Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-25 Thread Toby Deinhardt
 One curious phenomenon I've noticed is comparing digital versus analog 
 TV signals. My cable service uses the same channel on cable as the over 
 the air VHF channel for the local broadcast TV stations. 

All signal en-, trans- and decoding will require at least one to two 
frames. At work the broadcast signals of the same program which leave 
our company will often have a delta of a second or so depending on what 
kind of processing was necessary (i.e. satellite broadcast, terrestrial 
broadcast, internet stream, etc.).

Also any resynchronizing which may occur in the various system the 
signal is passed through also costs time.

This is most likely what you are noticing.

vy 73 de toby
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-24 Thread AD6XY

Ordinary and extraordinary? I.e. different polarisations being refracted at
different heights.

I am surprised it is that much delay though.  If it was the other way around
then Ground wave vs Sky wave would be a reasonable explanation but this is
ruled out if the vertical was receiving the crashes later and in any case
the extra delay would be very short.

Alternative explanations:

One antenna was favoring the short path and the other the long path. The
vertical radiation pattern could cause this. The Vertical would ideally have
a low radiation angle and may then favour long path, so local storms might
travel around the world to reach the vertical but also arrive at a high
angle on the horizontal via a shorter hop. 

You were hearing different crashes or an echo that was vertically polarised.

There is a known DSP delay on the K3 that depends on the filter bandwidth,
but that would only be a few 10s of ms at the most. So if you have the 150Hz
filter set the audio may be 10ms behind that of a wide open filter.



You have programmed the K3 to have a longer delay than I thought plausible
(AFX?). I don't think the K3 delay is more than a few ms.

You have a longer delay from one ear than the other or a problem in your
wetware. I hope it is not this. It would imply you have become unbalanced,
but you might expect this would happen all the time even on a single
receiver, so it is not likely.

Mike
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-24 Thread Stephen W. Kercel
Matt:

At an unconscious level of cognitive processing if you were listening to 
two replicas of the same signal, with one slightly delayed, if the delay 
were on the order of 1/100 second and if your ear were very highly 
trained, you might be able to tell that something is different about the 
two signals, but you would not be able to describe what. The delay would 
need to be on the order of 1/10 second or more before you would 
consciously recognize that one signal is delayed compared to the other.

Recall that radio waves move at 3 x 10^8 meters per second. If you look 
at multi path propagation at HF radio waves over intercontinental 
distances, and suppose that your two receivers were responding to two 
different signals taking two different paths, the differences in time of 
arrival of the different signals would be 1/1 second or less.

Also supposing that you were listening to the same wave on two antennas 
3 meters apart, the delay would be 10^-8 second.

Thus, by either (or both combined) delay mechanism, the delay is many 
orders of magnitude too short for your internal cognitive processes to 
detect the difference in arrival time of RF wave fronts.

On the other hand, DSP delays can be very long by comparison, and if you 
are using two receivers with non identical DSP parameters, you might 
very well be able directly to hear the delay (a difference in latency in 
the jargon of the trade) audibly.

One curious phenomenon I've noticed is comparing digital versus analog 
TV signals. My cable service uses the same channel on cable as the over 
the air VHF channel for the local broadcast TV stations. At the present 
time the local stations are still simulcasting an analog signal on their 
VHF channels that I can pick up with an antenna and receive on the TV, 
and a digital signal on UHF. The cable company captures the digital 
signal, converts it to analog and retransmits it over the cable circuit 
on the analog VHF channel. I have an RF switch that lets me switch 
between the antenna and the cable service. If I'm listening to the VHF 
analog over the air signal and quickly switch to cable, I can hear the 
last syllable or so of the transmitted dialog repeated quite distinctly. 
This suggests a delay for the digital modulation and conversion back to 
analog on the order of 1/10 to 1/2 second.

Thus, I'm more inclined to believe that what you're hearing is an 
artifact of the DSP in your receiver rather than an effect occurring Out 
There.

73,

Steve Kercel
AA4AK




Matt Zilmer wrote:
 I was working on 160m CW during the contest and noticed an interesting
 phenom when hearing static crashes.  The subRX (vertical polarized
 antenna) received the noise later than the receiver on the long wire
 (horz pol).  The K3 was set in diversity receive mode.

 Being new to receiver diversity, I'd never thought through all of the
 implications.  Is it possible that two wavefronts arrive at times
 different enough that this can actually be detected audibly?

 Anyone else ever noticed this or have any kind of explanation?  I
 don't know if it's a DSP audio delay thing, or something physical Out
 There.

 73 and :)
 matt zilmer
 K3 #24
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-24 Thread Matt Zilmer
On Sat, 24 Jan 2009 10:06:22 -0800 (PST), you wrote:


Ordinary and extraordinary? I.e. different polarisations being refracted at
different heights.

Pretty sure it's The Weird Stuff Out There.  What occurred to me after
reading your reply is that it seems possible that the e-m fields'
components have different characteristics due to polarization, and are
arriving at the two antennas simultaneously.  They just sound
different, maybe have different durations and strengths.

