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![]() John Byrns wrote: Hi Patrick, All your comments on text book references below are beside the point, what I was asking for is a citation for a textbook that explains yours and Phil's assertion that the rate of increase in the attenuation of a LC tank circuit is greatest near the "nose", and decreases further from resonance? Please note that I am not disputing yours and Phil's viewpoint, I came to understand your perspective during the "Thick as a Brick" thread back in January. You say this perspective is the one used in old radio text books, but I have never seen it mentioned in an old radio text book, hence I was hoping you could help me with a citation to a text book that uses/explains your perspective? Just because I haven't seen it doesn't mean it isn't there, since I never looked for it in the past. You seem to have forgotten that I changed the subject after you started talking about the thickness of your skull, you acknowledged the change of subject in a couple of posts, but now you have drifted back to an earlier subject and assuming that is what I am asking for citations on. I don't have the time to debate this any longer. I don't want to repeat what I have already said. I suggest yet again you satisfy your curiosity to inform yourself of the wonderments we see with LC tuned circuits by reading whatever books exist on the subjects, and I am sure there is a pile of material on the web. My methods and perceptions have led to successfully building or modifying AM radios to a far better level of performance than the status quo, and I have thus prooved at least to myself the effectiveness of my education, which I promoted to be able to use it, and not merely to be a "knowledgeable do-little". Patrick Turner. Regards, John Byrns In article , Patrick Turner wrote: John Byrns wrote: In article , Patrick Turner wrote: John Byrns wrote: In article , Patrick Turner wrote: John Byrns wrote: In article , Patrick Turner wrote: I have seen no reference of your interpretive methodology in any text books, and the text book methods to which I adhere to explain it all nicely, and I don't have any intention of going right through all that long and tortuous discussion again. And I wouldn't ask you to, if you notice I am not disputing your method, I am simply disputing your apparent claim that my method is invalid. I would ask you for one favor though, could you cite some of the textbooks that explain your method so nicely? I would have a dozen on my shelf which explain radio theory sufficiently well, including RDH4, and 11 others. Ahh, the old weapons of mass destruction excuse, you have the RDH4 and 11 other text books, and yet you can't come up with a citation for your method? I won't have the same books as you have, but apart from RDH4, I have Terman's Radio Engineering, about 6 different dated copies of ARRL, The british Communications Handbook, 5th Ed, Phillips Radio Paractice, Essentials of Radio by Sluurzberb&Osterfield, Applied Electronics by the staff of the Dept of Massacgusets insitute of Technology, Electrical and Electronic Engineering by John D Ryder, Of those I have at least the RDH4, and Terman's Radio Engineering, plus possibly one or two more, how about some page numbers where I can find an explanation of your definition of the rate of increase of the attenuation of a tank circuit around resonance? Most of the radio books I have do have explicit graphs and explanations of the response of RF and IFTs, with varying amounts of mutual coupling. You don't need the page numbers from me, the info is in there. The attenuation rates are shown on the graphs And also there is a statement in RDH4 about sideband cutting, with a narrow bw RF / IF response, which underlines the importance of requiring a wide RF bw to get a wide audio response. and I am too lazy to copy out the titles of the other approximate 10 books I have read on old fashioned electronics which all describe filters the same way, but not the way you do. Well I guess that about says it all, you are simply one of those old fashioned blokes who can't change his ways to adopt newer and better methods. Well in a later post I did take the trouble to name my sources. And I am not a lazy old bugger who never gets off his arse to find out by looking into things. I shouldn't have to do all this for you; your library should be embellished with enough old books about radio to make all of what I am saying perfectly clear. If you wanna uphold your methods, go write a book. I suppose I could, but why, I am not a textbook author, and my methods are not original with me, I am not nearly that clever. As I have said before I took them straight out of the modern filter design textbooks, the books on this subject have already been written by others, many times over, the field is way too crowded. You need to expand your reading list beyond those smelly old radio textbooks, the old blokes didn't know everything, you might learn something new from some more up to date reading, if you can even call it that. The smelly old textbooks say it all so well that there isn't any need to re-invent the wheel. The application of the theory contained didn't lead to great BCB AM radios very often because the radio industry was infested with bean counters and charlatans. This fact don't detract from the wisdom of the old books. The technology of tube radios is ancient history which will never again be the important techno mainstream thing it was, like steam engines. But the old technology is still fascinating, and great sound can be had with the right circuits. All the books backing up what I am saying are on the shelves for you to read. Page numbers please, if you can't cite page numbers it is nothing more than BS! Don't worry, I'm not going to hold my breath waiting, or anything like that. You have to do your own study; I can't and I won't do it for you. I was frustrated when I started to study the subject 10 years ago, and nobody could answer 1,001 questions I had, so I simply went to second hand bookstores and snapped up whatever was there, which seems impossible now because the sharks and collectors seem to have emptied the stores, and then I read and copied reams at the university libraries. But I also built and re-built a few radios. Including AM/FM types. Without having done anything in the workshop, I'd know SFA. Patrick Turner. Regards, John Byrns Surf my web pages at, http://users.rcn.com/jbyrns/ Surf my web pages at, http://users.rcn.com/jbyrns/ |
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