Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote: wrote: wrote: Noise on FM is kind of strange due to the capture ratio of the radio, i.e. it should be reject noise. I'd expect the noise source to be very close. FM radios aren't hard to find. Try a second radio in the same location and see if you get the same noise. wrote: Hello Everyone, I am new to SW listening. The few times I have heard SW, I assumed that the BBC was the only broadcasting station. My dad used his SONY ICF-2002, to pick up the BBC news in the mornings. (So.. I never used to trouble the controls) Much later, the AC adpter got damaged & he stopped listening to the BBC. (I believe he mentioned the SONY ate batteries) It gathered dust for a while, & then I tried using it with an adjustable, DC voltage adapter & realised there was nothing wrong with the radio itself. Since then, I learnt: 1. The BBC isn't the only broadcast station on SW. 2. Signal reception would be improved if I learnt how to build a better antenna. 3. I should really return the radio w/DC adapter to my dad so he could listen to the BBC again. So I bought a Kaito KA1102 portable radio last November 2005. Initially I was thrilled. Then after the excitement of owning my own wore off (i.e. about a month of SW listening), I suddenly noticed that whether operated on battery or Adapter: 1. A high pitched whistle on the local FM station. 2. A warbling, high pitched whistle on the SW bands. NOTE: I am resident in South America. Within my neighbourhood, two people use broadcasting radio sets to contact their inland business operations & two taxi service bases operate near my home. The whistle is sometimes so loud that it overpowers the voice tones of the announcers... which is very annoying. The manual didn't say anything about high pitched whistles, and I have tried moving to different locations at home (i.e. where I got good reception before), all to no avail. Fortunately, it doesn't happen all the time during a sitting, so I just turn the radio OFF, pause for a bit and then turn it back ON. That works.... for a short while. I would really like to understand what causes this problem in my KAITO KA1102 and what I should do to correct it. (i.e. Preferably before I return the SONY to my dad) I believe that if I can resolve this problem I will have a great portable radio. My dad's SONY ICF-2002 has been around for years, and except for the adapter issue and some whip antenna wiggle, gives no trouble today. Your suggestions on my KAITO 1102, (i.e. besides shipping it back to the Manufacturer's) would be most helpful. Kindest regards, SW Newbie, Yerodin P. Hello , Thanks for writing in. I am unsure of what more competent SW radio fans call "noise". A "whistle, that sounds like a mosquito buzzing in my ear" is something I can relate to. What does noise sound like? Kindest regards, SW Newbie Yerodin P. "NOBODY" can be this stupid.................... can you spell TROLL? Hello , When asking for assistance (i.e. in an area in which I know I am ignorant), I generally try not to assume I know what folks more knowledgeable than myself mean when they use technical terms. I could guess that , meant the hissing sound that accompanies poor signal reception....... however, that would mean that he didn't understand my original post . It is unlikely that a hiss and a high-pitched whistle (i.e. mosquito buzzing), sound the same. In my experience, humility & openness is more likely to get rendered assistance than other behaviours. Kindest regards, SW Newbie Yerodin P. |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
My comment was for the FM noise. I guess I should have explained
"capture ratio." With FM, the radio can reject an interfering signal as long as the desired signal is sufficiently stronger. So for you to get noise on FM, the noise source has to be very close, or the desired signal is very weak. I say this only because you have eliminated power line (mains) noise by going to battery operation. It would make sense to try the radio that you suspect has a problem in another location to see if the noise goes away. Noise on shortwave is another story. There is no ability to reject noise with an AM radio. Rather, on AM, the noise gets demodulated with the desired signal. There isn't much you can do other than to locate the noise source and eliminate it. There are some solutions, such as going to a loop antenna, which tends to not pick up some types of noise, or use a noise canceller like the ANC-4. But there is nothing like finding the noise source and eliminating it. I have no idea what it is like where you live. In urban areas, noise is everywhere. My house has it's share of devices that make noise on shortwave and even AM BCB. I have a laser printer that pumps out 847kHz. Battery chargers with switching supplies are another noise source. Computer monitors, especially CRT types make noise. Dirty insulators on power lines. The list is endless. wrote: wrote: Noise on FM is kind of strange due to the capture ratio of the radio, i.e. it should be reject noise. I'd expect the noise source to be very close. FM radios aren't hard to find. Try a second radio in the same location and see if you get the same noise. wrote: Hello Everyone, I am new to SW listening. The few times I have heard SW, I assumed that the BBC was the only broadcasting station. My dad used his SONY ICF-2002, to pick up the BBC news in the mornings. (So.. I never used to trouble the controls) Much later, the AC adpter got damaged & he stopped listening to the BBC. (I believe he mentioned the SONY ate batteries) It gathered dust for a while, & then I tried using it with an adjustable, DC voltage adapter & realised there was nothing wrong with the radio itself. Since then, I learnt: 1. The BBC isn't the only broadcast station on SW. 2. Signal reception would be improved if I learnt how to build a better antenna. 3. I should really return the radio w/DC adapter to my dad so he could listen to the BBC again. So I bought a Kaito KA1102 portable radio last November 2005. Initially I was thrilled. Then after the excitement of owning my own wore off (i.e. about a month of SW listening), I suddenly noticed that whether operated on battery or Adapter: 1. A high pitched whistle on the local FM station. 2. A warbling, high pitched whistle on the SW bands. NOTE: I am resident in South America. Within my neighbourhood, two people use broadcasting radio sets to contact their inland business operations & two taxi service bases operate near my home. The whistle is sometimes so loud that it overpowers the voice tones of the announcers... which is very annoying. The manual didn't say anything about high pitched whistles, and I have tried moving to different locations at home (i.e. where I got good reception before), all to no avail. Fortunately, it doesn't happen all the time during a sitting, so I just turn the radio OFF, pause for a bit and then turn it back ON. That works.... for a short while. I would really like to understand what causes this problem in my KAITO KA1102 and what I should do to correct it. (i.e. Preferably before I return the SONY to my dad) I believe that if I can resolve this problem I will have a great portable radio. My dad's SONY ICF-2002 has been around for years, and except for the adapter issue and some whip antenna wiggle, gives no trouble today. Your suggestions on my KAITO 1102, (i.e. besides shipping it back to the Manufacturer's) would be most helpful. Kindest regards, SW Newbie, Yerodin P. Hello , Thanks for writing in. I am unsure of what more competent SW radio fans call "noise". A "whistle, that sounds like a mosquito buzzing in my ear" is something I can relate to. What does noise sound like? Kindest regards, SW Newbie Yerodin P. |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FCC: Broadband Power Line Systems | Policy | |||
Announcing 'hifi-am', to discuss High Fidelity AM tuners and hobbyist transmitters | General | |||
Announcing 'hifi-am', to discuss High Fidelity AM tuners and hobbyist transmitters | Homebrew | |||
High school radio stations alive and well | Broadcasting | |||
Response to "21st Century" Part Two (Communicator License) | Policy |