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John Smith wrote: wrote: Roy Lewallen wrote: wrote: My Goodness! I would never break any FCC rules! How dare you accuse me. . . . No need for anyone to accuse you, it's all there on the Web: http://www.talkaboutradioshows.com/g...ages/7526.html Don't be silly Roy! I might sell 100 watt broadcast band transmitters, but i only encourage people to use them into 50 Ohm non-radiating dummy loads! Hehe! Makes a great bed-warmer! This is an outright lie. On Ebay and at http://www.talkaboutradioshows.com/g...ages/7526.html you say: "...WHETHER 50 OHM DUMMY LOAD OR A PROPERLY TUNED ANTENNA..." An antenna is not in the category of "...non-radiating dummy loads!". But if you read it carefully, you will note that i only am stating the conditions whereby the final transistors will not be blown, which is a 50 Ohm dummy load or a properly tuned antenna. But I don't encourage anyone to break the law, heaven forbid! :^/ S. |
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On 07/02/2005 4:52 PM, wrote:
Richard Clark wrote: On 7 Feb 2005 01:44:10 -0800, wrote: Come listen for yourself... ????? Volume has nothing to do with this! You could throw a dead carrier and still have an idea of how close to full quieting you are.... Obviously your hearing perception exceeds the characteristics of a larger part of mankind. This makes any claims for someone ELSE to listen to the difference even more problematic. Hearing is the poorest measure second only to "seeing" for one self. Leave this type of testimonial for the Sunday services. A good receiver actually gives you TONS of information. You can hear overmodulation, sideband "splatter" to adjacent channels, spurious oscillations on other channels, dead carrier hum in your signal, the overall intelligibility of your signal and the audio frequency response (roughly). No field strength meter can tell you this information! Bottom line is, human hearing is the ultimate destination. It can be more qualitative that quantity. However, it is exactly these aspects that make human hearing terrible for side-by-side comparisons like the one initially described by the OP. There are plenty examples of double-blind tests that indicate that the participating observer often makes the worst sort of qualitative judgements. Human judgement is a useful tool, especially when trying to understand the hard-to-quantify. However, I find it dubious that anyone has ears good enough to hear the quality of an audio signal that is the result of +- 1dB of RF gain presented to the front-end. (This is not to say I think that the OP only used this method to get his/her results. Clearly, the OP used some sort of methodology to obtain the +1dB gain claim. I only suggest that we should be critical of qualitative results that back up the results we want.) Results to the contrary from a proper double-blind test backed up by multiple datasets based on what we /can/ measure would convince me otherwise. A better qualitative test would be to simply live with the antenna for a few weeks, and see what DX one could pull in. Again, totally unscientific; but this is what average radiopersons (like me, I'm afraid!) have been doing for decades now. I look at this sort of thing as an example of the "right tool for the right job." |
wrote:
. . . But I don't encourage anyone to break the law, heaven forbid! Most of these are no longer on the web, but they were on 9-19-03 when I originally posted them he From http:http://www.metroactive.com/papers/me...eat-9735.html: I missed Creech but got to hear a tape of the band's performance two days later on a micropowered radio station broadcasting at 91.3FM out of Los Gatos known as Radio Free Lost Gatos. The guys in Creech guest DJed, heckled callers and played the whole of their set along with some of their favorite bands. According to RFLG owner/manager/DJ Dr. Slick, the station has been operating out of a house "buried in the Los Gatos hills" for three years. "I do it for fun," Slick says. "I don't do it because I'm an 'anarchist.' I don't go out and say, 'Kill the cops.' I'm positive with radio." Slick was mum on the wattage but said that 91.3 reaches all of Los Gatos and parts of Campbell. Slick plays classic rock, jazz and "a little bit of Bach" when not turning the controls over to guest DJs like the members of Creech. The station can be heard Sundays and Wednesdays, 8pm*3am. Meanwhile, the next Gaslighter Theater show stars Monkey, Blue Beat Stompers, Steadyups, Lucky Strike and Pigs in Space on Friday (Sept. 5). As always: all ages and five bucks. From http://www.svcn.com/archives/lgwt/05...PirateCat.html Monkey Man stepped into the world of microbroadcasting about a year ago, with his friend Michael Magic at Free-Radio San Jose, 93.7 FM, but had to leave the station after some of his on-air hi-jinks went too far. After that, he started working with Dr. Slick, whose station, Free-Radio Los Gatos, is on 91.3 FM on Sunday and Wednesday nights from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. "Then Dr. Slick said I should get my own station, so I went down to Fry's and got one of those little radio kits for, like, $30." Dr. Slick gave Monkey Man an old one-watt amplifier, and another friend, Austin Tatious of KKUD 104.1 in Willow Glen, donated a mixing board. Pirate Cat was on the air. ------------- end of Web quotes --------------- At the time, I asked: "It looks like we can look forward to a bigger signal from Radio Free Lost Gatos (or is it Free-Radio Los Gatos?). No more 'all of Los Gatos and parts of Campbell'! Or are you be building FM transmitters and amplifiers for sale?" It looks like we now have the answer. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
