Hi all.  I was wondering how you would define/interpret S# signal strengths if 
you didn't have an S-meter, or the radio you were using didn't have one?  Would 
you base it in part on the quality of the received signal, for example?

I don't have that type of S-meter (the PL-380 and PL-606 use different scales). 
 I usually base my interpretations on the "S" definitions of the RST scales, 
like follows...

S0 "no reception" (not on scale) - self-explanatory, not even a carrier trace

S1 "faint signal, barely perceptible" - anything from a carrier trace to 
copyable audio with extreme difficulty, requiring a quiet area, good quality 
headphones, and a channel free of QRM from other stations

S2 "very weak signal" - readable with some possible difficulty, but still very 
noisy & weak.  Desensed PL-606 signals reading 50/00 would be rated here at 
best, even if they might otherwise be S6 or S7 without the desense.

S3 "weak signal" - easily readable, but still at a reduced volume with some 
noise.  Also signals that would be stronger on the PL-606 but are desensed (for 
example 50/15) would be rated here or below.

S4 "fair signal" - about the weakest a scan will stop or a tuning indicator 
will be lit.  Also this is approximately where the perceived volume of the 
signal audio is near its maximum.  Weaker signals often sound "quieter", with 
the noise level staying the same, or below S2 or so the noise AND signal both 
get quieter.  Stronger signals sound just as loud with a reduction in 
background noise.

S5 "fairly good signal" - some noticeable noise with the signal, but quieter 
than with S4.  My reception of 640 KFI, 740 KBRT daytime and 1070 KNX is about 
here on some radios.  On my PL-606 they indicate around mid to upper 40s dBu or 
so.

S6 "good signal" - there may be a little background noise noticeable between 
talk beds in a quiet environment with good headphones.  Music or road noise in 
a car would mask that noise however.  Typical PL-606 readings are approx. 52-58 
dBu or so.

S7 "moderately strong signal" - with very few exceptions, there is virtually no 
background noise audible with the signal.  (My PL-606 is one exception, as it 
seems to have some noise even with S9 signals.)   On a radio with poor 
selectivity like the SRF-M37W, the first-adjacent splash will sound just as 
loud as if not louder than the main channel.  PL-606 readings are typically in 
the 60s dBu range.

S8 "strong signal" - Loud splash on poorly-selective radios extends to ±2 or 3 
channels.  PL-606 on-channel readings typically range from about 70-82 dBu or 
so, with 2nd-adjacent desense typically 39/00 or 41/00 up to 47/00.

S9 "extremely strong signal" - if a station has audible intermods at other 
spots on the dial, chances are it's an S9.  Loud splash on poorly-selective 
radios extends ±4 or more channels, with the weaker splash in extreme cases 
audible over much of the band.  On some radios the first-adjacent splash sounds 
different with a reduced volume - for example the Sangean DT-400W within 1/2 
mile of a 50kW transmitter.  PL-606 signals are typically 83-93 dBu with 
2nd-adjacent desense approximately 49/00 or 50/00 (in extreme cases spreading 
as wide as or wider than FM stations for the 50/00 and across much of the band 
for 49/00).  I currently have no stations rated this high, but when the KCBQ 
site was in Santee (50kW @ 6 mi daytime) I rated them here.

S10 "overload" (not on scale) - signal is overloading the audio stage and 
sounds distorted on-channel.  On the PL-606 this starts around 95 dBu and is 
well underway by max scale at 98 dBu.  Usually I have to be within 80 to 
several hundred feet of the tower depending on power.  In somewhat severe cases 
occasional blips of unintelligible modulation is heard, then stronger ones 
sound like an open carrier.  This happened within 10 feet of one of 2.5 kW 590 
KTIE's tower, for example, where I'd guess the field was a few hundred or so 
volts/meter.  In extreme cases distorted audio is heard all the time, even when 
the radio would be otherwise muted like when switching bands or first powering 
it on.  (This probably would happen less than a few inches from a 50kW tower.)

As you can see my scale doesn't have S9+xx dB readings - the next is S10.  So 
how do you interpret the numbers and definitions?

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