The 600kw transmitter mentioned in the original post is of course far more massive than the 50kw stations in the USA. However, the email exchange below may be of interest regarding the D96L's front end. Gary, Kevin, myself, and a few others did some tests in July 2009 with the Kchibo D96L. We found the radio to be surprisingly resistant to overload when close to MW transmitters. 73,
Guy Atkins Puyallup, WA --------------(below is from July 2009)---------------------------- The trip I took at noon today with the D96L to locations near three local MW transmitters was enlightening. I stopped by Kelsey Creek Park in Bellevue, and then had time left over to get even closer to the transmitters. I parked near a campus of office buildings, as close as I could get to the north boundary of Mercer Slough Nature Park (If I had consulted a map first I could have gotten within about 500 ft. of the KKNW transmitter! Below are the results from the two testing locations. The 1 kHz filter was used in all instances: >From Kelsey Creek Park 880 kHz, KIXI (50 KW); 1.5 miles away 87 dBu on the meter some moderate splatter +/- 10 kHz from 880 no splatter when tuned +/- 13 kHz from 880 1150 kHz, KKNW (10 KW); 1.6 miles away 89 dBu on the meter some moderate splatter +/- 10 kHz from 1150 no splatter when tuned +/- 13 kHz from 1150 1540 kHz, KXPA (5 KW); 1.2 miles away 87 dBu on the meter Splatter barely noted at 10 kHz +/- from 1540 no splatter when tuned +/- 12 kHz from 1540 from north end of Mercer Slough Nature Park 880 kHz, KIXI (50 KW); 0.6 miles away 93 dBu on the meter !! moderate splatter +/- 10 kHz from 880 no splatter when tuned +/- 13 kHz from 880 1150 kHz, KKNW (10 KW); 0.6 miles away 90 dBu on the meter !! moderate splatter +/- 10 kHz from 1150 no splatter when tuned +/- 13 kHz from 1150 1540 kHz, KXPA (5 KW); 0.3 miles away 90 dBu on the meter ! moderate splatter at 10 kHz +/- from 1540 no splatter when tuned +/- 13 kHz from 1540 There you have it...this radio (and likely other SiLab chipped radios) have an amazing front end. I didn't think to check for signs of images further above and below the fundamental; I was concentrating on selectivity and resistance to splatter near a local. There would probably be a hint of image signal like John discovered with his biggie loop antenna slightly picking up one of his Vancouver flamethrowers. 73, Guy ------------------------------------------------------------------- I tried last night, getting KOM0-1000 on the D92L at about 93-94 dB with my active loop almost at oscillation. The bandwidth sounded narrower than the 1 khz filter, and cycling through the bandwidths made almost no difference. And of course, no overloads! I will check tonight on how close I can come, but I think 20 khz is usually pretty splatter free on the narrower bandwidths. Kevin ------------------------------------------------------------------- Hi Guy, Thanks for running the detailed selectivity tests on the D96L at Kelsey Creek Park in Bellevue last week, which were much appreciated. In testing the D96L's ability to limit the splatter from local pest KSUH-1450, I have checked it against both the G8, and a Murata CFJ455K5 filter modified C.Crane SWP Slider. The apparent winner in limiting splatter was the D96L on its 1 kHz selectivity setting, limiting KSUH's upper splatter to about 4 kHz, when the pest was nulled. The G8 limited the splatter to about 5 kHz, while the SWP Slider limited it to about 7 kHz. Unfortunately, the D96L's ability to limit KSUH splatter doesn't seem to give it the ability to receive either KARR-1460 or KUTI-1460 in the null of KSUH. KARR-1460 can be received on both the stock G8 and the Slider SWP in the null of KSUH in the daytime, and KUTI-1460 can also be received on the Slider SWP (which of course has a longer, externally mounted loopstick). My impression is that the D96L has rather modest nulling capability in comparison to the G8 and other Ultralights, possibly related to the loopstick's position in the cabinet. And as John and I found out at Grayland, these type of domestic splatter tests don't necessarily translate into superior 9-kHz split selectivity performance. 73, Gary -------------------------------------------------------------------- Hey Guy/all: I just checked on the D96L, and my observations match yours: with uber-strong locals, 12-13 khz away there is no splatter with the 1 khz filter. On the "lowly" PL-300WT, I need to go 15-16 khz away to be splatter-free. So, these filters do have skirts! Man, there are some really corny jokes that could made right now... Kevin _______________________________________________ IRCA mailing list [email protected] http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/irca Opinions expressed in messages on this mailing list are those of the original contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the IRCA, its editors, publishing staff, or officers For more information: http://www.ircaonline.org To Post a message: [email protected]
