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Ross Archer wrote:
"starman" wrote in message ... Ross Archer wrote: A disclaimer: I may be totally wrong about this, but I think what you built is actually more like a sharp-tuned preselector than an antenna tuner, because it's not resonating your antenna system or improving the impedance mismatch, so much as it's favoring signals around the frequency of interest over signals that are outside this range. This would reduce the stress on your receiver's front end by attenuating out-of-band signals. You can verify this (or disprove it) by comparing a signal at say, 15 Mhz with and without your matching network installed. If your HF signals drop in strength, this may explain why reception is so much better with the parallel resonant circuit in place. It's my understanding that a substantial antenna like yours will pick up many volts of total RF at a very wide range of frequencies. These components stress your front end, driving it into non-linearity and causing mixing products, some of which will fall within the passband of the LF signal you're trying to hear. This is experienced as a higher noise level. The pre-selector knocks down these out-of-band signals, dramatically reducing the amount of rmixing and thus reducing the background noise level. I'm EXTREMELY skeptical of any claim that impedance matching by itself will make any difference to HF reception once you have more than (say arbitrarily) twenty feet of wire antenna, unless you're feeding a crystal set. ![]() the efficiency of energy transfer increases the efficiency of noise transfer just exactly as much as it increases the efficiency of signal transfer, resulting in a net 0 dB change in signal-to-noise ratio. You get higher S-meter readings, but no change in signal readability. Preselection, on the other hand, should never hurt and would help in cases where the receiver is overstressed by total signal levels. This is one possible explanation for your results. Again, I'm not certain this is correct. However, if you notice a big drop in signal level well up the HF spectrum when your network is installed, this would be plausible at least. ![]() -- Ross I thought your choice of the word "stress" (above) was curious. I've never seen that word used in the context of overloading a receiver's front-end. I'm sure you know that signal overloading doesn't actually damage anything in the radio, so what does "stress" mean to you in this case? Just curious. Stress, an in overall signal levels taxing the ability of one or more of the linear amplification stages to remain in their linear regions. Even a little bit of non-linearity allows spurious mixing products (e.g. intermod) to occur. Anythinng that knocks down the total signal level, especially if it's only signals you don't want to listen to, will reduce that "stress". Yes, it is a curious usage, but I'm just copying a usage I saw elsewhere wrt. dynamic range. -- Ross After reading your original post again, I see that you were using 'stress' to mean any signal level that causes the front-end of the receiver to operate outside it's design limits, particularly with regard to linearity. I too am skeptical of the value of impedance matching or antenna tuning if the receiver is already getting the signal levels it needs to operate above the local noise floor. However one of the benefits of impedance matching for certain antenna types like the inverted-L is you can also achieve an effective RF ground for the coax shield when the matching transformer (unun or balun) is located close to the ground. This allows for a short (effective) ground connection from the common end of the transformer windings to ground. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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