I did a test with my '930S. My O II and the 930S are on a 2 pos antenna
switch. I had the 930S feeding a dummy load and listened on the O II. I
was surprised to hear essentially no phase noise from the 930S; I
thought it produced a fir bit. I could certainly hear the 930 as I
turned across it (switch provides about 60 dB isolation). Did I do
something wrong in my admittedly primitive test set up?
Kim N5OP
On 7/6/2014 5:40 PM, Rick - DJ0IP / NJ0IP wrote:
Jim, you are totally correct and keying problems can be a problem for any
transmitter, whether analog or digital.
But that was not really what I was talking about.
At this point I will come out of my closet and say what I do for a living.
I'm the tech support manager (world-wide) for Spiderbeam antennas.
We supply various antennas to contest teams and DX-peditions, all over the
world (in over 130 countries).
We sponsor most DX-peditions and part of my job is helping them plan their
antennas.
But right here in Germany we had a new Multi-2 contest station claim there
was a problem with our Spiderbeam Yagi design. Their claim was, if they
would key either rig (in SSB) without even speaking into the mike, it
created an S7 to s9+ noise level in the other radio, regardless of which
band it was on, and it was worse if one of our beams (they had two
Spiderbeams) was pointing at the other. (duh)
Somehow they felt our antennas were at fault.
My job of course was to prove it was not our antennas at fault and help find
the source of the problem. Which I did.
After much discussion, I was able to persuade the contest team to swap out
both transceivers (TS-590s) with something else. They replaced them with a
TS-850 and K2. The problem vanished. GONE COMPLETELY! They then put the
TS-590s back in, one at a time and both totally wiped out the other station.
They sold both TS-590s.
Wayne explained what the problem was, though he wasn't aware of the actual
problem here in Germany.
This is ludicrous for a new radio on the market! SHAME ON KENWOOD!
Would have been the same results with a pair of FT-3000's.
This has NEVER been the case with any Ten-Tec radio!
Nor with Elecraft radios!
This is the garbage I was referring to earlier. DIRTY TRANSMITTERS!
CHEAP IS CHEAP, GUYS! CHEAP JAP CRAP ISN'T WORTH THE MONEY YOU PAY FOR IT.
73 - Rick, DJ0IP
(Nr. Frankfurt am Main)
-----Original Message-----
From: TenTec [mailto:tentec-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Jim Brown
Sent: Sunday, July 06, 2014 10:47 PM
To: tentec@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [TenTec] On Noisy Transmitters
On 7/6/2014 1:33 PM, Jim Brown wrote:
Clicks are generated by rise times that are too fast combined with
intermod distortion.
Another point I forgot to make in this post is that many modern rigs allow
the user to adjust the keying rise time via a menu setting. In on the air
tests of an IC7600, clicks went from moderate to awful as the rise time was
adjusted from slow to fast, and the default setting was closer to awful than
moderate. You can see these measurements in
http://audiosystemsgroup.com/K6XXAmpTalk.pdf
73, Jim K9YC
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--
Kim Elmore, Ph.D. (Adj. Assoc. Prof., OU School of Meteorology, CCM, PP
SEL/MEL/Glider, N5OP, 2nd Class Radiotelegraph, GROL)
/"In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. But, in
practice, there is." //-- Attributed to many people; it's so true that
it doesn't matter who said it./
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