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Receiver specs - are they meaningful
Receiver test data from
S = Sherwood P = Passport Q = ARRL QST mag 5 KHZ THIRD ORDER INTERCEPT DYNAMIC RANGE dB 100P Icom IC-R9500 93Q Flexradio SDR-1000 82S AOR7030 80S Icom R7800 78S Icom R781 78Q/75S Icom IC-R756 PRO III 77Q/75S Icom 756 PRO II 77P Drake R8A/B 77S NRD 515 75S Drake R7 75S WJ-1000 74P WJ-8711 71S Icom 756 PRO 71S Drake R8 68S/66P NRD545 67S Icom R75 67S Drake SW8 64S Yaesu 7700 (similar to FRG7) 62S Icom R70/R71 55P Eton E1 portable 46S Ten Tec 340 43P WinRadio 313i The above data is supposed to indicate which of your dream receivers will get you that ultimate DX catch above all other receivers. In practice, life is different: one of my pals had a SDR-1000 and I didn't notice his logs reflect anything much better than other fella's. A top DXer John Bryant used a Eton E1 on a DXpedition to Easter Island and logged some of the best catches I have ever seen. See: http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/easter_island_2007.dx I have a pal who insists on DXing with an ancient battered Yaesu FRG-7 and i would rate his fantastic logs and high quality recordings amongst the very best in the world, yet the FRG-7 is actually a very poor receiver from a poor front end and sloppy bad filters point of view. A few years ago a DXer won the prestigious Danish DC Club annual contest with an equally modest receiver, a Yaesu FRG-7000. A lot of my co DXer's are now using SDR-IQ's and achieving amazing results, whilst the top rated AOR 7030 lads don't seem to be getting much in the way of spectacular catches lately. So what's the motto of this story; just this, don't worry about receiver specs just concentrate on going on a decent DXpedition to a good radio spot and make sure you get a decent antenna up. Have fun and good DX John Plimmer, Montagu, Western Cape Province, South Africa South 33 d 47 m 32 s, East 20 d 07 m 32 s RX Icom IC-756 PRO III with MW mods Drake SW8 & ERGO software Sony 7600D, GE SRIII, Redsun RP2100 BW XCR 30, Sangean 803A. Antenna's RF Systems DX 1 Pro Mk II, Datong AD-270 Kiwa MW Loop, PAORDT Roelof mini-whip http://www.dxing.info/about/dxers/plimmer.dx |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
On Nov 25, 1:01 pm, wrote:
Receiver test data from S = Sherwood P = Passport Q = ARRL QST mag 5 KHZ THIRD ORDER INTERCEPT DYNAMIC RANGE dB 100P Icom IC-R9500 93Q Flexradio SDR-1000 82S AOR7030 80S Icom R7800 78S Icom R781 78Q/75S Icom IC-R756 PRO III 77Q/75S Icom 756 PRO II 77P Drake R8A/B 77S NRD 515 75S Drake R7 75S WJ-1000 74P WJ-8711 71S Icom 756 PRO 71S Drake R8 68S/66P NRD545 67S Icom R75 67S Drake SW8 64S Yaesu 7700 (similar to FRG7) 62S Icom R70/R71 55P Eton E1 portable 46S Ten Tec 340 43P WinRadio 313i The above data is supposed to indicate which of your dream receivers will get you that ultimate DX catch above all other receivers. In practice, life is different: one of my pals had a SDR-1000 and I didn't notice his logs reflect anything much better than other fella's. A top DXer John Bryant used a Eton E1 on a DXpedition to Easter Island and logged some of the best catches I have ever seen. See:http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/easter_island_2007.dx I have a pal who insists on DXing with an ancient battered Yaesu FRG-7 and i would rate his fantastic logs and high quality recordings amongst the very best in the world, yet the FRG-7 is actually a very poor receiver from a poor front end and sloppy bad filters point of view. A few years ago a DXer won the prestigious Danish DC Club annual contest with an equally modest receiver, a Yaesu FRG-7000. A lot of my co DXer's are now using SDR-IQ's and achieving amazing results, whilst the top rated AOR 7030 lads don't seem to be getting much in the way of spectacular catches lately. So what's the motto of this story; just this, don't worry about receiver specs just concentrate on going on a decent DXpedition to a good radio spot and make sure you get a decent antenna up. Have fun and good DX John Plimmer, Montagu, Western Cape Province, South Africa South 33 d 47 m 32 s, East 20 d 07 m 32 s RX Icom IC-756 PRO III with MW mods Drake SW8 & ERGO software Sony 7600D, GE SRIII, Redsun RP2100 BW XCR 30, Sangean 803A. Antenna's RF Systems DX 1 Pro Mk II, Datong AD-270 Kiwa MW Loop, PAORDT Roelof mini-whiphttp://www.dxing.info/about/dxers/plimmer.dx right on john! i'm done searching for the holy grail of receivers - it just doesn't exist - i am having more fun and catching the same dx with my kaito 1103 than with my drake r8 or icom r75. infact there are stations i can id with the kaito that i cannot make out on my drake r8 - go figure! the gap between portable and tabletop is closed. i am patienty awaiting a new eton e1 - would not be suprised if my $50 kaito 1103 runs it neck and neck. good dx! john |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
On Nov 25, 6:01 pm, wrote:
