Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters

2010-02-17 Thread Craig D. Smith
Not overkill at all, Phil, if you are into CW contesting.  Especially
something like the 160 meter events.

But I would recommend the 200 Hz 5 pole rather than the 250 Hz 8 pole.  The
250 and 400 are actually pretty close in actual BW (see measured data
available elsewhere).  I use the 200 and 400 combo (mostly CW contesting)
and am quite pleased.

73   Craig  AC0DS

 So, is it overkill to have the 250 Hz and the 400 Hz filters in the same
K3?

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Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters

2010-02-17 Thread Ken Wagner K3IU
G'morning, Phil:

After taking a look at the response curves for the filters, I chose the 
5 pole 200 Hz filter to accompany the 8 pole 400 Hz filter. I find it 
useful in the crowded bands during the contests.

73,
Ken K3IU
~~~
On 2/17/2010 9:52 AM, Phil Hystad wrote:
 Each morning I wake up stressed because I do not have all five filter slots 
 populated.  There is a hole in my K3 and it bothers me.  I had been saving 
 the high end for a FM filter but now decided that No, I won't be doing FM 
 with my K3.  So, my filters are: 400 Hz, 1000 Hz, 2.7 KHz (5-p), 6 KHz.

 I am thinking of adding another filter and I am thinking of the 250 Hz 
 because I prefer CW over SSB and I think I would get more use out of that end 
 of my filter lineup.

 So, is it overkill to have the 250 Hz and the 400 Hz filters in the same K3?

 73, phil, K7PEH
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Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters

2010-02-17 Thread Bill W4ZV


Craig D. Smith wrote:
 
 But I would recommend the 200 Hz 5 pole rather than the 250 Hz 8 pole.
 

Ditto.  W4TV (?) measured the 250 (actually 370 Hz) versus the 200 and the
latter had more rejection at ALL frequencies, even though it's only a
5-pole.  I only use my 200 ~1% of the time (500 Hz 8-pole the other 99%) but
there are times when it's nice to have (such as large simplex pileups).

Someone previously commented on the 1000 Hz (actually ~1100 Hz) for CW.  I
had one but found it too wide to be of much use.  If there are NOT a lot of
strong signals around, the stock 2.7k will work about as well.  If there ARE
a lot of strong signals around, the 1000 allows too many of them to desense
the rig.  This is especially true if you use a low pitch as I do (3-400 Hz). 
In that case the bandpass is shifted upwards from 200 Hz such that signals
as much as 1000 Hz above zero beat will desense the K3 (e.g. a 200-1300 Hz
bandpass for a 300 Hz pitch).

73,  Bill

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Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters

2010-02-17 Thread Joe Subich, W4TV


 Ditto.  W4TV (?) measured the 250 (actually 370 Hz) versus 
 the 200 and the latter had more rejection at ALL frequencies, 
 even though it's only a 5-pole.

Actually, I compared both of my 200 Hz filters (measured) to 
the curves for the 250 Hz filter on the Elecraft web page: 
http://www.elecraft.com/K3/K3_8_pole_plots.htm specifically 
http://www.elecraft.com/K3/filter_plots/250.gif. 

The stated conclusion is correct ... my filters were 190 and 
200 Hz at -6dB and 440 Hz wide at - 30dB  vs. 360/525 Hz for 
the INRAD/Elecraft 250 Hz filter.  Note, according to Wayne 
only the first 30 dB or so of rejection is significant as that 
is enough to protect the AGC and mixers and after 30 dB the 
DSP is the dominant bandwidth determining factor.  

As recommended by others, I would use 400 Hz for general CW 
and RTTY with the 200 Hz for critical CW only (200 Hz is 
too narrow for 170 Hz shift RTTY which, in theory, needs 
around 300 Hz to properly pass the keying sidebands).

My own rigs have 13 KHz, 2.8 KHz, open, 500 Hz and 200 Hz 
filters.  I'm waiting on Elecraft to allow use of the 13 KHz 
filter for AM and ESSB transmit (there is no reason to not 
allow it) and will eventually add the 1.5 KHz narrow SSB 
filter.   If I were to do it again, I would have saved the 
money on the 2,8 KHz filters and gotten the 400 Hz filters 
instead.  The savings in sticking with two stock 2.7 KHz 
filters (even with matching for the sub receiver) would 
have paid for the 13 KHz Hz and 200 Hz filters. 

73, 

   ... Joe, W4TV 
 





 -Original Message-
