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Telstar Electronics September 11th 07 06:31 PM

VoiceMax
 
http://www.telstar-electronics.com/d...evelopment.htm


Radioisfun September 11th 07 07:06 PM

Telstar Electronics VoiceMax IS GARBAGE!
 
IDIOT!
"Telstar Electronics" wrote in message
oups.com...



Porgy Tirebiter September 11th 07 07:35 PM

VoiceMax/ Garbage from [email protected]
 

"Telstar Electronics" wrote in message
oups.com...


More ****ing backyard worthless garbage from a dimwit CB'er........
And SPAM for the group!














Telstar Electronics September 12th 07 01:43 AM

VoiceMax
 
http://www.telstar-electronics.com/d...evelopment.htm


Porgy Tirebiter September 12th 07 03:05 AM

GARBAGE from [email protected]
 
Still useless GARBAGE!!!...























Telstar Electronics September 12th 07 10:50 AM

VoiceMax
 
http://www.telstar-electronics.com/d...evelopment.htm


Telstar Electronics September 13th 07 06:36 PM

VoiceMax
 
Why Do You Need a Speech Processor for Your CB Radio?
Two-way radio communication relies on the modulation contained within
the signal. Maintaining a high modulation level is crucial in
providing the highest possible efficiency from any transmitter
operating on AM, FM, or SSB modes. Two-way radios also rely on
microphones that inherently change audio levels delivered to the
transmitter. This causes transmitter modulation to fluctuate greatly
depending on voice level and pitch. The average modulation of a
typical voice signal is only about 40%. This low percentage applied
to the transmitter, results in less than optimal transmission range.

Other Processors Have a Problem...
Other speech processors use a low-cost "audio clipping" approach to
achieve compression. While this method is economical for the
manufacturer, clipping distorts the original signal and sounds fuzzy
on the air. What these types of audio processors gain in volume, they
lose in voice intelligibility.

VoiceMax is Different...
VoiceMax uses a sophisticated AGC (Automatic Gain Control) circuit
that installs inside your transceiver to hold the audio level
constant, with less than 1% harmonic distortion. No "clipping" type
processor can come close to this low distortion level. Whether you're
whispering or shouting, VoiceMax holds your transceiver at 100%
modulation allowing you to punch through heavy channel traffic
without sacrificing voice clarity. VoiceMax incorporates a feature
not
offered on other processors. The adjustable noise gate allows the user
to
block unwanted ambient background sounds. This feature is especially
helpful in mobile environments where wind and road noise can be an
issue. VoiceMax works with your non-amplified dynamic microphone to
give you tremendous audio punch without all the background noise
associated with power microphones.

www.telstar-electronics.com


Deek September 13th 07 09:19 PM

VoiceMax
 
Telstar Electronics wrote:

Why Do You Need a Speech Processor for Your CB Radio?
Two-way radio communication relies on the modulation contained within
the signal. Maintaining a high modulation level is crucial in
providing the highest possible efficiency from any transmitter
operating on AM, FM, or SSB modes. Two-way radios also rely on
microphones that inherently change audio levels delivered to the
transmitter. This causes transmitter modulation to fluctuate greatly
depending on voice level and pitch. The average modulation of a
typical voice signal is only about 40%. This low percentage applied
to the transmitter, results in less than optimal transmission range.


PURE B--- S---

The peak power is the peak power is the peak power!

Distorting the audio with a speech processor ... distorts the audio.

Distorted audio is distorted audio is distorted audio.

Modulation is supposed to fluctuate greatly. It is supposed to replicate your
voice which fluctuates greatly. If it does not replicate your voice it is by
definition DISTORTION!!

Most processors cause 'nasal' and high pitched sounding audio because our voices
are not 'nasal or high pitched. It is called DISTORTION.


Telstar Electronics September 13th 07 11:26 PM

VoiceMax
 
On Sep 13, 3:19 pm, Deek wrote:
Telstar Electronics wrote:
Why Do You Need a Speech Processor for Your CB Radio?
Two-way radio communication relies on the modulation contained within
the signal. Maintaining a high modulation level is crucial in
providing the highest possible efficiency from any transmitter
operating on AM, FM, or SSB modes. Two-way radios also rely on
microphones that inherently change audio levels delivered to the
transmitter. This causes transmitter modulation to fluctuate greatly
depending on voice level and pitch. The average modulation of a
typical voice signal is only about 40%. This low percentage applied
to the transmitter, results in less than optimal transmission range.


PURE B--- S---

The peak power is the peak power is the peak power!

Distorting the audio with a speech processor ... distorts the audio.

Distorted audio is distorted audio is distorted audio.

Modulation is supposed to fluctuate greatly. It is supposed to replicate your
voice which fluctuates greatly. If it does not replicate your voice it is by
definition DISTORTION!!

Most processors cause 'nasal' and high pitched sounding audio because our voices
are not 'nasal or high pitched. It is called DISTORTION.



You might want to read this... it's a good explanation of what
VoiceMax is all about.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VOGAD


Deek September 14th 07 12:42 PM

VoiceMax
 
Telstar Electronics wrote:

On Sep 13, 3:19 pm, Deek wrote:

Telstar Electronics wrote:

Why Do You Need a Speech Processor for Your CB Radio?
Two-way radio communication relies on the modulation contained within
the signal. Maintaining a high modulation level is crucial in
providing the highest possible efficiency from any transmitter
operating on AM, FM, or SSB modes. Two-way radios also rely on
microphones that inherently change audio levels delivered to the
transmitter. This causes transmitter modulation to fluctuate greatly
depending on voice level and pitch. The average modulation of a
typical voice signal is only about 40%. This low percentage applied
to the transmitter, results in less than optimal transmission range.


PURE B--- S---

The peak power is the peak power is the peak power!

Distorting the audio with a speech processor ... distorts the audio.

Distorted audio is distorted audio is distorted audio.

Modulation is supposed to fluctuate greatly. It is supposed to replicate your
voice which fluctuates greatly. If it does not replicate your voice it is by
definition DISTORTION!!

Most processors cause 'nasal' and high pitched sounding audio because our voices
are not 'nasal or high pitched. It is called DISTORTION.




You might want to read this... it's a good explanation of what
VoiceMax is all about.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VOGAD


I understand DISTORTION quite well! I hold an EE degree, managed an EE design
department for 10 years, and served as Chief Engineer on a major Military System
LGM 118A RS/RV.

Speech compression IS IS IS distortion. PERIOD!




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