snip The above data is supposed to indicate which of your dream receivers will get you that ultimate DX catch above all other receivers. In practice, life is different: one of my pals had a SDR-1000 and I didn't notice his logs reflect anything much better than other fella's. A top DXer John Bryant used a Eton E1 on a DXpedition to Easter Island and logged some of the best catches I have ever seen. See:http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/easter_island_2007.dx I have a pal who insists on DXing with an ancient battered Yaesu FRG-7 and i would rate his fantastic logs and high quality recordings amongst the very best in the world, yet the FRG-7 is actually a very poor receiver from a poor front end and sloppy bad filters point of view. A few years ago a DXer won the prestigious Danish DC Club annual contest with an equally modest receiver, a Yaesu FRG-7000. A lot of my co DXer's are now using SDR-IQ's and achieving amazing results, whilst the top rated AOR 7030 lads don't seem to be getting much in the way of spectacular catches lately. So what's the motto of this story; just this, don't worry about receiver specs just concentrate on going on a decent DXpedition to a good radio spot and make sure you get a decent antenna up. Have fun and good DX John Plimmer, Montagu, Western Cape Province, South Africa South 33 d 47 m 32 s, East 20 d 07 m 32 s RX Icom IC-756 PRO III with MW mods Drake SW8 & ERGO software Sony 7600D, GE SRIII, Redsun RP2100 BW XCR 30, Sangean 803A. Antenna's RF Systems DX 1 Pro Mk II, Datong AD-270 Kiwa MW Loop, PAORDT Roelof mini-whiphttp://www.dxing.info/about/dxers/plimmer.dx I take some heat from my local SWL brotherhood because of my unwillingness to "upgrade" to a better receiver. I have been using a R2000 since the early 1980s. And it is true that Kenwood might choke on mu modifications, but after babysitting a AOR7030+ for 9 months, having a R8B for 2 months, and I still own a R390 and a R392 but because of their odd tunning, separate MHz(Mc) and KHz(Kc), and the fact that only a body builder would enjoy trying to rapidly tune from one frequency to another they seldom get used by me. Both are loaned out to people who value the precision and whom I know will take good care of them. At my location, and, if you think about it, at all locations, the background noise or noise floor sets the limit on what you can receive. The 7030+ and R8B have much nicer features, but the 7030+'s menuing system was really designed by a very demented 3rd grader, but anything I could receive on any of the better receivers, I could hear on a stock R2000. True, better filters and better audio and better noise filters make some signals better. Don't get me wrong, I would sell my left n^^ for a 7030+ or R8B, but for day to day listening, the better receivers are like a limo compared to our Escort. Both do the job, is the increased ride worth the increased price. There has been a one time power failure during December for 18 hours and the AOR really was impressive. But even then I couldn't find a signal that the AOR received that the R2000 couldn't. It is true the better choice of filters makes the AOR more fun during extremely quiet RF conditions. But sadly it just isn't RF quiet enough for the better receivers to win. I accept that in wonderful, mythical (or is it mystical?), Greyland the better receivers may well receive signals that my lowly R2000 can't. But until I win the lottery, not likely since I don't buy tickets, I have to put up with the RF noise that I have. Instead of "wasting" money on a "better" receiver, I have decided to tackle the RF noise our own home generates. For less then $200 and way too many hours in research and work, I can't tell the difference when the meter is pulled. Picking the correct antenna, feeding it correctly, getting rid of,, or suppressing RF noise sources can make every day listening as rewarding as a trip to the country. If you like the stock PAORDT mini-antenna, you might want to take a look at the Kongsfjord web page, http://www.kongsfjord.no/,http://www.kongsfjord.no/dl/ Antennas/Simplified%20Complementary%20Push-Pull%20Output%20Active %20Whip%20Antennas.pdf. Dallas Lankford has made some serious changes that greatly improve the PARDT IMD performance. I have an unusual situation in that I have 2 MW stations that drive most active antennas nuts. Dallas's active antennas are the only ones that survive my harsh RF environment.. Terry |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
On Nov 25, 1:01 pm, wrote:
"A lot of my co DXer's are now using SDR-IQ's and achieving amazing results, whilst the top rated AOR 7030 lads don't seem to be getting much in the way of spectacular catches lately." Dear John, It seems that you really have a "thing" against the AOR AR7030 'Plus' receiver. Frankly, I don't know why. You have very limited experience with it and that was more than ten years ago. Did that so color your impressions that you cannot accept the fact that virtually all of the "negatives" written at that time (and even today repeated in some publications) have been totally overcome or have become commonplace? (I also note that you do not quote the IP3 for the RF Space SDR-IQ model.) I think that it is a shame that relatively few SWLs have purchased this receiver solely because of those negative comments regarding its operating scheme, and that of menu-driven products in general. Menu- driven products were relatively uncommon in 1996, but they are quite common, and are used by an increasing number of people (think DVD players, GPS units, and cell-phones), today. People reading these comments were/are frightened away from this receiver and continue to be frightened today. For a number of years I myself, having read these comments by professional testers and some early users, was scared away from purchasing this radio. But those AR7030 'Plus' specifications (all of them, not just one) kept coming back to haunt me. I finally "bit the bullet" in 2004 and bought a unit which was customized for me by the factory. The only regret I have is that I didn't buy this radio sooner! Those "negatives" regarding the operation of the receiver are just not true nor even applicable today. And it should be noted that, should an owner desire, full and effective (and easy!) computer control, which did not exist in 1996, or even 2000, of this radio can now be achieved and for FREE! You will never see me achieving "spectacular catches" with it, however. I am a program