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Old June 5th 05, 08:53 PM
 
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From: Roy Lewallen on Sat, 04 Jun 2005 14:06:41 -0700


wrote:

A basic definition that is industry-wide, government-wide,
has "dbm" as decibels of "0 dbm" related to a power level of
1.0 milliWatts in a "50 Ohm system." That has become so
widespread that specification writers don't always include
those words. It is implicit when referring to RF components.


. . .


That's common in the RF industry, but many others also use dBm -- for
example, it's often used in video systems where the standard impedance
is 75 ohms, and others where the standard is 600 ohms. In all those
applications, dBm is universally defined and understood to mean dB
relative to 1 mW, regardless of the impedance.


Quite true, Roy. :-)

I restricted myself to "50 Ohms" for a couple of reasons:
As far as "pure" RF components go, 50 Ohms is the Z
characteristic; I didn't want to complicate my explanation.

The TV Cable industry is HUGE and they use 75 Ohms. However,
so many radio amateurs run around snarking on "TV" that it
could have raised a lot of unneccessary babbling in here. :-)
TV cable is digital in some locations (ours is in the SF
Valley of L.A.) and has more TV channels crammed into the
same VHF-UHF space than old analog TV. Don't know the
modulation of my digital TV cable signals, whether it is
wider or narrower than analog channels...but my TV service
crams over 400 channels into the same bandwidth. TV sure
isn't the narrow-band stuff that many hams are used to.

"dbv" (sometimes "dbu" but rarely) refers "0" as 1.0 microVolt,
almost any characteristic. Not seen much in specifications,
though.

The "VU" (for Volume Unit) is an old, old one in the audio
and telephone industry with "0 VU" being 1.0 mW into 600
Ohms impedance. Not only that, the "VU" industry standard
used to call out the indicating meter's ballistic (needle or
meter motor) characteristics! :-)

"dbc" is an often-used term on component specifications but
is still a relative term of db in regards to the Carrier of
a signal where the noise is called out. ["C" for Carrier]

"dba" is a legal term in the USA standing for "Doing
Business As" in local governments that require business
licenses. :-)

My apologies if some ISPs show two more postings of my
message. When I posted via Google on Saturday early
afternoon, Google was interrupting itself with lots of
users (?) or something that kept prompting "server error."
I've since removed redundant posts on Google, but some
other ISPs may be storing the multiples. Stuff happens.



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Old June 6th 05, 02:16 AM
 
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Yes, I do. :-)



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Old June 6th 05, 03:54 PM
drwxr-xr-x
 
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On 5 Jun 2005 17:16:10 -0700, wrote:
Yes, I do. :-)



Yes, you 'do' WHAT??
What are you nattering on about?!?

Oh, I see. Another sloppy groups.google poster.


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Old June 6th 05, 06:40 PM
K7ITM
 
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This page: http://decibel.biography.ms/ mentions both dBv and dBu.
Says in "electrical voltage" (probably with reference to audio
industry), dBu and dBv both mean dB relative to 0.775V -- generally
0.775Vrms, but dB taken as 20 log(V/0.775), without reference to a
particular impedance.

But the same page says dBu or dB(lower-case Greek mu: "micro") as radio
power is dB relative to one microvolt per square meter.

Go figure. It all points out the need to be careful to define your
terms if there's any chance of ambiguity. If you're not careful, your
reader may think dBu refers to Dallas Baptist University, or Deutsche
Billiard Union, or Duluth Business University... though the
capitalization would be wrong for those.

Cheers,
Tom

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Old June 7th 05, 10:54 AM
Roy Lewallen
 
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Thanks, Tom. This newsgroup is truly educational. I'm slowly learning
that out there, somewhere, just about every possible convention or
nomenclature is used by someone for some purpose. I'll bet I'm the only
kid on my block now who knows what dBu and dBv mean. And I guess Len is
the only kid on his block that knows they sometimes mean dB relative to
1 uV, as well -- ah, what's a factor of 775,000 one way or the other,
anyhow.

dBu = dumb ******* unit.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL

K7ITM wrote:
This page: http://decibel.biography.ms/ mentions both dBv and dBu.
Says in "electrical voltage" (probably with reference to audio
industry), dBu and dBv both mean dB relative to 0.775V -- generally
0.775Vrms, but dB taken as 20 log(V/0.775), without reference to a
particular impedance.

But the same page says dBu or dB(lower-case Greek mu: "micro") as radio
power is dB relative to one microvolt per square meter.

Go figure. It all points out the need to be careful to define your
terms if there's any chance of ambiguity. If you're not careful, your
reader may think dBu refers to Dallas Baptist University, or Deutsche
Billiard Union, or Duluth Business University... though the
capitalization would be wrong for those.

Cheers,
Tom

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Old June 7th 05, 04:22 PM
nanchez
 
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Hi

Thanks to all of you... like Roy said, this newsgroup is very
educational... now I have enough information to make some
experimentation with this mixer and oscillator... actually, the mixer
is an Analog Devices AD607 and the oscillator is a Linear LTC6903...
I'm planning to build my own rig...

Thank you so much.

Hern=E1n S=E1nchez
HJ4SZY



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