As I said, this is my first time using a diversity-capable receiver,
and it looks like there is a lot to learn...

Um, I don't *think* it's my hearing.  But, well you never know.

73 and Thanks,
matt

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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-24 Thread AD6XY



Stephen W. Kercel wrote:
 
 Matt:
 
 Recall that radio waves move at 3 x 10^8 meters per second. If you look 
 at multi path propagation at HF radio waves over intercontinental 
 distances, and suppose that your two receivers were responding to two 
 different signals taking two different paths, the differences in time of 
 arrival of the different signals would be 1/1 second or less.
 
 

You are right it can't be simple multipath but it could be two entirely
different paths.

Or to put it more simply, a 1000km path difference equates to a delay of
3.3mS.
If the long path is 3km and the short path 1 km the difference is
2km and the delay 67mS which is probably detectable.

Mike
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-24 Thread Dave Gilbert
It is not unusual for me to hear some sort of multipath propagation on 20m late in the afternoon here in Arizona when beaming to Japan (single receiver and 4 element yagi with a good F/B ratio). The disparity in arrival time is often enough to make signals totally unreadable at CW speeds of roughly 25 WPM. The middle of a character or even a word sometimes just sounds like a continuous carrier. This might go on for an hour or more until one of the paths disappears. I have on two occasions this winter even heard three different arrival times for the same signal, which was very weird and I wish I had recorded it. Given the differences in path length necessary to generate that kind of delay I make no claim regarding the cause ... only that I have clearly heard it several times. In any case, if such delays are enough to blur 25 WPM CW, they would be enough to be easily noticed in static crashes. Of course, that still requires some sort of polarity disparity to create the effect observed by Mr. Zilmer.73,Dave AB7EStephen W. Kercel wrote:Recall that radio waves move at 3 x 10^8 meters per second. If you look 
at multi path propagation at HF radio waves over intercontinental 
distances, and suppose that your two receivers were responding to two 
different signals taking two different paths, the differences in time of 
arrival of the different signals would be 1/1 second or less the delay is many orders of magnitude too short for your internal cognitive processes to 
detect the difference in arrival time of RF wave fronts.
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-24 Thread Stephen W. Kercel
Dave:

I had not thought of that. but you make a good point. It is kind of like 
optical interferometry, where the receiving electronics is inherently 
too slow to capture the instantaneous vibrations of either light wave, 
but can easily detect an interference pattern resulting from the 
interaction of the two light waves.

73,

Steve
AA4AK


Dave Gilbert wrote:


 It is not unusual for me to hear some sort of multipath propagation on 
 20m late in the afternoon here in Arizona when beaming to Japan 
 (single receiver and 4 element yagi with a good F/B ratio).  The 
 disparity in arrival time is often enough to make signals totally 
 unreadable at CW speeds of roughly 25 WPM.  The middle of a character 
 or even a word sometimes just sounds like a continuous carrier.  This 
 might go on for an hour or more until one of the paths disappears.  I 
 have on two occasions this winter even heard three different arrival 
 times for the same signal, which was very weird and I wish I had 
 recorded it.  Given the differences in path length necessary to 
 generate that kind of delay I make no claim regarding the cause ... 
 only that I have clearly heard it several times. 

 In any case, if such delays are enough to blur 25 WPM CW, they would 
 be enough to be easily noticed in static crashes.  Of course, that 
 still requires some sort of polarity disparity to create the effect 
 observed by Mr. Zilmer.

 73,
 Dave   AB7E



 Stephen W. Kercel wrote:

 Recall that radio waves move at 3 x 10^8 meters per second. If you look
 at multi path propagation at HF radio waves over intercontinental
 distances, and suppose that your two receivers were responding to two
 different signals taking two different paths, the differences in time of
 arrival of the different signals would be 1/1 second or less.

 ... the delay is many orders of magnitude too short for your internal 
 cognitive processes to
 detect the difference in arrival time of RF wave fronts.

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Re: [Elecraft] K3 Dual Receive Surprise

2009-01-24 Thread Sverre Holm

 On 160 m and 80 m, one kind of weird delayed propagation is the ducted 
 one, where signals travel along magnetic field lines into space and 
 back, but it is very rare. 

And on second thought, since Matt was hearing static crashes with delay 
between his two receivers - one imaginative explanation could be that 
they are statics originating as lightning from the Southern hemisphere 
travelling both in the ionosphere (direct) and on a magnetic field line 
(delayed). Each of his two antennas could have mainly picked up just one 
of them.  Such static crashes are responsible for whistlers at much 
lower frequencies (kHz - audible frequencies).

The delay difference would be half of the range I indicated for magnetic 
field line propagation, i.e. 70 ms and up, depending on the location.

Well, I don't know how credible or frequent this could be, but I think 
there is a remote possibility for such phenomena.

-- 
Sverre
F/LA3ZA



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