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I was hoping your question would elicit comments from others who are
experienced in noise measurement. Back in the 60s I had a job as a test technician. One assignment was to measure noise power in an AM aircraft receiver. I didn't know anything about noise, but had a procedure to follow. As I recall, you set up the receiver with audio output that would drive an AC voltmeter calibrated in dB. You were to inject a modulated signal at the frequency where the receiver was tuned, and increase the signal level until the audio output increased by 3 dB above the noise level. The theory was that that signal power would be equal to the noise power in the channel. I still don't know much about noise measurement. I can see how this test might be valid for an SSB or CW receiver, but doubt it was any more than a go/no go test for the AM receiver. In your case, wouldn't RMS noise measurement be required rather than peak measurement? Fred K4DII See G8KBB's website. Like to measure to 3 decimals? W4ZCB |
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