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On Oct 11, 2:57 am, ShutterMan wrote:
You know, a lot of the questions you ask here about "modern" radios could have very similarly applied to radios of 20 or 40 years ago. Some of the distinctions would have been different but not all that many! Hey folks, A lurking SWL listener here. Was wondering something about receivers in general. Why is it that all-band receivers are generally more expensive than HF-only receivers? I know there are other circuits in there, but in essence, aren't all receiver circuits basically the same, just with the ability to tune to different frequencies? Yes, but I think you underestimate the importance of front ends, preselectors before the front end, and the variety of modes and filters to be demodulated with associated different bandwidths, and multiple IF stages in reducing intermod and reducing images. I suppose another way of asking is this: a simple AM radio tank circuit could be modified by adjusting the coil turns and/or variable capacitor in order to pick up other frequencies. Why does this (rather oversimplified) simple change cause the cost of the receiver to go up nearly 50% in cost? (comparing a simple handheld AM radio with one that includes a shortwave band or two). An AM/FM stereo radio is cheaper in many cases than a similar radio with SW bands. But you'd think that VHF reception would be slightly more expensive to manufacture than AM's nearby neighbor SW. Confuses me. The FM broadcast (88MHz-108MHz) band spans way way less than an octave, and is nowhere near the IF frequency. The SW bands (1.6MHz - 30 MHz inclusive) span more than 4 octaves and usually overlap the best choice in IF frequency for filtering the most popular modes. Get to "all band" (which I think by your definition goes up to the GHz) and you get like 8 more octaves for your front end to cover. I also notice that HF transceivers can cost roughly the same as HF receivers - you'd think a receiver WITH transmitter would be much more expensive, but from what I can see its not. Something isn't registering in my mind as to why all these cost differences. Many really substantial parts of a transceiver - other than the finals - are shared between the transmitter and receiver on low end models. Frequency synthesis, sideband filtering, etc. I think all low-end models share the receiver preselection with the transmit final filtering. And if you're comparing a very low-end transceiver (say $600) with an entry-level communications receiver in the same price range (say the ICOM R75) you will note that the entry-level communications receiver has many features not at all present on the transceiver. Hams like me might might gloss over a lot of those features because they aren't awfully relevant to ham band CW and SSB operation but they must be important to somebody, otherwise they wouldn't sell the radios, I guess! I will note that the vast majority of SWL'ers seem to use radios definitely below the entry-level communcations receiver level and are typically in the under-$200 range. For the past couple decades most ham transceivers were, out of the box, of marginal utility for SWLing because the filters were chosen for CW and SSB operation, not for AM. Yeah, they had a mode button on the front marked "AM" in some cases but didn't have a really good filter for AM installed from the factory. And all the preselection was optimized for the ham bands, not the SWL bands (assuming that you could tune outside the ham bands at all, not all could, but post-WARC many began being general-coverage for receive.) On the high-end ham transceivers I think this distinction is not really there anymore but we're talking about the $2500 price range and the good high-end transceivers are beginning to incoprorate *multiple* HF receivers into them. Tim. |
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