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BDK ) writes:
In "pro" radios it might be true, but in hobby receivers, it's not true that S-meters have any real correlation with signal strength in comparing one radio to another. Oh come on. The same model with the same factory adjustment would have the same reading or very close. It would be reasonable to see a small variation but a "huge" difference would indicate a problem with one of the radios. Obviously, your and my idea of "tolerances" isn't what theirs is. A whole lot of radios are aligned "just good enough", or they need touching up due to aging after a really short time. But fundamental to all this talk about s-meters is that they never were intended to be anything but a relative indicator. And once you have that situation, there is little reason for the manufacturers to fuss over them. They are great to indicate at a glance that one station is stronger than the other, and if you need to peak or null something they provide a better indicator than your ears, and as I once saw suggested, they are a great way to get a rough idea of whether your receiver is working fine or not (just turn on the crystal calibrator when you first get the receiver, and then record the s-meter readings on various bands. If those start changing dramatically, then something is wrong, though it's no indication of what might be weakening.). Over the years, there's been lots of discussion of "how much is an s-unit" and while some have tried to impose a value on it, there really isn't anything to it. Before there were actual meters attached to receivers, there were the magic eye tubes, which had no scale at all. "You're about half open on the magic eye tube..." Want to give someone a better s-reading? Put up a bigger antenna, or add a preamp ahead of the receiver. It will raise the meter reading, but the signal as it arrives at your antenna hasn't changed one bit. Before there were meters on receivers, there was the "RST" system for rating signals. Readability/Signal Strength/Tone that you'd transmit to the other guy to give an indication of how his signal sounded at your receiver. It was all subjective, but nevertheless likely helpful to some extent in the early days of radio. Even today, some amateur radio contests require the exchange of RST, though it's my impression that in those cases they just send "59" or "599" (for code, the "T" relates to the tone of the signal and doesn't apply to voice) to comply with the rules and don't bother to actually send something that reflects the state of the signal at their receiver. From the 1961 ARRL Handbook, this is the how you are supposed to interpret the Signal Strength code: 1 faint signal, barely perceptible 2 very weak signal 3 weak signal 4 fair signal 5 fairly good signal 6 good signal 7 moderately strong signal 8 strong signal 9 extremely strong signal I can no longer remember if I read it outright years ago, or made an assumption, but somewhere I got the impression that S-meters are named after the RST system. Given that, any attempt at defining an s-unit is retroactive, trying to impose some absolute on something that has always been relative. One of the silliest things I ever saw was a digital s-meter to attach to CB sets. It was a 2-digit digital voltmeter, and you'd attach it to the AGC line of your CB set (all s-meters are just voltmeters measuring the voltage on the AGC line), and get flashy numbers. I can't recall if it did anything to actual give the basic idea of s-units, or just was a linear voltmeter. I'm sure it did sell well, because it was the sort of gadgetry that would sell at the time, and the whole concept of s-meters is so muddled that I'm sure the less technically inclined would buy into the notion of digital s-meters. Michael |
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