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On Thu, 27 Jan 2005 08:11:34 -0800, "Caveat Lector"
wrote: Also for weak signal detection, listening with headphones can make a big difference in comprehension as compared to listening to a speaker. Using the above techniques and head phones, top notch CW operators can copy code even when the signal is about the same as the noise. I can't do this though (;-( old ears I guess (;-) Hi OM, Well, back when I was in college physics (before the flood), my professor put me and a buddy on a task to build the perfect detector. It correlates perfectly with your advice to use headphones. He had us build a Synchronous Detector (not a simple device to construct from tubes and at 455 KHz). Some may be familiar with this form of detection, and yet they may be ignorant of its best implementation. For others, this kind of detector is also found in color TV detection and color information separation. Often the block diagramming or circuitry is described in terms of I and Q paths. I won't go into the particulars of design, but I will offer that these two separate paths when broken out to separate Audio channels, and then fed to stereo head phones, they offer an unique signal hearing experience. Basically, the entire two channel system is completed by the brain combining phases and providing a perception of the wanted signal being "heard" in the middle of your skull, while interfering off-frequency signals are perceive off to one side or the other. In a sense, you hear an enhanced signal through phase reinforcement. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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