Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jerry Stuckle wrote in news:lrgjen$ao4$1@dont-
email.me: I know EXACTLY what a picowatt is. And I also know what portable receivers are capable of. Sure, if you feed a picowatt directly into the front end of a receiver, a good receiver will hear the signal. But what field strength do you need at the antenna for a portable FM receiver to hear that signal? And most of your inexpensive portable receivers will not hear much of a signal (if at all), even if you do feed a picowatt directly into the front end (not that you can without major surgery on the receiver). Which begs the question of whether that front end is a high resistance input or not. I don't know if it's 50R, 75R, or whatever, but I do know that if it's a high resistance then talk of power means nothing, it needs spelling out in volts. I think one reason this thread got so long is that context is everything, and people (including me) didn't say enough about it from the off. Cranking the numbers means little in a case where a smarter question might well be 'how long is a pice of string?'. What is helping me a lot here is the direct accounting of people's experience with various powers, in specific buildings and such, using specific antennas.. Thanks for those, they give me the quickest grasp of the scale I need to work with. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
WCBS-FM ralliers get rates boost | Broadcasting | |||
Funding Boost for Radio New Zealand International | Shortwave | |||
Advice Needed: How to boost signal on 2.4 ghz av unit | Equipment | |||
PrePaid Boost/Nextel Special | Swap | |||
FS PRE-PAID BOOST/NEXTEL | Swap |