Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Telamon,
That was a good point you made earlier about the author's insistence on using filters 4 kHz for SSB. I clearly missed that. I think it's only fair though that we note it was dxing.info that gave the article the presumptive title "Comparing Four Great Communications Receivers... Testing the top receivers". Jan Alvestad just called it "Comparison Test" when he sent me the piece, prior to it appearing on the web. I personally think the RX340 is easy to operate. At the last Grayland DXpedition June 9-11 I DX'ed with one alongside my modded Racal and ICOM receivers. it was very intuitive to use, at least for the DX targets I was tuning (Aussie & So. Pacific mediumwave and some tropical band broadcasters). Over 15 years of DXing from the WA coast I've found that all of the "serious" receivers have performed within an eyelash (or two) of each other for foreign mediumwave and tropical band DX. We use good splitters like Stridsberg, Mini-Circuits and the like, as well as high-IP3 preamps distributing RF from the Beverage antennas. We make each installation as RF-sanitary as possible. So, each receiver typically gets the same signals as the others, allowing for fair comparisons. As I think back over many, many receiver comparisons and discussions during these DXpeditions, there isn't a single receiver that stands out in my mind as being *clearly*, indisputably the king-of-the-hill. One or another might detect audio on a faint signal a couple minutes before another rig, but by the time the signal is strong enough to begin revealing discernable details (IDs, etc.), all the top-grade receivers are providing useful audio also. In this DXpedition environment, I think the real differences come down to: -propagation at the moment -antenna(s) in use -skill & patience of the DXer -luck! If I was forced to name a top-dog receiver among those models I've listened to at Grayland over the years, it would be a foursome: Collins HF-2050, WJ HF-1000 (or equiv. 8711A), Ten-Tec RX340, and Winradio G303i. Note that these are all IF-DSP receivers! To my ears, they provide a slight but noticeable edge in audio recovery (readability) in really tough DX situations. In a typical suburban, high-RF environment with local MW & other broadcasters nearby, the digital frontends of these four rigs might wilt. In this case I'd place my bets on the AR7030 and other all-analog receivers with excellent close-in dynamics. My friend's Elecraft K2 transceiver would also likely do very well amidst strong signals (if it could have general coverage capability :^) My modded R75 and RA6790GM receivers have no problems with my Beverage antennas in the city, either. Anyway, keep up the good discussion on receivers. I almost forgot it was rec.radio.shortwave for a while! Guy Atkins Puyallup, WA USA "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , starman wrote: Mike Terry wrote: Testing the top receivers: TenTec RX340, AOR AR7030, Racal RA1772 and Icom IC-R75. Which of these fine communications receivers is the best at locations with strong nearby transmitters? Find it out in a new article (PDF) by Jan Alvestad. http://www.dxing.info/ Those four receivers are hardly the only top ones. Does he plan to review some of the other high end receivers? I don't care if he does. I thought the reviews were a little odd in what he wanted the radios to do and found some of the information to be misleading. I certainly disagree with his conclusions. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
IARN EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS GRADUATE SCHOOL | General | |||
a dipole made of two great sheets of metal? | Antenna | |||
Amateur Radio Newsline™ Report 1389 – March 26, 2004 | Shortwave | |||
If Ham Radio Were Invented Today (reprise) | Policy | |||
Great mobile scanner antenna - and cheap ! | Scanner |