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Technically, is it not energy that leaves the transmitter and is
received by the receiver? Actual integration being performed by later receiver stages and/or the human ear/brain? Chuck, NT3G Reg Edwards wrote: It is power which leaves the transmitter. Power is what is received by the receiver. So the S-meter is a power meter. It is a great pity that the usual S-meter is scaled partly in S-units and partly in decibels relative to S9. But given that 1 S-unit = 6 dB, the modern meter scale fits very nicely between receiver internal noise level and the receiver overload point. And, for example, it's so much easier to report signal strength as S5 rather than 0.047 micro-microwatts. In the same vein, we could, of course, report a signal strength of 20 dB over S9 as S12 and be done with decibels. ---- Reg, G4FGQ. |
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