Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I don't know anything about the Optimod 9100B, do you know what the
various curves look like? The graph is a bit messy, but here are the 9100B's pre-emphasis curves: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homep...s/opt-emph.gif The "Red", "Yellow", and "Green" curves are all continuously variable from 0 dB (flat) to a maximum of 22 dB boost (at 10 kHz). This graph shows what each of these three curves look like at boost values of 5, 10, 15, and 20 dB. Meanwhile, the "Blue" NRSC curve maxes out at a boost of 10 dB, as shown, which meets the NRSC pre-emphasis standard exactly. The Optimod 9200's factory-configured pre-emphasis is equivalent to the "Red" curve at 10 dB boost -- in other words, the first curve on the graph above the NRSC curve. I wonder if it is "extreme amounts of pre-emphasis", or just the extra midrange range hump in the 3.5 to 4 kHz area that you are hearing? The amount of increased boost extends all the way to 10 kHz, regardless of which non-NRSC curve is selected, so even the higher frequencies (which only "wideband" receivers can fully discern) are increased as well. Why not just equip your radio with a complimentary four color equalizer switch? Because I shouldn't have to. FM radio, TV audio, phono records, audio tapes, and even CDs all use standardized pre-emphasis curves, with no user interaction required. Why should AM radio be the same? Canada made the complete NRSC standards, including pre-emphasis, mandatory for all of its AM stations in 1988. But the FCC chose to keep the NRSC standards "voluntary" in the USA, except for a rather lenient RF spectrum occupancy mask which effectively limits transmitted bandwidth to +/- 10 kHz (but yet has allowed the disastrous +/- 15 kHz IBOC system to be used, since its sidebands conform to this RF mask which was never intended to accomodate digital signals). The primary goal of the NRSC was to encourage the manufacture of high-quality AM receivers, by reducing adjacent-channel interference and providing a "level playing field" of how AM stations broadcast their signal. Today, unfortunately, these high-quality receivers may be few and far between, but that does _not_ mean that this kind of "every man for himself (or station for itself)" attitude should prevail! p.s. One correction: The Omnia 4.5AM processor does indeed provide pre-emphasis that conforms to the NRSC curve. However, if desired, the user may provide extra mid-range or treble boost by using the EQ controls. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
With CW gone, can the CW allocations be far behind? | Policy |