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#1
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Hi everyone,
I hope you are all well. A while back, I'd mentioned that I'd QSO'd with a gent who was using a DSP board. Well, I had to try it out for myself and had SGC install their ADSP2 board into my Uniden Grant XL. Some may say that it's like installing dual Weber side-draft 2 bbl. carbs on a Ford Pinto 4 cyl. engine. (Actually that's been done.) Why do it? Because I can, that's why. ;-) Actually, the base receiver of the Grant XL is a very good platform to begin with. It's the same chassis/board as the venerable Cobra 2000 GTL with the same great receiver. I'd already added CBCI's Channel Guard IF filter with good results, increased ACR. (Adjacent Channel Rejection) The ADSP2 installs further down in the receiver chain so one doesn't interfere with the other. (No pun intended) :-) Well, upon powering up the radio and cycling the two microswitchs through their positions, one thing became immediately clear...I was going to be one VERY happy camper. There are three filter settings; voice, CW1, and CW2 as well as two levels of DSP, hence the two microswitches. Of course, each can be turned off completely. I find that the first DSP level is quite sufficient and the voice filter is rarely even needed. However, when the signal-to-noise ratio becomes unbearable, (As it has recently in this locale on both 10m and 11m.) it's nice to be able to "kick" the filtering level up a notch (Again, no pun intended.) or two. Is it kinda pricey? Yeah, but it's no more than what many seem willing to shell out for an amplifier and its 100% legal. Here's the website. Hope this heps some of you, take care. :-) www.sgcworld.com -- 73 de Bert WA2SI |
#2
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"The2x4" wrote in message
... Please tell us Bert that you are gonna put the thing in a better radio? No need, it's desktop companions are a Yaesu FT-840 through a Timewave DSP-599zx and an Elecraft K2. (Top dog receiver.) I'm kinda considering a Ten-Tec Orion if the tax man is particularly good to me next year. :-) There's just no emoticon for a $hit-eatin' grin. $180 invested into a Grant CB. Seems way overkill. The radio is worth about $80 mint. I bought the rig brand spankin' new for $124.95 on a close-out special. (Not eBay!) Whatever its yo' money. Yup, some things you just can't put a price on. Hey did you notice the ADSP unit is $180? The speaker is only $130. Ohhh I see now. The speaker is called a ADSP speaker but doesn't have ADSP in it. That can't be right........ Tell me there IS a ADSP unit in the speaker for $130. That is $50 cheaper. Not really sure, however, I wanted the board installed directly in the receiver chain...not after. I've also used the ClearSpeech DSP external speaker. The ADSP2 installation sounds much better and is more versatile wrt the various levels of filtering. The2x4 -- 73 de Bert WA2SI "Bert Craig" wrote in message .net... Hi everyone, I hope you are all well. A while back, I'd mentioned that I'd QSO'd with a gent who was using a DSP board. Well, I had to try it out for myself and had SGC install their ADSP2 board into my Uniden Grant XL. Some may say that it's like installing dual Weber side-draft 2 bbl. carbs on a Ford Pinto 4 cyl. engine. (Actually that's been done.) Why do it? Because I can, that's why. ;-) Actually, the base receiver of the Grant XL is a very good platform to begin with. It's the same chassis/board as the venerable Cobra 2000 GTL with the same great receiver. I'd already added CBCI's Channel Guard IF filter with good results, increased ACR. (Adjacent Channel Rejection) The ADSP2 installs further down in the receiver chain so one doesn't interfere with the other. (No pun intended) :-) Well, upon powering up the radio and cycling the two microswitchs through their positions, one thing became immediately clear...I was going to be one VERY happy camper. There are three filter settings; voice, CW1, and CW2 as well as two levels of DSP, hence the two microswitches. Of course, each can be turned off completely. I find that the first DSP level is quite sufficient and the voice filter is rarely even needed. However, when the signal-to-noise ratio becomes unbearable, (As it has recently in this locale on both 10m and 11m.) it's nice to be able to "kick" the filtering level up a notch (Again, no pun intended.) or two. Is it kinda pricey? Yeah, but it's no more than what many seem willing to shell out for an amplifier and its 100% legal. Here's the website. Hope this heps some of you, take care. :-) www.sgcworld.com -- 73 de Bert WA2SI |
#3
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Ain't no need to continue. Shame that ya' joining the appliance operators
group. The noise and pullin' 'em out of da noise makes for an excellent operators. Using micros to sift out the QRN don't do much for keeping the ol' brain working at using 2 hands an' a more stimulating between the eyes natural decision making. Dial rotating, hand on the volume, listening for that S1 in the noise. DSP......Ain't no honor in 'dat my friend. Still glad you like QRP. Me too. Carl N9EFJ "Bert Craig" wrote in message .net... "The2x4" wrote in message ... Please tell us Bert that you are gonna put the thing in a better radio? No need, it's desktop companions are a Yaesu FT-840 through a |
#4
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Bert Craig wrote:
