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Zoran Brlecic wrote:
Is the best filter between your ears ?? Yes. *After* you pass the signal through the 250-500 Hz second IF crystal filter. G! Depends to some degree on how you work your DX. 250Hz is too narrow for contesting but probably just about right for pileups. Do you listen to DX on a Speaker. No. Waste of time. Are headphones better ??? Always. Fully agreed. Which ones -- Com Phones or Hi-Fi The cheaper, the better. You definitely don't want hi-fi headphones because they only contribute to the sound in the range outside of the transmitted speech, i.e. above 3 kHz, which translates into noise. Disagreed. IMHO the most important specification for headphones is physical comfort. Can you wear them for hours without hurting your ears? My ears - and the filters in the rig (for which I've paid good money!) do a pretty good job of filtering out the noise. I've generally found "communications" phones have an awful lot of ripple in the audio passband. They tend to sound "tinny" or "bassy" or otherwise unnatural. Not to mention they're usually heavy and uncomfortable. I bought two pair of Labtec LVA-8322's at Dayton a couple of years ago. ($5 each if I remember properly) They're comfortable - sound good - they've got a boom mike (which keeps getting me great audio reports, people don't believe me when I tell them what I'm using for a mike!). One pair sits in the shack, the other I use for DXing the FM broadcast band. (1,200 stations in 42 states since 1994) Actually, right now I'm using them to listen to a They Might Be Giants CD... One of the better bargains I've found at Dayton. Do you keep the RF Gain at Max? Normally, yes. Or advance the audio gain, then bring up the RF Gain control for APPARENT improved S/N ratio. Huh how does that work?? I think it does work but only for strong signals. I've done that for long ragchews with local stations, and it works nicely. Sounds almost like VHF-FM quality. It's pretty hard to find the "sweet spot" when working weak or QSB-laden signals though. Do you use fast AGC or Slow when DXing --- Why ??? Neither. AGC is a dynamic compression which compresses all the signals into a much narrower dynamic audio range. That's great for strong signals and easy on the ears, but it completely obliterates the weak ones by "pumping" strong signals, QRM and QRN. You need to turn off AGC for dxing (and most of contesting), unless you only want to work strong signals. The drawback is that the full dynamic range is very hard on the ears because you get a full blast of S9+ signals interspersed with the barely audible ones. Fast. If I'm going to abuse my hearing, I use the Ramones. -- Doug Smith W9WI Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66 http://www.w9wi.com |
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