Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Floyd Davidson
writes: "Studio quality AM" is not a valid term. AM Broadcast has never been up to "Studio Quality" standards, which would be _at_ _least_ 20 to 20K Hz. Hey, even FM Broadcast is only up to 15 KC. At least that's been the limit since they added the stereo subcarrier. I agree that recording equipment should be good at least up to 20 K. There is no difference at all between the audio response necessary for SSB and AM. AM, because it has both sidebands, will necessarily take up twice the RF spectrum for the same audio response, but in fact 2.4KHz (400Hz to 2800Hz) is actually *preferable* to higher fidelity audio response when the purpose is voice communications. (Ma Bell did a bazillion studies on this decades ago, so it is not exactly new information.) During my years at Bell Labsm, working in speech coding, our preferred standard range was 300 - 3300 Hz. At 3300 you have a fighting chance of telling an "F" from an "S" and a "T" from a "D" sound. At 4000 you have very little trouble. At 2800 you have all those military types spelling it out with phonetics and lots of "say again". The low, bass end doesn't really affect BW much (not at all in AM with carrier), but too much bass wastes power and voltage swings in the modulator, and overlaods and distorts in the receiver's audio circuits and speaker, and also batters your ears. That's why a lot of radios have tone switch positionsthat cut out some of the bass response. 73, Mike K. Oscar loves trash, but hates Spam! Delete him to reply to me. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Wizard Radio in Seven Corners, VA, to receive WHFS in Annapolis-followup | Antenna | |||
messing with a car radio | Antenna | |||
What Exactly is a Radio Wave? | Antenna | |||
How to connect external antenna to GE Super Radio III | Antenna | |||
Review: Amateur Radio Companion 3rd Edition | Antenna |