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Nordic Breeds WA4VZQ wrote:
I am sure Scott Dorsey knows more about this than I do, but CBS produced two devices called the Audimax and Volumax that shifted the phase of the audio as a function of frequency. Another term for these devices is phase rotator. Kahn Communications also was in the market with its SymmetraPeak. To the ear, the sound was unchanged, but to the transmitter, the peaks became symmetrical. There is an excellent discussion of these devices on James Tonne's (W4ENE) website http://www.tonnesoftware.com/appnote...s/allpass.html and on Gary Blau's (W3AM) website http://www.w3am.com/8poleapf.html. {A biased opinion here — Jim's site contains some _excellent_ free software.} The original Audimax/Volumax combination had no phase rotator. I worked at an AM station that used them, and the chief engineer had installed a phase reverse switch on the announcer mike and auditioned each announcer to tell them which position to use. (Apparently they had used figure-8 mikes a year or so before I got there, and the announcers just used the front of back of the mikes). A lot of stations using the Audimax/Volumax would also have a phase rotator in the chain, though. CRL made a popular one, and so did Garron. Some folks made some boards tht dropped inside the Volumax for it too, but I never used any of those. I went to the Optimod as soon as I could, and it has a great phase rotator. The phase rotator is a hell of a great gadget, it gives you a lot of loudness without any perceived distortion. Mind you, for communications applications it's no more effective just than aggressive clipping, but there are folks who don't want aggressive clipping. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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