listener. I listen to a relatively few stations that have news, opinions, and other similar political and economic commentaries that concern me. I personally have little interest nowadays in trying to hear "exotic" signals. But this radio does allow me to hear the programs to which I listen to absolute best advantage. I can tell you that I can definitely hear things on this radio that I can hear on no other receiver I own. For example, I own a Grundig Satellit 800, which is a pretty good receiver. as well as the AR7030 'Plus." It is "fed" by one of my two Wellbrook ALA 330S Active Loop Antennas, both of which are mounted in my attic approximately twenty feet away from each other. Both are also mounted on identical Radio Shack rotators. There is a great deal of difference in the quantity and quality (more important to me) of signals receivable on those radios. Frankly, the AR7030 'Plus' runs rings around the Satellit 800 both in terms of the signals I can hear and the sound quality of those signals. (It should, after all, as it cost about five times as much!) The sound quality of a radio broadcast is better via the AR7030 'Plus' than any other radio I have ever heard, and that goes back to the console radio days. (This doesn't even mention my portable SW receivers. Note that it is my opinion that all of these types of receivers have a place in one's armamentarium.) I wonder what John Bryant might have achieved had he had an ICOM IC-756 Pro III instead of the Eton E1 on Easter Island. Or an AOR AR7030 'Plus.' Or a Redsun RP-2100. Or even a GE Superadio III, all assuming the same antenna system. Would he have heard more signals? Would what he heard have sounded better? We'll never know for sure but, based on the specifications of the radios mentioned, we can guess. (Not that any of it matters one way or another - his results, as achieved with his Eton E1, were indeed spectacular!) I don't know how many true DXers have bought the AR7030 'Plus' but I'd be willing to bet quite a number have been scared away as I was. I'd also bet that any "top" DXer using this radio would achieve results at least equal to, and maybe better than, what he/she can achieve with most other radios, including your ICOM. Your point that a good DXer, even with somewhat inferior (for want of a better term) equipment can easily outperform someone who isn't quite as experienced, even if the latter is using the latest and most expensive radio and the best antenna is, of course, quite correct and has been known for as long as I have been a SWL.. But you really can't ignore those specifications (all of them). Given otherwise identical conditions, a radio with better specs, in the hands of someone qualified, will indeed outperform a radio with inferior specifications. Specs aren't the whole thing, but they are one of the most important things in choosing a receiver. I must mention that, in your previous terminology, I am not defending the AOR AR7030 'Plus" "to the death." It is one of the "top" receivers in that rarefied level of other "top" receivers. Each of them has certain relative strengths and certain relative weaknesses. There has never been, and there probably never will be, a "perfect" radio. All one can do when choosing a receiver (assuming he/she can only purchase one or two "top" receivers) is to determine, from the specifications and reviews, which will satisfy him/her based on his/her own listening habits, needs, and desires. But I really wish you would stop "knocking" this receiver, or any other receiver for that matter, unless there is a definite and well- known weakness in the design, performance, or construction quality of that particular radio of which a prospective purchaser should.be made aware. Pejorative comments such as the one quoted above, which actually do not enhance the premise of your otherwise interesting posting, are not helpful to someone seeking information on tabletop SW receivers, in my opinion. It is well-known that you are a top DXer and, frankly, I feel that if you had an AR7030 'Plus' instead of your ICOM IC-756 Pro III, your results would be identical. And, again in my opinion, there are a number of really good ("top") receivers and the AOR AR7030 'Plus' is one of them. Best, Joe |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
On Nov 25, 12:24 pm, Joe Analssandrini
wrote: On Nov 25, 1:01 pm, wrote: "A lot of my co DXer's are now using SDR-IQ's and achieving amazing results, whilst the top rated AOR 7030 lads don't seem to be getting much in the way of spectacular catches lately." Dear John, It seems that you really have a "thing" against the AOR AR7030 'Plus' receiver. Frankly, I don't know why. You have very limited experience with it and that was more than ten years ago. Did that so color your impressions that you cannot accept the fact that virtually all of the "negatives" written at that time (and even today repeated in some publications) have been totally overcome or have become commonplace? (I also note that you do not quote the IP3 for the RF Space SDR-IQ model.) I think that it is a shame that relatively few SWLs have purchased this receiver solely because of those negative comments regarding its operating scheme, and that of menu-driven products in general. Menu- driven products were relatively uncommon in 1996, but they are quite common, and are used by an increasing number of people (think DVD players, GPS units, and cell-phones), today. People reading these comments were/are frightened away from this receiver and continue to be frightened today. For a number of years I myself, having read these comments by professional testers and some early users, was scared away from purchasing this radio. But those AR7030 'Plus' specifications (all of them, not just one) kept coming back to haunt me. I finally "bit the bullet" in 2004 and bought a unit which was customized for me by the factory. The only regret I have is that I didn't buy this radio sooner! Those "negatives" regarding the operation of the receiver are just not true nor even applicable today. And it should be noted that, should an owner desire, full and effective (and easy!) computer control, which did not exist in 1996, or even 2000, of this radio can now be achieved and for FREE! You will never see me achieving "spectacular catches" with it, however. I am a program listener. I listen to a relatively few stations that have news, opinions, and other similar political and economic commentaries that concern me. I personally have little interest nowadays in trying to hear "exotic" signals. But this radio does allow me to hear the programs to which I listen to absolute best advantage. I can tell you that I can definitely hear things on this radio that I can hear on no other receiver I own. For example, I own a Grundig Satellit 800, which is a pretty good receiver. as well as the AR7030 'Plus." It is "fed" by one of my two Wellbrook ALA 330S Active Loop Antennas, both of which are mounted in my attic approximately twenty feet away from each other. Both are also mounted on identical Radio Shack rotators. There is a great deal of difference in the quantity and quality (more important to me) of signals receivable on those radios. Frankly, the AR7030 'Plus' runs rings around the Satellit 800 both in terms of the signals I can hear and the sound quality of those signals. (It should, after all, as it cost about five times as much!) The sound quality of a radio broadcast is better via the AR7030 'Plus' than any other radio I have ever heard, and that goes back to the console radio days. (This doesn't even mention my portable SW receivers. Note that it is my opinion that all of these types of receivers have a place in one's armamentarium.) I wonder what John Bryant might have achieved had he had an ICOM IC-756 Pro III instead of the Eton E1 on Easter Island. Or an AOR AR7030 'Plus.' Or a Redsun RP-2100. Or even a GE Superadio III, all assuming the same antenna system. Would he have heard more signals? Would what he heard have sounded better? We'll never know for sure but, based on the specifications of the radios mentioned, we can guess. (Not that any of it matters one way or another - his results, as achieved with his Eton E1, were indeed spectacular!) I don't know how many true DXers have bought the AR7030 'Plus' but I'd be willing to bet quite a number have been scared away as I was. I'd also bet that any "top" DXer using this radio would achieve results at least equal to, and maybe better than, what he/she can achieve with most other radios, including your ICOM. Your point that a good DXer, even with somewhat inferior (for want of a better term) equipment can easily outperform someone who isn't quite as experienced, even if the latter is using the latest and most expensive radio and the best antenna is, of course, quite correct and has been known for as long as I have been a SWL.. But you really can't ignore those specifications (all of them). Given otherwise identical conditions, a radio with better specs, in the hands of someone qualified, will indeed outperform a radio with inferior specifications. Specs aren't the whole thing, but they are one of the most important things in choosing a receiver. I must mention that, in your previous terminology, I am not defending the AOR AR7030 'Plus" "to the death." It is one of the "top" receivers in that rarefied level of other "top" receivers. Each of them has certain relative strengths and certain relative weaknesses. There has never been, and there probably never will be, a "perfect" radio. All one can do when choosing a receiver (assuming he/she can only purchase one or two "top" receivers) is to determine, from the specifications and reviews, which will satisfy him/her based on his/her own listening habits, needs, and desires. But I really wish you would stop "knocking" this receiver, or any other receiver for that matter, unless there is a definite and well- known weakness in the design, performance, or construction quality of that particular radio of which a prospective purchaser should.be made aware. Pejorative comments such as the one quoted above, which actually do not enhance the premise of your otherwise interesting posting, are not helpful to someone seeking information on tabletop SW receivers, in my opinion. It is well-known that you are a top DXer and, frankly, I feel that if you had an AR7030 'Plus' instead of your, your results would be identical. And, again in my opinion, there are a number of really good ("top") receivers and the AOR AR7030 'Plus' is one of them. Best, Joe One of the problems with the 7030 is when someone sees you run it, it looks like magic.You can flip through the menus pretty fast. It is similar to watching someone run say a CAD program, where you do a few clicks and the magic appears, but the other person can't follow what you did. My only regret about the 7030+ is the price hasn't dropped over the years. I'd like a second one for stuff like hfdl, but can't justify the expense. The NB options is kind of pricey since all I ever use is the notch. If you take a 7030+, add the NB, daughter board and say one extra filter, you are at $2k. THe icom is about $700 more, or about a 1/3 premium. Then again, it has a built in pan adapter.The nice thing is you know there will be a Pro IV eventually, so you can pick up the III used eventually. AOR has done minor revs over the years (documented on their website), but don't see the need to change the basic radio. |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
