On Tue, 7 Jan 2003 13:54:17 -0500 (EST)
"Scott Rosenfeld [N7JI]" <ham@w3eax.umd.edu> wrote:
> I used to spend hours upon hours doing A/B testing.
>
> Conclusion?
>
> Unless you have a signal generator producing a stable signal of known
> frequency and amplitude, fuggetaboutit.
>
I totally disagree. If I have two radios, A and B, and an antenna
switch so that they are sharing a common antenna, there is a lot I can
tell by doing some simple A/B testing. For example, if I can hear weak
signal X well enough to work him on radio A but not on radio B, that
tells me a lot. If I get on a crowded band and can get signal Y
separated from the crowd on radio A but not on radio B, that tells me a
lot.
Of course, these are anything but scientific or quantitative
measurements, but they do tell me which receiver is likely to produce
better results.
BTW, due to a very busy schedule over the coming several weeks I'll be
unsubscribing from the list temporarily. Don't take it personally.
This is a great list.
73,
Caity
KU4QD
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