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You mentioned that in your location the smaller Wellbrook ALA 1530 gave
a lower S-meter reading, but was clearer then your Wellbrook K9AY loop. Is it posible the K9AY produces enough RF to cause your receiver to, so to speak, "fold". I have found that too much RF, even well removed from the tuned frequency, can cause many receivers to act "weird". By wierd I am referring to non obvious distortion that degrades intelligibility. Me experiments over the last ~14 months showed me that ANYTHING that degrades the signal to noise will impair intelligibility. I found that every receiver I tested, the boring list at the end, experienced degraded intelligibility with a long enough wire antenna. Long enough might be 50' with the DX398, to 1000' with the R390/R392. Receivers used: R2000, R1000, PRC1000,DX398, R390, R392, AOR7030+, R8B and several ham transceivers with general coverage receivers. If you have a RF attentuator, in a pinch a the Rat Shack TV adjustable pad can be used, could you try an experiment? The next time you encounter a situation where the ALA 1530 gives better, as in increased intelligibility, place the attenuator/pad inline and see if reducing the incoming RF voltage helps. Several things I read got me to thinking about the effect of broad band "noise" and the effect it could have on cross modulation/IMD/IP2/IP3 at the first mixer, before great selectivity is present. IF, please note the IF, the first mixer adds unwanted RF crap from unwanted, overly strong, RF "noise", then intelligibility will almost certainly suffer. "Noise" in this context means every RF signal other then the one you want. Longer, as in the length of an antenna, is not always better. Terry |
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