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![]() Nothing wrong with a channel approach. Simplifies most of the design tradeoffs. BTW, I measured all the AM stations at my house (Seattle). Using a typical AM radio (a Sony SW7600GR with internal antenna), I tuned all the stations that were easily received without too much QRN/QRM (day time). I then checked the field strength of each using a spectrum analyzer and a calibrated antenna with 1 meter effective electrical length. I received 15 (reasonably clear) stations. The strongest station, only 2 miles away, gave -55dBuV (about 1.8mV/m), while the weakest of the 15, gave -85dBuV (about 56uV/m). QRN, due to skywave, increased substantially at night. This is "same channel" interference, which we get from the fact that there are no "clear channels" anymore. Better antennas actually make the QRN worse on some channels-- even while helping local daytime reception. I would design the radio to only work with strong local signals, if fidelity is the goal. Again, I say "good luck." Steve. -- Steven D. Swift, , http://www.novatech-instr.com NOVATECH INSTRUMENTS, INC. P.O. Box 55997 206.301.8986, fax 206.363.4367 Seattle, Washington 98155 USA |
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