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Bob Dobbs wrote:
joe wrote: Bob Dobbs wrote: SC Dxing wrote: Operator Bob, I guess the questions I am asking. Does having separate USB/LSB switch make a difference when listening to sideband signals? Sure does! Will having separate USB/LSB along with synch detection make that much of a difference trying to listen to weak AM signals both on AM and shortwave? If your experience matches mine you might have some difficulty getting the sync-det to lock on the variable intensity SSB signals but on AM it will make a difference depending on which side of the signal is being encroached. I guess you mean AMBCB and SW in which case the operation is the same. A sync detector is not designed to be used on an SSB signal. It is no wonder that you have some difficulty. Was just answering the question from the person I responded to, I know full well how it works but I can see where my answer might be misconstrued and confusing. A sync detector works by locking onto the carrier of the signal. In SSB there is no carrier. When there is audio (modulation) present, there most certainly is a carrier, otherwise it's suppressed and therefore problematic for sync-det. In SSB there is no carrier at all, you seem to be saying that there is. The common AM mode (DSB modulation with carrier) has a carrier, modulated or not. SSB is nothing with no modulation and one sideband only when there is modulation. If someone were to modulate their SSB signal with anything close to a steady tone the sync-det could possibly get a lock. True as a steady tone is just like a carrier. Because it may look like one does not mean it is. note* - there isn't a way to engage the sync-det in either of the SSB modes on the only radio I have that has it. Of course not, it would make no sense. However, if your radio has USB/LSB selectable sync modes, then the only difference between that and SSB is the injected carrier to the product detector is either phase locked, or not. |
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