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![]() "Ralf Ballis - DL2MRB" wrote in message ... But usually, in propagation program (VOACAP, etc), the power strength at receive expressed in dBW is far below such values. I read somewhere the next equivalences : - (minus) 93 ~ S9+10, -103 = S9, -127 = S5, -151 = S1. One S unit referencing 6 dB. Some receivers has meter in dB over 1 micro V. With -93 dBW for a S9+10 signal at receive, that 'd mean that the power 'd be only P(W) = 10^ (dBW/10) = 0.7 watt ? "W" mean level in Watt. IMHO this power is much to low... What is wrong in this relations (or in my interpretation) ? P log * 10 = dbW Does not exist ! But well dBW = 10 Log P, this is not the same excepting reading from right to left, Hi! Your explanation is not one. refer my link for a correct explanations. Anyway, how do you calculate the dBW on 20m with such a formula. Someone calculated dBW on 10m, so we must be able to do the same at 20m... But how ? Thierry Reverse calculation: dbW / 10 10^x = P -93 / 10 10^x = 5,011e-10 = 0,0000000005011 Watt Regards, Ralf -- Vy 73 es 55 de Ralf, DL2MRB E-Mail: Board: www.hamradioboard.de |
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