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![]() Michael Black wrote: I glanced at it and maybe missed something, but DSB is AM. And he certainly says it at the outset, and when he's talking about the components he's talking about 2 sidebands and a carrier. Now, "DSB" often has fallen into the meaning of "DSB with no carrier", but technically one should specifically define that there is no carrier. snip Michael Back in 1972 when I took my FFC 2nd and 1st class exams DSB was defined as the sidebands with a supressed carrier. A signal with both sidebands and the carrier was simply AM with a BW disgnator. .Now that diffintion may have slipped over the years, but from my perspective AM means both sidebands, with a carier DSB means both sidebands without the carrier, and ISB means two different sidebands with no carrier. I only have received the later, ISB, a very few times mainly on ancient STL links. It might be useful to check out what the ITU says these days about "AM", both sidebands with carrier", and for this conversation, "DSB" being both sidebands without the carrier. Terry |
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