phase modulation synthesis. At risk of opening a wild (but fun) bit of off-topic, I wonder if given a reference carrier at precise fixed frequency, a phase modulation technique might allow advantages to signal transmission that FM lacks. |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
On 8/2/2014 9:55 PM, Lostgallifreyan wrote:
Rob wrote in : Deviation is something different than bandwidth. To receive an FM signal, as a rule of thumb you require a receiver with a bandwith of about twice the deviation plus twice the maximal audio frequency. So to receive a signal with 15kHz audio and 75kHz deviation, you require a bandwitdh of about 180kHz. This is not "to make things less critical". It is a requirement because of the characteristics of FM modulation, where sideband frequencies are determined by a Bessel function. The ratio between deviation and maximal audio frequency, the modulation index, determines the signal/noise ratio after demodulation for a strong signal. That's useful. It ties in with things I have read about phase modulation synthesis. At risk of opening a wild (but fun) bit of off-topic, I wonder if given a reference carrier at precise fixed frequency, a phase modulation technique might allow advantages to signal transmission that FM lacks. Not really. All phase modulation does is integrate the modulating signal and use that to shift the phase of the carrier (which also requires a frequency change to effect the phase change). The resulting signal is exactly the same as if the carrier were directly frequency modulated. The only difference is how you got there. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
Jerry Stuckle wrote in
: That's useful. It ties in with things I have read about phase modulation synthesis. At risk of opening a wild (but fun) bit of off-topic, I wonder if given a reference carrier at precise fixed frequency, a phase modulation technique might allow advantages to signal transmission that FM lacks. Not really. All phase modulation does is integrate the modulating signal and use that to shift the phase of the carrier (which also requires a frequency change to effect the phase change). The resulting signal is exactly the same as if the carrier were directly frequency modulated. The only difference is how you got there. Ok. What made me wonder is that I read (in the context of phase modulation for musical audio synthesis) that true FM methods can cause a frequency drift that is avoided completely by using phase modulation. I wondered if that fact might (at some other cost) be useful in signal transmission at RF. |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
On 8/2/2014 10:52 PM, Lostgallifreyan wrote:
Jerry Stuckle wrote in : That's useful. It ties in with things I have read about phase modulation synthesis. At risk of opening a wild (but fun) bit of off-topic, I wonder if given a reference carrier at precise fixed frequency, a phase modulation technique might allow advantages to signal transmission that FM lacks. Not really. All phase modulation does is integrate the modulating signal and use that to shift the phase of the carrier (which also requires a frequency change to effect the phase change). The resulting signal is exactly the same as if the carrier were directly frequency modulated. The only difference is how you got there. Ok. What made me wonder is that I read (in the context of phase modulation for musical audio synthesis) that true FM methods can cause a frequency drift that is avoided completely by using phase modulation. I wondered if that fact might (at some other cost) be useful in signal transmission at RF. Yes and no... Without knowing the context, I would guess the frequency drift they refer to is caused by a DC bias to the modulator from the incoming signal itself with FM modulation. This would assume the incoming signal is DC coupled, which I would guess it might be in music synthesizers (don't know - never worked with one). Using phase modulation, if there were a DC bias on the signal, it would just old the phase at a constant angle - and since frequency shift is based on the change in the phase angle of the signal (and vice versa, of course), the signal would have zero deviation. It's something I've never encountered in radios, but then you don't normally see radios DC coupling the audio signal to the modulator. But I will admit most of the FM transmitters I've worked with (both commercial FM and VHF/UHF business and ham bands) have been phase modulated. The only time I remember getting deeply into direct FM was back in the early to mid 70's when I was working on a frequency synthesizer of 2 meters (this was back when crystal rigs were still common). It's pretty easy to get FM out of such a circuit since frequency is directly controlled by voltage - all you need to do is feed the modulating signal into the VCO feedback loop. It ended up working pretty well, and I didn't have any problem with frequency drift (but then with a VCO any drift automatically solves itself). -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
Jerry Stuckle wrote:
On 8/2/2014 8:50 PM, Jerry Stuckle wrote: On 8/2/2014 7:48 PM, wrote: Jerry Stuckle wrote: On 8/2/2014 5:53 PM, Rob wrote: Lostgallifreyan wrote: Jerry Stuckle wrote in news:lrio4f$fs4$1@dont- email.me: Nope. I'm talking about what is commonly used here. But there are some people from the U.K. who think they are experts on everything. To be fair to him, I'm in the UK and he may well have aimed that point at me, knowing this from the message header or some earlier post of mine. I'm also interesed in how the US conventions differ from ours. I think you should be careful not to mistake Jerry's conventions for US conventions. It looks a lot like Jerry makes many assumptions that are not based on signal theory or common practice, but mainly on his own experience as a cable fitter. Cabling is not the only thing I do - nor the only thing I have done in the past. It is just one of the things my company does. But like other trolls, you think you know everything, when you actually know nothing. So much for the anonymous troll who uses a fake email and probably doesn't even have a call sign. And here he goes off into his usual "stupid troll" rant with yet a person who had the umitigated audacity to imply Jerry Stuckle does not know everything about everything. You ignorant peasants just don't understand; Jerry Stuckle has done everything, knows everything and is NEVER, EVER wrong about anything. To even hint otherwise is blasphemy and you shall be severely reprimanded and totally disparaged as you well deserve. And here's one of the other anonymous trolls without a call sign on this newsgroup. If I didn't know some REAL hams in the U.K., I would have a VERY DIM VIEW of the people there. You, "Rob", Gareth and a couple of others - all cut from the same form. But trolls can't stand the truth, can you? Once again, you can have the last word - as trolls need Actually, that statement is unfair - to Gareth. At least he isn't afraid to let people know who he is. So Gareth, I apologize for mixing you in with the anonymous trolls. You're better than that. I beg your pardon, my liege, but it was my understanding I was to have the last word. Obviously I was in error. I was also quite suprised to find I am British, but if your worship says I am British, I must be British as your worship is never wrong. -- Jim Pennino |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
In message , Jeff writes
Jerry does not seem to take on board that this is an international group, not a group of ex-US cable technicians who slovenly misuse dBm to mean dBmV, when the rest of the world uses dBm correctly to mean dB relative to a milliwatt. I think only a small minority of US cable TV people would misuse dBm when they really mean dBmV. I worked in the industry all my life, 20 years of which were for an American company - and I never found this to be a common practice. -- Ian |
Indoor FM boost with no cables?
On 8/3/2014 5:18 AM, Jeff wrote:
And here's one of the other anonymous trolls without a call sign on this newsgroup. If I didn't know some REAL hams in the U.K., I would have a VERY DIM VIEW of the people there. You, "Rob", Gareth and a couple of others - all cut from the same form. But trolls can't stand the truth, can you? Once again, you can have the last word - as trolls need I do find that rant very amusing; particularly that fact that Jerry misses completely how similar he and Gareth are!! As soon as they are challenged on a subject, rather than carry on a sane argument they both resort first to impugning someone's knowledge and qualifications (without any grounds or knowledge of the person) and then to name calling. It is a startling resemblance. Jeff No, it's just calling unsubstantiated claims by anonymous trolls what they are - pure bull manure! Especially when they repeatedly show a complete lack of the knowledge they claim they should have. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
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