I would think that my old TS-450 must be pretty clean because it seems 
like just about every RTTY contest I get in, I can be CQ'ing and someone 
will move in right next to me, inside my 250 cycle passband.  I figure 
it must be someone with a new 'state of the art' rig that can screw 
their passband down to about 150 cycles and then crowd right in next to 
me and totally QRM me, while not even knowing I'm there.
 Sometimes I just wish there was somewhere I could set mine wide enough 
to get their attention.
 Maybe what we need is some organization to set up a 'cash for dirty 
rigs' like they did with the 'cash for clunkers' program.  I'd be glad 
to swap my TS-450 for a K-3 :-)  73
Tom W7WHY
On 10/20/2014 10:43 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
 
On 10/20/2014 2:05 PM, Stuart Phillips wrote:
 The FCC publishes required levels of operation for several aspects of 
radio performance but is silent on matters like phase noise etc 
beyond using phrases like “commonly accepted engineering practice”.
 
Hi Stu,
As I wrote in TXNoise.pdf,
 "FCC Rules 97.307 (a) No amateur station transmission shall occupy 
more bandwidth than necessary for the
information rate and emission type being transmitted, in accordance 
with good amateur practice. Figure 12
clearly shows that Yaesu and Icom transceivers are using 3 times more 
bandwidth than Kenwood and 5 times
more than Elecraft. As I read the Rules, this puts anyone using them 
in violation of 97.307 (a)."
 Follow my logic. Elecraft, with their K3, have defined "good amateur 
practice" with respect to CW. Kenwood's TS590S, less than half the 
cost of a K3, is next best, and the modern ICOM and Yeasu rigs are 
much worse. I've seen data from Flex for their 6xxx-series rigs 
putting them in a class with the K3 for cleanliness, but these data 
have not been verified by ARRL. In simple terms, today's ICOM and 
Yeasu rigs are in violation because they use MUCH more than the 
minimum bandwidth needed for transmission. 97.307 (b) and 97.307 (c) 
expand upon that standard.
 As I see it (and as principal author of all AES Standards on EMC, I 
have used similar wording), "good amateur practice" with respect to 
occupied bandwidth was specifically written into the Rules to not tie 
the hands of innovative designers and allow the State of the Art to 
advance. Wayne Burdick, Elecraft chief engineer, showed many (all?) of 
his cards in an Appendix to my report. There is no magic there, simply 
good, innovative engineering. The methods are available to all.
 For years, we were taught that CW bandwidth was related to CW speed, 
which is a total falsehood -- CW bandwidth is solely a function of 
rise and fall waveforms, distortion in RF stages, including the 
output, and phase noise.
73, Jim K9YC
 
 
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