Hi everyone, I hope you are all well. A while back, I'd mentioned that I'd QSO'd with a gent who was using a DSP board. Well, I had to try it out for myself and had SGC install their ADSP2 board into my Uniden Grant XL. Some may say that it's like installing dual Weber side-draft 2 bbl. carbs on a Ford Pinto 4 cyl. engine. (Actually that's been done.) Why do it? Because I can, that's why. ;-) Actually, the base receiver of the Grant XL is a very good platform to begin with. It's the same chassis/board as the venerable Cobra 2000 GTL with the same great receiver. I'd already added CBCI's Channel Guard IF filter with good results, increased ACR. (Adjacent Channel Rejection) The ADSP2 installs further down in the receiver chain so one doesn't interfere with the other. (No pun intended) :-) Well, upon powering up the radio and cycling the two microswitchs through their positions, one thing became immediately clear...I was going to be one VERY happy camper. There are three filter settings; voice, CW1, and CW2 as well as two levels of DSP, hence the two microswitches. Of course, each can be turned off completely. I find that the first DSP level is quite sufficient and the voice filter is rarely even needed. However, when the signal-to-noise ratio becomes unbearable, (As it has recently in this locale on both 10m and 11m.) it's nice to be able to "kick" the filtering level up a notch (Again, no pun intended.) or two. Is it kinda pricey? Yeah, but it's no more than what many seem willing to shell out for an amplifier and its 100% legal. Here's the website. Hope this helps some of you, take care. :-) Hi Bert! Glad to hear that this was a worthwhile experiment. That was always the best part of CB for me, the experimentation factor. I wish more people would play with their receivers, rather than the transmitters. It'd be a whole lot cleaner out there..... Have you done any parametric testing, or has all of your testing been subjective, on-air stuff? I'd love to see some hard data, on the degree of improvement over stock. Is this practical? Well, you certainly could get a ham quality receiver, which would probably do it a bit better, for only an incidental increase in price. But you wouldn't have the satisfaction of saying "i done it". The question of legality is also interesting. On the one hand, the FCC takes a dim view (I.E. it's usually illegal) of ANY mods to a type accepted radio. In practice though, it's usually the transmitter that they're most concerned with. You could always use one modded receiver for receive, and another unmodded radio to transmit, and that would be legal. Dave "Sandbagger" |
#5
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"Dave Hall" wrote in message
... Bert Craig wrote: Hi everyone, I hope you are all well. A while back, I'd mentioned that I'd QSO'd with a gent who was using a DSP board. Well, I had to try it out for myself and had SGC install their ADSP2 board into my Uniden Grant XL. Some may say that it's like installing dual Weber side-draft 2 bbl. carbs on a Ford Pinto 4 cyl. engine. (Actually that's been done.) Why do it? Because I can, that's why. ;-) Actually, the base receiver of the Grant XL is a very good platform to begin with. It's the same chassis/board as the venerable Cobra 2000 GTL with the same great receiver. I'd already added CBCI's Channel Guard IF filter with good results, increased ACR. (Adjacent Channel Rejection) The ADSP2 installs further down in the receiver chain so one doesn't interfere with the other. (No pun intended) :-) Well, upon powering up the radio and cycling the two microswitchs through their positions, one thing became immediately clear...I was going to be one VERY happy camper. There are three filter settings; voice, CW1, and CW2 as well as two levels of DSP, hence the two microswitches. Of course, each can be turned off completely. I find that the first DSP level is quite sufficient and the voice filter is rarely even needed. However, when the signal-to-noise ratio becomes unbearable, (As it has recently in this locale on both 10m and 11m.) it's nice to be able to "kick" the filtering level up a notch (Again, no pun intended.) or two. Is it kinda pricey? Yeah, but it's no more than what many seem willing to shell out for an amplifier and its 100% legal. Here's the website. Hope this helps some of you, take care. :-) Hi Bert! Hey Dave. Glad to hear that this was a worthwhile experiment. That was always the best part of CB for me, the experimentation factor. I wish more people would play with their receivers, rather than the transmitters. It'd be a whole lot cleaner out there..... Thank, Dave. I was never into power increasing or freq. expansion mods, however, I too am not without sin. More on that later. 0:-) Have you done any parametric testing, or has all of your testing been subjective, on-air stuff? I'd love to see some hard data, on the degree of improvement over stock. No, I haven't...which is pretty much why I had SGC perform the installation and testing. After speaking with the folks at SGC, I knew that they had the equipment to not only get it done...but "get it done right!" Is this practical? Nope, but that was part of the allure. Well, you certainly could get a ham quality receiver, which would probably do it a bit better, for only an incidental increase in price. But you wouldn't have the satisfaction of saying "i done it". Exactamundo! The question of legality is also interesting. On the one hand, the FCC takes a dim view (I.E. it's usually illegal) of ANY mods to a type accepted radio. In practice though, it's usually the transmitter that they're most concerned with. I take a common sense approach. While I'm reasonably certain that the receiver mods are 100% legal, I do have an on-board speech processor installed. I use the SP-1a and I'm very pleased with the resulting audio. I could've gone with Astatic's external model, but since even the addition of an amplified mic can (and has) be arguably construed as a modification to the type-accepted transmitter section, and thus technically illegal, I chose to apply a little common sense here as well, Thus the rig is clean, clear, and I'm quite comfy operating it at it's whopping 12 Watts P.E.P. (What's AM?) HOWEVER, a stock Grant LT also sits right next to it. ;-) You could always use one modded receiver for receive, and another unmodded radio to transmit, and that would be legal. Truth is, I'm one of those folks who listen 99.99% of the time and transmit the other 0.01%. Except between 7.1 and 7.15 MHz on the Novice/Tech"+" sub-band. Tryin' to get my "key" on. :-) Take care and thanks for the comments. Dave "Sandbagger" -- 73 de Bert WA2SI |
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