Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Big Joe" wrote...
Sure I like the sound of clipping to a small amount. As you know all Commercial, and Ham FM radios since the begging, has had a CLIPPER built in followed by a Low pass filter ( Motorola used to call it a splitter filter ) . This goes to a Deviation adjustment to feed the modulator. Does a good job at two things. It holds the deviation ( Modulation ) to a fixed point and also clips off some of the Voice P-P levels to help increase the average voice level. So it Seems to sound OK to all the other FM radio users. What you have to remember is that other FM users have much more bandwidth to play with than CB users. The broadcast stations have shed-loads of bandwidth to play with. If you are using AM or SSB CB, I would certainly recommend speech processing. But I would recommend that you avoid it with FM CB, the 10KHz between channels is not really enough for FM. With a multi-mode set, I would fit one and disable it for FM mode. I believe that would be better than lowering the maximum deviation to allow for the increased average. But, speaking of broadcast stations, do you know the other trick used to get greater distance on FM broadcast? It works a treat on FM CB, without the adjacent channel splatter of other devices. If I needed a Broadcast Radio quality sound then Sure I would use a Compressor throughout the system. Unfortunately, to get broadcast quality FM, you would need FM broadcast bandwidth. One channel would take up most of the CB band. If you want a Pint, you must first get a Pint container. But you will never get quality while the barman is giving you the dregs and slops. If the modulation system used in a FM radio was used in a AM CB radio ( without using all the audio feedback crappy AGC systems they use now ) the audio could be adjusted to 100% and then what ever mic was used the radio would not overmodulate. AM, FM and SSB each have their good and bad points. One big problem with FM is that the bandwidth requirement really doesn't suit the small CB channel spacing. Here in the UK, we have had FM CB for over 26 years... and the splatter has been hell. It's still going on now, even after the government reduced the maximum allowed deviation. I have just been listening to someone giving me a signal of just 7 on his channel... and jumping to 6 on each of the adjacent channels with every sound he makes. Oh yes, and he sounds crap on the channel he is supposed to be on. So much of his signal is going outside of the receiver bandwidth, that the needle bounces about like a yo-yo and far too much of his audio is lost. So like I said I like a little of both. The choice over which of the two systems to use really comes down to price and either proven long-term reliability or trust in the name. Lou's product is reasonably priced and has proved itself over a long time but, let's face it, it is only a basic circuit designed to meet the needs of the majority of CB users... cheap but effective. Telstar's product may cost a little more and boasts better quality**, but it is a new product without the years of tests in the real world. Even large manufacturers find problems with their design after batches have gone out. I have spent many hours fixing design errors so that a batch of products could leave by the deadline. Similar to adding a Compressor to a FM transmitter driving it using the mic gain to a little of clipping. All FM transmitters are NOT born equal. What works on one FM system may not be suitable on another. Speech compression is fine for broadcast FM, but not for CB FM with only 10KHz channel spacing. Regards, Peter. ** I have only had Lou's product on the bench. I have never tested the Telstar product, so cannot comment on whether it really is worth any extra cost. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Coalition cutting & running | Shortwave | |||
Airwave - Cutting Through the Propoganda | Scanner | |||
I'm Cutting Back (OT) | Shortwave | |||
Cutting your own | General | |||
Cutting your own | General |