Vic, it may well be your imagination (!) but you may also be hearing the 
rejection that your tuner gives you, particularly to strong AM stations in the 
broadcast band. My measurements, as well as circuit simulation, show about a 40 
dB rejection of AM stations when the tuner is tuned to 40 meters.

Circuit simulation of the Johnson circuit shows not all that high a Q, but it 
certainly is starting to look like a broad bandpass response. (It's actually  
more high-pass than band-pass.) That's why it's effective against the broadcast 
band. It's yet another argument to use a tuner like that one.

Interestingly, I just moved from a link-coupled tuner back to an unbalanced 
tuner with balun because my measurements of common-mode current on the 
transmission line show that the balun is more effective at suppressing it. The 
link-coupled tuner acts more like a voltage balun which would be okay if the 
antenna were inherently balanced, but in many cases the current balun 
suppresses common-mode better when the antenna is in an environment that makes 
it not well-balanced. When power lines or houses or cars or other things are in 
the antenna's near field it tends to make the antenna present an unbalanced 
load to the transmission line. That's when equal currents (not voltages) work 
better. But I'm repeating what has long been known.

If you can measure this stuff, like with an RF current meter, it becomes much 
clearer.

Enjoy your new, cleaner reception, thanks to that tuner!

Al  W6LX


>>> This may be totally imaginary, 
>>> -- 
>>> 73,
>>> Victor, 4X6GP

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