Hi John,
Good to hear from you again on the newsgroup, and to read your observations. A few thoughts: The RF environment where a receiver is used definitely figures into the equation. I believe it's Vince or Gary in your country that uses the FRG-7, and he has said that his DXing location is far from local transmitters. That can make a big difference. In the same way, John's use of the Eton E1 on Easter Island is fully appropriate, as there are no local MW stations there, and only 1 low-power FM. Easter Island's nearest concentration of MW stations is 2300 miles away on the South American continent, and Australia/NZ is about 4300 miles distant! It doesn't take a crunch-proof receiver front end to perform well in such a location. The scarceness of local noise and nearby powerful stations is also a reason the early pioneers in radio and DXing had such phenomenal catches in the 1920s-1940s, despite their very simple receivers. I chose the SDR-1000 largely on the strength of its front end and close-in dynamic range/IP3, for use here in the greater Seattle/Tacoma area. I have many MW frequencies registering S9+50db, and a number of them are at S9+60dB or greater. The strongest I've seen was -13dBm on the SDR-1000's very accurate and calibrated (dBm) signal meter. This is when I was using the Beverage antennas in the greenbelt (forested) area behind my house. In direct tests at my home, the SDR-1000 clearly heard weak DX that was inaudible or muffled in the noise on a Ten-Tec RX-340 (two different units). However, the same rigs side-by-side at the Grayland DXpedition location performed equally as well. I've heard a number of 9 kHz "splits" at home with the SDR-1000, such as 1475 kHz RTM Malaysia in Kota Kinabalu, that may not have been quite as clear and strong with another radio used in the "RF alley" here. With the Perseus receiver I have on the way, the front end may be slightly less "stout," but it has operational advantages over the SDR-1000 that make it very worthwhile for both home and DXpedition use. 73, Guy Atkins KE7MAV Puyallup, WA USA wrote in message ... Receiver test data from S = Sherwood P = Passport Q = ARRL QST mag 5 KHZ THIRD ORDER INTERCEPT DYNAMIC RANGE dB 100P Icom IC-R9500 93Q Flexradio SDR-1000 82S AOR7030 80S Icom R7800 78S Icom R781 78Q/75S Icom IC-R756 PRO III 77Q/75S Icom 756 PRO II 77P Drake R8A/B 77S NRD 515 75S Drake R7 75S WJ-1000 74P WJ-8711 71S Icom 756 PRO 71S Drake R8 68S/66P NRD545 67S Icom R75 67S Drake SW8 64S Yaesu 7700 (similar to FRG7) 62S Icom R70/R71 55P Eton E1 portable 46S Ten Tec 340 43P WinRadio 313i The above data is supposed to indicate which of your dream receivers will get you that ultimate DX catch above all other receivers. In practice, life is different: one of my pals had a SDR-1000 and I didn't notice his logs reflect anything much better than other fella's. A top DXer John Bryant used a Eton E1 on a DXpedition to Easter Island and logged some of the best catches I have ever seen. See: http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/easter_island_2007.dx I have a pal who insists on DXing with an ancient battered Yaesu FRG-7 and i would rate his fantastic logs and high quality recordings amongst the very best in the world, yet the FRG-7 is actually a very poor receiver from a poor front end and sloppy bad filters point of view. A few years ago a DXer won the prestigious Danish DC Club annual contest with an equally modest receiver, a Yaesu FRG-7000. A lot of my co DXer's are now using SDR-IQ's and achieving amazing results, whilst the top rated AOR 7030 lads don't seem to be getting much in the way of spectacular catches lately. So what's the motto of this story; just this, don't worry about receiver specs just concentrate on going on a decent DXpedition to a good radio spot and make sure you get a decent antenna up. Have fun and good DX John Plimmer, Montagu, Western Cape Province, South Africa South 33 d 47 m 32 s, East 20 d 07 m 32 s RX Icom IC-756 PRO III with MW mods Drake SW8 & ERGO software Sony 7600D, GE SRIII, Redsun RP2100 BW XCR 30, Sangean 803A. Antenna's RF Systems DX 1 Pro Mk II, Datong AD-270 Kiwa MW Loop, PAORDT Roelof mini-whip http://www.dxing.info/about/dxers/plimmer.dx |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
wrote in message ... Receiver test data from S = Sherwood P = Passport Q = ARRL QST mag 5 KHZ THIRD ORDER INTERCEPT DYNAMIC RANGE This is one spec. That's like comparing cars soley on the transmission or engine size. It tells you next to nothing about the receiver's overall performance. And for those of us with rotatable, directional antennas and no MW broadcast stations in the same county, IP3 is probably the least important spec. Dale W4OP |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
To reply to some of these posts:
r2000sw - I too have awful RFI at my home QTH and I found much of the answer was to turn nearly everything OFF in the house so that I can get a bit of noise free DX in in the wee hours of the morning. Of course, in the evenings I can't intrude on my ball and chains TV/DVD/ VCR's that put out a hellava RFI racket. As for antenna's, I think my RF Systems DX1 professional MK II I superb and reduces the local RFI substantially - the PAORDT mini-whip was just horrible. Enjoy your R2000! to Joe A., I think the old adage "methinks the maiden doth protest too much" applies to you and your defence of the 7030+. I have said before it is a great radio, but not everyone's cup of tea. I don't know the SDR-IQ specs but it is a very modest device and I doubt it's specs are any better than the quoted WinRadio 313. As for John Bryant on Easter Island, I think with any