To: | <tentec@contesting.com> |
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Subject: | [TenTec] Orion, NRD-545, DSP, filters etc |
From: | geraldj@isunet.net (Dr. Gerald N. Johnson, electrical engineer) |
Date: | Tue Jan 28 22:38:07 2003 |
In my experience, most crystal lattice filters ring adversely when hit by pulses, such as noise or fast CW. Tentec uses ladder filters that have a less square frequency response and as a consequence have a more linear phase response and thus ring much less. My audio DSP, a Timewave DSP-59+, has a far superior selectivity without rapid changes in phase response, and with noticeable detectable ringing on 35 wpm CW at bandwidths above 50 Hz. The DSP filter can be built to have very good selectivity at the same time it has linear phase response and that is what it takes to make a filter not ring. Its easy in a DSP filter to have many poles, while in an analog filter having many poles can result in excessive insertion loss and cost. Most analog filters have to trade off selectivity and skirt steepness for ringing. Most amateur radio filters (crystal lattice and mechanical) choose steep skirts sacrificing ringing. Tentec crystal filters sacrifice some corner sharpness in trade for much less ringing. 73, Jerry, K0CQ -- Entire content copyright Dr. Gerald N. Johnson, electrical engineer. Reproduction by permission only. |
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