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![]() Bob Dobbs EC42 wrote: On Wed, 30 Aug 2006 16:32:14 +0000, Mark Zenier wrote: In article .com, Steve wrote: In some contexts, when noise is a problem, people will say that you want to keep the "noise antenna" that you use with the ANC-4 as small as possible. This is because you want the noise antenna to hear *only* the noise, which will be phased out, and not the target signal, which you don't want to be phased out. The suggestion here is clearly that, if your noise antenna *does* hear the target signal, you're going lose signal along with noise. Answering Steve; since I seem to have either lost or never saw his original post. What you say above is correct. However, when people use the ANC-4 to establish phased arrays of two or more antennas, this is usually with a couple of serious antennas, widely separated, *both* of which can hear the target signal. In this case they aren't using the ANC-4 as much for noise reduction alone, but for signal enhancement, and phase select for desired signal versus unwanted interference, noise and other stations. Hence my question: When the ANC-4 is connected to two largish antennas, both of which are capable of hearing the target signal, what prevents the desired signal from simply being phased out? Is determining what gets phased out just a matter of carefully adjusting the controls on the ANC-4? They aren't trying to phase out the desirable signal. A noise bridge works by subtracting the noise from the signal. He's not talking about a noise bridge, which seeks an impedence null in an antenna system, and is sometimes used as a tuner tuner. Yep, a noise bridge can be quite handy for setting up an antenna tuner. dxAce Michigan USA |
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