radio he would have done just as well, but here is where the SDR-IQ is a big plus, because you can monitor 190 Khz of spectrum just before and after the TOH top of hour and thus get more positive ID's, hence that is why DXer's are getting such good results from their SDR-IQ because of the ability to get multiple catches at the same time. Something you can't do on an ordinary radio. to m...sushi, I agree totally with you about the 7030's menu system. I can't even operate the menu on my cellphone let alone the DVD's, so my wife does that. I like one button one knob RX's with a very large display like the Drake R8B/NRD545/756Pro3 to mention just a few. to my pal Guy - thanks for that input. I must admit putting in the original post with a bit of tongue in cheek, as I am a lover of top end RX's with the more bells and whistles the better and the bigger and better screen. If I ever win the Lotto I will upgrade to an Icom IC 7700 = huge and superb. No computer radio's for me in my dotage! I do believe like you that in some very tight situations the really very top end RX's do deliver the goods that radio's with lesser specs can't do, but the thrust of my post was really, does it actually matter in the wholeness of who gets what with what RX and the actual quantum of results achieved??? I don't think so. I once demonstrated to my co-DX friends Vince with his R8A and Gary with his Frog how I could get perfectly readable copy of Reunion on 666 using all the bell's and whistles on my Icom and Kiwa Loop regeneration, whereas they couldn't get readable copy, but in the wholeness of things they achieve just as much as I do and sometimes more. You are moving now from a superlative SDR-1000 to a much more modest Perseus, the reason being that it can copy a huge 400 Khz of spectrum at TOH for later playback, and however modest the specs of the Perseus might be, this facility is going to get you lots more catches and positive ID's. ZS6011, John Plimmer, Montagu, Western Cape Province, South Africa South 33 d 47 m 32 s, East 20 d 07 m 32 s RX Icom IC-756 PRO III with MW mods Drake SW8 & ERGO software Sony 7600D, GE SRIII, Redsun RP2100 BW XCR 30, Sangean 803A. Antenna's RF Systems DX 1 Pro Mk II, Datong AD-270 Kiwa MW Loop, PAORDT Roelof mini-whip http://www.dxing.info/about/dxers/plimmer.dx On Nov 26, 6:18 pm, "Guy Atkins" wrote: Hi John, Good to hear from you again on the newsgroup, and to read your observations. A few thoughts: The RF environment where a receiver is used definitely figures into the equation. I believe it's Vince or Gary in your country that uses the FRG-7, and he has said that his DXing location is far from local transmitters. That can make a big difference. In the same way, John's use of the Eton E1 on Easter Island is fully appropriate, as there are no local MW stations there, and only 1 low-power FM. Easter Island's nearest concentration of MW stations is 2300 miles away on the South American continent, and Australia/NZ is about 4300 miles distant! It doesn't take a crunch-proof receiver front end to perform well in such a location. The scarceness of local noise and nearby powerful stations is also a reason the early pioneers in radio and DXing had such phenomenal catches in the 1920s-1940s, despite their very simple receivers. I chose the SDR-1000 largely on the strength of its front end and close-in dynamic range/IP3, for use here in the greater Seattle/Tacoma area. I have many MW frequencies registering S9+50db, and a number of them are at S9+60dB or greater. The strongest I've seen was -13dBm on the SDR-1000's very accurate and calibrated (dBm) signal meter. This is when I was using the Beverage antennas in the greenbelt (forested) area behind my house. In direct tests at my home, the SDR-1000 clearly heard weak DX that was inaudible or muffled in the noise on a Ten-Tec RX-340 (two different units). However, the same rigs side-by-side at the Grayland DXpedition location performed equally as well. I've heard a number of 9 kHz "splits" at home with the SDR-1000, such as 1475 kHz RTM Malaysia in Kota Kinabalu, that may not have been quite as clear and strong with another radio used in the "RF alley" here. With the Perseus receiver I have on the way, the front end may be slightly less "stout," but it has operational advantages over the SDR-1000 that make it very worthwhile for both home and DXpedition use. 73, Guy Atkins KE7MAV Puyallup, WA USA wrote in message ... Receiver test data from S = Sherwood P = Passport Q = ARRL QST mag 5 KHZ THIRD ORDER INTERCEPT DYNAMIC RANGE dB 100P Icom IC-R9500 93Q Flexradio SDR-1000 82S AOR7030 80S Icom R7800 78S Icom R781 78Q/75S Icom IC-R756 PRO III 77Q/75S Icom 756 PRO II 77P Drake R8A/B 77S NRD 515 75S Drake R7 75S WJ-1000 74P WJ-8711 71S Icom 756 PRO 71S Drake R8 68S/66P NRD545 67S Icom R75 67S Drake SW8 64S Yaesu 7700 (similar to FRG7) 62S Icom R70/R71 55P Eton E1 portable 46S Ten Tec 340 43P WinRadio 313i The above data is supposed to indicate which of your dream receivers will get you that ultimate DX catch above all other receivers. In practice, life is different: one of my pals had a SDR-1000 and I didn't notice his logs reflect anything much better than other fella's. A top DXer John Bryant used a Eton E1 on a DXpedition to Easter Island and logged some of the best catches I have ever seen. See: http://www.dxing.info/dxpeditions/easter_island_2007.dx I have a pal who insists on DXing with an ancient battered Yaesu FRG-7 and i would rate his fantastic logs and high quality recordings amongst the very best in the world, yet the FRG-7 is actually a very poor receiver from a poor front end and sloppy bad filters point of view. A few years ago a DXer won the prestigious Danish DC Club annual