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Re: [CQ-Contest] Sept/Oct NCJ article on DX Prowess of Receivers

To: "Clive Whelan" <clive@gw3njw.org>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Sept/Oct NCJ article on DX Prowess of Receivers
From: Bill Coleman <aa4lr@arrl.net>
Date: Wed, 1 Sep 2004 21:31:51 -0400
List-post: <mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>

On Sep 1, 2004, at 2:31 PM, Clive Whelan wrote:
I have not used one of
the real clunkers such as the TS2000 or IC756Pro Mk1, but I have NEVER
experienced gain compression in any modern receiver I have used. Probably
the last time I heard such a thing was in a surplus receiver from WW2.
However I have often suffered from the "headless chicken" syndrome, which is
a function of IMD. I should mention here that I am a 99% CW operator, and I
do not actually know what IMD sounds like on SSB, possibly not recognisable
per se?

I'm not sure that it is IMD, but I have experienced some adjacent-channel interference that covers 20 or more kHz. Using an Kenwood TD-430S, which is one of the first generation of general-coverage up-converting receiver designs, when 10m gets rather crowded, there's a pattern of phantom signals across the dial. Very strong signals produce a noticeable change in background noise over 50 kHz or more.


I'm not sure what you mean by the "headless chicken" syndrome.

Referring to my on experience, I am not sure if this applies. Frankly I have
usually been so busy keeping the rate up in such circumstances that I
haven't sussed out the critical spacing, but my feeling is that it was
definitely more than 3kHz or so. Of course Tom refers to "something within
the roofing filter", and since the TS870 roofing filter is at best 15kHz
wide, then IMD at 5kHz spacing or more is entirely feasible.

Tom has used much better radios than I. The old TS-430S also has products outside the roofing filter, although these can be reduced dramatically by inserting the 20 dB attenuator.


On this subject I have seen suggestions to change the 8.83Mhz filter for an
INRAD device in the TS870 to address this problem. but I can't see how this
can work. Surely the problem lies in the first mixer and anything which
comes through the 15kHz roofing filter (of poor quality no doubt) is going
to cause IMD before the 8.83Mhz IF is reached. I would be interested in
opinions and/or practical experience in this matter.

The primary reason the K2 and K2/100 rigs do so well on these receiver tests is because they use a very simple single-conversion design. Although the first (and only) IF filter isn't a particularly sharp-skirted design, it is sufficient to knock out most all adjacent channel interference.


Bill Coleman, AA4LR, PP-ASEL        Mail: aa4lr@arrl.net
Quote: "Not within a thousand years will man ever fly!"
            -- Wilbur Wright, 1901

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