clvrmnky wrote: A good receiver actually gives you TONS of information. You can hear overmodulation, sideband "splatter" to adjacent channels, spurious oscillations on other channels, dead carrier hum in your signal, the overall intelligibility of your signal and the audio frequency response (roughly). No field strength meter can tell you this information! Bottom line is, human hearing is the ultimate destination. It can be more qualitative that quantity. However, it is exactly these aspects that make human hearing terrible for side-by-side comparisons like the one initially described by the OP. There are plenty examples of double-blind tests that indicate that the participating observer often makes the worst sort of qualitative judgements. But any radio broadcaster worth his or her salt will be able to tell APPROXIMATELY how many watts a signal is producing (or ERP), especially since we don't have ionospheric skip in the broadcast band, all line of sight. Human judgement is a useful tool, especially when trying to understand the hard-to-quantify. However, I find it dubious that anyone has ears good enough to hear the quality of an audio signal that is the result of +- 1dB of RF gain presented to the front-end. -1 dB at 100 watts is about 79 watts, so yeah, most people with a good receiver aren't going to hear the difference. But some people very familiar with the signal might notice the difference. -2 dB at 100 watts is about 63 watts, which most people should notice, especially on the fringe of the service area. -3 dB is 100 versus 50 watts, and no **** there's an audible difference! (This is not to say I think that the OP only used this method to get his/her results. Clearly, the OP used some sort of methodology to obtain the +1dB gain claim. I only suggest that we should be critical of qualitative results that back up the results we want.) +1 dB was what our theoretical difference was, but it may have been more. Sorry, but we don't have a huge VHF anechoic chamber, and the proper signal strength meter to do this properly! A better qualitative test would be to simply live with the antenna for a few weeks, and see what DX one could pull in. Again, totally unscientific; but this is what average radiopersons (like me, I'm afraid!) have been doing for decades now. Like i said, I would love to have a big VHF anechoic chamber, and place each antenna on a rotor, and measure every 2 degrees or so, with the proper uV/meter equipment, but we don't have the $$ for that. Most people don't, i don't know anyone who does. It may be unscientific, but in a certain way NOT, because you can get field reports from many people, who all have different receivers, and different antennas on their cars, etc... so the results are more of an averaged response. Bottom line is, is the signal more intelligible and listenable? Slick |
Roy Lewallen wrote: wrote: . . . But I don't encourage anyone to break the law, heaven forbid! Most of these are no longer on the web, but they were on 9-19-03 when I originally posted them he From http:http://www.metroactive.com/papers/me...eat-9735.html: I missed Creech but got to hear a tape of the band's performance two days later on a micropowered radio station broadcasting at 91.3FM out of Los Gatos known as Radio Free Lost Gatos. The guys in Creech guest DJed, heckled callers and played the whole of their set along with some of their favorite bands. According to RFLG owner/manager/DJ Dr. Slick, the station has been operating out of a house "buried in the Los Gatos hills" for three years. "I do it for fun," Slick says. "I don't do it because I'm an 'anarchist.' I don't go out and say, 'Kill the cops.' I'm positive with radio." Slick was mum on the wattage but said that 91.3 reaches all of Los Gatos and parts of Campbell. Slick plays classic rock, jazz and "a little bit of Bach" when not turning the controls over to guest DJs like the members of Creech. The station can be heard Sundays and Wednesdays, 8pm=AD3am. Meanwhile, the next Gaslighter Theater show stars Monkey, Blue Beat Stompers, Steadyups, Lucky Strike and Pigs in Space on Friday (Sept. 5). As always: all ages and five bucks. From http://www.svcn.com/archives/lgwt/05...PirateCat.html Monkey Man stepped into the world of microbroadcasting about a year ago, with his friend Michael Magic at Free-Radio San Jose, 93.7 FM, but had to leave the station after some of his on-air hi-jinks went too far. After that, he started working with Dr. Slick, whose station, Free-Radio Los Gatos, is on 91.3 FM on Sunday and Wednesday nights from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. "Then Dr. Slick said I should get my own station, so I went down to Fry's and got one of those little radio kits for, like, $30." Dr. Slick gave Monkey Man an old one-watt amplifier, and another friend, Austin Tatious of KKUD 104.1 in Willow Glen, donated a mixing board. Pirate Cat was on the air. Cool article! Yeah, i remember those days well....sigh. Great times! At the time, I asked: "It looks like we can look forward to a bigger signal from Radio Free Lost Gatos (or is it Free-Radio Los Gatos?). No more 'all of Los Gatos and parts of Campbell'! Or are you be building FM transmitters and amplifiers for sale?" It looks like we now have the answer. Radio Free Los Gatos doesn't exist anymore, but thanks for bringing up good memories! We serve the San Jose/Milpitas area now. Just because i build transmitters, don't mean i encourage people to use radiating loads with them! Dummy loads are a wonderful thing, and you can learn so much about RF circuit design and the phase-locked-loop! Slick |
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wrote:
Radio Free Los Gatos doesn't exist anymore, but thanks for bringing up good memories! Remember KFAT? "The Free Mexican Air Force"? Those were the days. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
On 8 Feb 2005 18:49:05 -0800, wrote:
-3 dB is 100 versus 50 watts, and no **** there's an audible difference! Only to a piece of toast. |
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