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On Mar 17, 1:51*pm, Bob wrote:
Hello, I'm mainly a sw listener, Sr. Citizen now, and frankly not very knowledgeable about radio theory. Have a new WinRadio receiver that I'm enjoying very much. But I realize there are several optional settings that I really don't understand, and don't have a handle on. I do listening from about 1 MHz up thru the vhf/uhf scanner freq's, including MIL and Maritime stuff on SSB. Regarding the IF Bandwidth options: Might someone please give me a short discourse on what this does, and what it effects. And, some suggested (Default) settings that I could get started with for: AM NFM LSB USB Also the effect of slow, medium and fast for what I think is the the AF Filter Thank you very much; appreciate the help, Bob Hi, Bob - In terms of IF, Bandwidth describes the width of the slice of the frequency spectrum that gets through to your final RF stage, and also affects the width of the audio slice that reaches your speaker. It serves to determine both the audio quality (how much the of high freqs get cut off) and the amount of adjacent channel information is allowed to get through. As an example - For SWL on AM, most stations are spaced about 5 kHz apart. That means one on 9,555, one on 9,560, one on 9,565 and so forth. If you want to listen to a station on 9,560 and you don't want adjacent interference from those other freqs, the slice you take should be narrow enough to reject those adjacent signals but wide enough to provide a pleasing audio regime. In this case, a 6 kHz IF filter width (typical for a wide AM with good midrange tones) would be adequate, cutting off everything more than 3 kHz away on either side and leaving you with a clear channel. You would hear everything from 0 to 3,000 Hz audio, an adequate range for comfortable hearing and understanding. If you run across a station closer than 5 kHz, you may want to narrow your filter a bit. If an offending station is on 9,558, you would have to take a narrower slice, and maybe use a filter that cuts off at 4 kHz width. You again get a clean signal, but the trade-off is that you lose some high audio frequencies. The desired signal gets a *little* bit harder to understand. Lots of things can affect this, of course. If your filter has steep "skirts", meaning a good solid cutoff at each end, then they should work very well. If your filter has gentle skirts, they may not work as well as their bandwidth rating would suggest, allowing in some adjacent interference. I am not sure about the WinRadios, but if they have continuously variable bandwidths, you should be able to adjust the filter width so that the skirt quality will be slightly less important. Also, if the adjacent signal is very strong and your desired signal is weaker, even a decent filter may have a harder time rejecting the adjacent interference. In this case, a passband / IF shift adjustment can be handy - it can take the whole desired signal and essentially shove it away from the offending adjavcent interference. Again, I don't know if the WinRadios have this feature. For AM SWL, good bandwidths are something nice and wide for strong signals on clear channels (6 kHz or more), a 6 kHz filter for general listening on a modestly crowded band, and a 3 - 4.5 KHz bandwidth for the modest signal next to the stornger station. If you get much narrower, you may lose a lot of audio and the sound becomes very muddy. This is where SSB - USB - LSB can help. If you get interference from a station a few kHz away and the AM filter won't cut if out, a switch to the sideband farther away from the offending signal can make a big difference. In fact, using sideband for AM listening can help with a number of problems ranging from noise to fading. For USB / LSB, you can have narrower bandwidths, say 1.5 - 3 kHz, and still enjoy decent audio, because the slice you take is only half the incoming signal, and it can include everything from 0 up to the desired higher frequency. The passband / IF shift can also help on USB / LSB, sliding your signal away from the interference. You will probably hear some variation in the sound of the SB signal, though, so it must be used judiciously. Finally, if you have a REALLY close signal but you can use SSB, you can switch to that sideband farther from the offending signal and switch in a narrow filter. Howeve, you may still get a whistling heterodyne from the nearby station - in that case, switch in a Notch filter to cut it out, and adjust it is possible to achieve the desired level of whistle removal. Does that help? 73, Bruce |
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