Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() RDH4 says most AM BCB radio makers tried for a final IF bandwidth response of 3.5 kHz That was in 1955/ Since then, the BW has shrunk in many sets to even less than 2 kHz, especially in solid state gear, giving horrid state AM listening. No good turning up the treble control knob, there is no treble there to boost. I modified a fairly generic Radio Shack Optimus receiver's AM section by removing the narrow bandwidth ceramic filter and using a set of overcoupled IFs in its place. See: http://pw2.netcom.com/~wa2ise/radios...tml#solidstate Sounds a lot better on local stations, though DX will have a lot of monkey chatter. The FCC limits interference only partly by bandwidth restrictions. Mostly, it uses geographic seperation and power restrictions. By ear, I think most stations go to about 7 or 8 kHz audio. Many of the AM stations are talkers, but the ads can really sparkle. There's one I hear which sounds like it goes to the 10 kHz audio max. Much AM is talkback from mobile telephones, and its pretty dreadful.... Of course talk shows using telephone lines will be limited by the quality of the phone system. But you should hear better quality from the talk show host and commercials played on station equipment (or via satellite), as mentioned above. Audio from digitally compressed cell phones sounds the worst. If someone uses a cell phone to do a remote (like a high school football game) be sure to use an old analog cell phone (the kind that one could easedrop on with an FM scanner radio). But that assumes that the phone system doesn't do compression at the cell tower site to send it down the landlines. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FA/FS: High Power Antenna Tuner | Equipment | |||
FA/FS: High Power Antenna Tuner | Equipment | |||
High school radio stations alive and well | Broadcasting | |||
KE9OA's High Performance MW Receiver | Shortwave | |||
High performance MW receiver | Shortwave |