contest with an equally modest receiver, a Yaesu FRG-7000. A lot of my co DXer's are now using SDR-IQ's and achieving amazing results, whilst the top rated AOR 7030 lads don't seem to be getting much in the way of spectacular catches lately. So what's the motto of this story; just this, don't worry about receiver specs just concentrate on going on a decent DXpedition to a good radio spot and make sure you get a decent antenna up. Have fun and good DX John Plimmer, Montagu, Western Cape Province, South Africa South 33 d 47 m 32 s, East 20 d 07 m 32 s RX Icom IC-756 PRO III with MW mods Drake SW8 & ERGO software Sony 7600D, GE SRIII, Redsun RP2100 BW XCR 30, Sangean 803A. Antenna's RF Systems DX 1 Pro Mk II, Datong AD-270 Kiwa MW Loop, PAORDT Roelof mini-whip http://www.dxing.info/about/dxers/plimmer.dx- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
On Nov 26, 12:00 pm, Joe Analssandrini
wrote: On Nov 26, 1:30 pm, wrote: To reply to some of these posts: to Joe A., I think the old adage "methinks the maiden doth protest too much" applies to you and your defence of the 7030+. I have said before it is a great radio, but not everyone's cup of tea. ... ... but here is where the SDR-IQ is a big plus, because you can monitor 190 Khz of spectrum just before and after the TOH top of hour and thus get more positive ID's, hence that is why DXer's are getting such good results from their SDR-IQ because of the ability to get multiple catches at the same time. Something you can't do on an ordinary radio. to m...sushi, I agree totally with you about the 7030's menu system. I can't even operate the menu on my cellphone let alone the DVD's, so my wife does that. I like one button one knob RX's with a very large display like the Drake R8B/NRD545/756Pro3 to mention just a few. to my pal Guy - thanks for that input. I must admit putting in the original post with a bit of tongue in cheek, as I am a lover of top end RX's with the more bells and whistles the better and the bigger and better screen. If I ever win the Lotto I will upgrade to an Icom IC 7700 = huge and superb. No computer radio's for me in my dotage! I do believe like you that in some very tight situations the really very top end RX's do deliver the goods that radio's with lesser specs can't do, but the thrust of my post was really, does it actually matter in the wholeness of who gets what with what RX and the actual quantum of results achieved??? I don't think so. Dear John, "I see, said the blind man as he picked up his hammer and saw." NOW I understand where you're coming from, John. Obviously if you cannot operated menu-driven products, the AOR AR7030 'Plus' would definitely NOT be for you. That explains, in part, your review of it. I had to learn how to operate this receiver which was much different from anything that I had used previously. But I have to say, as a retired old geezer, I just didn't have that much, if any, trouble learning how to operate it. I hate to say this, John, but I'm afraid that, more and more, menu-driven products will become the norm and that is solely due to cost. We're all going to have to learn to use them. Switching electronically is much less expensive for the manufacturers to produce than switching mechanically. That is why the AR 7030 'Plus' can offer performance equal to or superior than much more costly receivers with mechanical controls at a far lower price and is one of the reasons that it has had such a long production life. (And I too love radios with lots of buttons and knobs. They surely do impress your relatives, friends, and neighbors! These people always exclaim, upon being shown one of these radios, "Wow. You really know how to work this?" But really, in fact, I'm much more interested in performance than "show.") Your comment about being able, with SDRs, to "monitor" many frequencies at the same time is well-taken and something about which I had not thought previously. For a dedicated DXer this would be a boon BUT the manufacturers have got to 1) get the performance of these SDR radios up to the level of current shortwave receivers and 2) "future- proof" them so that when Microsoft or Apple introduce new operating systems, these radios will continue to operate. This latter problem is one to which I have given a great deal of thought and is the reason why, at least at the present time, I am not considering purchase of one. And I'm not just talking about a change from Windows XP to Windows Vista. What will Microsoft produce ten or fifteen years from now? Will today's SDRs still function with your computer of the future or will you have just an expensive paperweight? Yes, I know you can hold on to an older computer, but, when that goes, what do you have? For me, at least, this is something to seriously consider. If I won the lottery, I would buy a Watkins-Johnson WJ-8711A with all its factory options plus a Sherwood SE-3 MK IV as described in PASSPORT TO WORLD BAND RADIO. (I would also buy another house somewhere, preferably near the ocean, on a very large property so I could put up a Beverage antenna or two. I'd have my resident employees maintain these antennas for me.) But, you know what? I would ALSO buy two more AR7030 'Plus' receivers - one, configured the same as my current one, to replace my Grundig Satellit 800 and one, configured with the internal NiCd battery option, for travel, replacing my Sony ICF-SW7600GRs. Ah, dreams ... All the best to you John, Joe- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - My Answer to the My Tired/Weak Old Eyes and My Big Old Fingers is the Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radio for every day Shortwave Radio Program Listening (SWL). The Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radio has Big Widely Space Number Buttoms; a good size Tuning Knob that feels right; and a Large LCD Display with Numbers I can read without my Eye Glasses. Plus the Wonderful Sound that comes out of it is Pleasing to my worn-out Old Ears too. Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radio Icom IC-R75 Receiver with Kiwa Mods Kenwood R-5000 Receiver Eton E1 Radio ~ RHF |
