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Try turning the AGC off, turn the RF Gain way down and the AF Gain up
considerably. Then advance the RF gain until the signal is just copyable in head phones. Repeat for the two antenna conditions. Make sure your audio levels are equal. Military and Ham operators operate this way and claim a SUBJECTIVE increase in signal to noise over that of a wide open receiver. Technically this should not be true, Signal to noise ratio should not be reduced by decreasing receiver gain But the human ear with its threshold levels, logarithmic hearing, and brain filtering may account for this. -- Caveat Lector "Bill Ogden" wrote in message ... My observation was based entirely on my ears --- a very subjective measurement I know. However, the effect was rather striking. It might have been due to the high noise crashes (when the beam was tuned to the "right" band) that create more subjective interference due to overloading the ear. I have heard from others now who mention that using the "wrong" antenna sometimes appears to improve signal readability. (Of course, this could be due to polarization differences, etc, etc, that are probably not involved with the SteppIR setup.) It is all very subjective and probably not worth a technical debate. However it would be tempting to utilize the effect if the band changes on the SteppIR were just a bit faster ---- an if I could remember to retune the antenna every time before transmitting. Like most of us, I have noted many times that the ability to clearly copy a signal (i.e., a comfortable S/N situation) is often not correlated with S meter readings of the signal or the noise. Bill W2WO |
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