Receiver specs - are they meaningful
On Nov 26, 12:00 pm, Joe Analssandrini
wrote: On Nov 26, 1:30 pm, wrote: To reply to some of these posts: to Joe A., I think the old adage "methinks the maiden doth protest too much" applies to you and your defence of the 7030+. I have said before it is a great radio, but not everyone's cup of tea. ... ... but here is where the SDR-IQ is a big plus, because you can monitor 190 Khz of spectrum just before and after the TOH top of hour and thus get more positive ID's, hence that is why DXer's are getting such good results from their SDR-IQ because of the ability to get multiple catches at the same time. Something you can't do on an ordinary radio. to m...sushi, I agree totally with you about the 7030's menu system. I can't even operate the menu on my cellphone let alone the DVD's, so my wife does that. I like one button one knob RX's with a very large display like the Drake R8B/NRD545/756Pro3 to mention just a few. to my pal Guy - thanks for that input. I must admit putting in the original post with a bit of tongue in cheek, as I am a lover of top end RX's with the more bells and whistles the better and the bigger and better screen. If I ever win the Lotto I will upgrade to an Icom IC 7700 = huge and superb. No computer radio's for me in my dotage! I do believe like you that in some very tight situations the really very top end RX's do deliver the goods that radio's with lesser specs can't do, but the thrust of my post was really, does it actually matter in the wholeness of who gets what with what RX and the actual quantum of results achieved??? I don't think so. Dear John, "I see, said the blind man as he picked up his hammer and saw." NOW I understand where you're coming from, John. Obviously if you cannot operated menu-driven products, the AOR AR7030 'Plus' would definitely NOT be for you. That explains, in part, your review of it. I had to learn how to operate this receiver which was much different from anything that I had used previously. But I have to say, as a retired old geezer, I just didn't have that much, if any, trouble learning how to operate it. I hate to say this, John, but I'm afraid that, more and more, menu-driven products will become the norm and that is solely due to cost. We're all going to have to learn to use them. Switching electronically is much less expensive for the manufacturers to produce than switching mechanically. That is why the AR 7030 'Plus' can offer performance equal to or superior than much more costly receivers with mechanical controls at a far lower price and is one of the reasons that it has had such a long production life. (And I too love radios with lots of buttons and knobs. They surely do impress your relatives, friends, and neighbors! These people always exclaim, upon being shown one of these radios, "Wow. You really know how to work this?" But really, in fact, I'm much more interested in performance than "show.") Your comment about being able, with SDRs, to "monitor" many frequencies at the same time is well-taken and something about which I had not thought previously. For a dedicated DXer this would be a boon BUT the manufacturers have got to 1) get the performance of these SDR radios up to the level of current shortwave receivers and 2) "future- proof" them so that when Microsoft or Apple introduce new operating systems, these radios will continue to operate. This latter problem is one to which I have given a great deal of thought and is the reason why, at least at the present time, I am not considering purchase of one. And I'm not just talking about a change from Windows XP to Windows Vista. What will Microsoft produce ten or fifteen years from now? Will today's SDRs still function with your computer of the future or will you have just an expensive paperweight? Yes, I know you can hold on to an older computer, but, when that goes, what do you have? For me, at least, this is something to seriously consider. If I won the lottery, I would buy a Watkins-Johnson WJ-8711A with all its factory options plus a Sherwood SE-3 MK IV as described in PASSPORT TO WORLD BAND RADIO. (I would also buy another house somewhere, preferably near the ocean, on a very large property so I could put up a Beverage antenna or two. I'd have my resident employees maintain these antennas for me.) But, you know what? I would ALSO buy two more AR7030 'Plus' receivers - one, configured the same as my current one, to replace my Grundig Satellit 800 and one, configured with the internal NiCd battery option, for travel, replacing my Sony ICF-SW7600GRs. Ah, dreams ... All the best to you John, Joe- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - My Answer to the My Tired/Weak Old Eyes and My Big Old Fingers is the Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radio for every day Shortwave Radio Program Listening (SWL). The Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radio has Big Widely Space Number Buttoms; a good size Tuning Knob that feels right; and a Large LCD Display with Numbers I can read without my Eye Glasses. Plus the Wonderful Sound that comes out of it is Pleasing to my worn-out Old Ears too. Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radio Icom IC-R75 Receiver with Kiwa Mods Kenwood R-5000 Receiver Eton E1 Radio ~ RHF |
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