 From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net 
 [mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Bill W4ZV
 Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 10:23 AM
 To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters
 
 
 
 
 Craig D. Smith wrote:
  
  But I would recommend the 200 Hz 5 pole rather than the 250 
 Hz 8 pole.
  
 
 Ditto.  W4TV (?) measured the 250 (actually 370 Hz) versus 
 the 200 and the latter had more rejection at ALL frequencies, 
 even though it's only a 5-pole.  I only use my 200 ~1% of the 
 time (500 Hz 8-pole the other 99%) but there are times when 
 it's nice to have (such as large simplex pileups).
 
 Someone previously commented on the 1000 Hz (actually ~1100 
 Hz) for CW.  I had one but found it too wide to be of much 
 use.  If there are NOT a lot of strong signals around, the 
 stock 2.7k will work about as well.  If there ARE a lot of 
 strong signals around, the 1000 allows too many of them to 
 desense the rig.  This is especially true if you use a low 
 pitch as I do (3-400 Hz). 
 In that case the bandpass is shifted upwards from 200 Hz such 
 that signals as much as 1000 Hz above zero beat will desense 
 the K3 (e.g. a 200-1300 Hz bandpass for a 300 Hz pitch).
 
 73,  Bill
 
 -- 
 View this message in context: 
 http://n2.nabble.com/My-Five-Filters-tp4586377p4586571.html
 Sent from the Elecraft mailing list archive at Nabble.com. 
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Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters

2010-02-17 Thread Guy Olinger K2AV
My lineup for both RX in my K3 is

13, 2.7, 1.8, 400, 250
  6, 2.7, 1.8, 400, 250

I didn't purchase the 250 8 pole specifically as my roofer over
200/150/100/50 DSP bandwidths.  I have the 400 8-pole identified as 450 in
the K3 and the 250 identified as 350. I use WIDTH 350 as my tighter run
bandwidth.

I will use DSP width of 450 when I can, to hear callers well off frequency
(surprising how many there are), but will narrow to 400 then 350 when I get
crowders up or down. I find myself using 350 more and more often as people
are crowding in closer than +/- 500. With the 8 pole 250 and the DSP at
350, the steepest of skirts nearly coincide at +/- 250, allowing a small
adjustment in SHIFT to make a large adjustment in down the skirt, to put a
crowder well down without losing so much up and down hearing space.

I think that there are a lot of people who are fairly tone deaf (as in
couldn't carry a tune in a bucket, etc) who are just never going to hear
zero beat, and packet spots that are off that keep bringing calls off
frequency. So we are going to continue to have off frequency callers.  The
real 200 of the 200 is just too narrow for running and the 400 is
sometimes too broad for running.

For really narrow work, the DSP has always seemed to be enough under the
250.

I find DSP of 1000 under the SSB 1.8 more than adequate for casual CW tuning
around.  I tighten down to 450 if I call someone.

So my lineup for both RX is

13, 2.7, 1.8, 400, 250
  6, 2.7, 1.8, 400, 250

Anything from 2.7 to 250 might be used for diversity.

For SSB contesting I can barely manage using the 1.8, but can't stand it for
casual, and use the 2.7 instead.  I am in awe of someone who can get voice
intelligibility out of 1.5.  I can't. Simple enough to try 1.5, just
reducing using WIDTH.

13 for FM in one, and 6.0 for broadcast listening in the other (BC and HF
bands).

73, Guy.

On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 4:07 PM, Joe Subich, W4TV li...@subich.com wrote:



  Ditto.  W4TV (?) measured the 250 (actually 370 Hz) versus
  the 200 and the latter had more rejection at ALL frequencies,
  even though it's only a 5-pole.

 Actually, I compared both of my 200 Hz filters (measured) to
 the curves for the 250 Hz filter on the Elecraft web page:
 http://www.elecraft.com/K3/K3_8_pole_plots.htm specifically
 http://www.elecraft.com/K3/filter_plots/250.gif.

 The stated conclusion is correct ... my filters were 190 and
 200 Hz at -6dB and 440 Hz wide at - 30dB  vs. 360/525 Hz for
 the INRAD/Elecraft 250 Hz filter.  Note, according to Wayne
 only the first 30 dB or so of rejection is significant as that
 is enough to protect the AGC and mixers and after 30 dB the
 DSP is the dominant bandwidth determining factor.

 As recommended by others, I would use 400 Hz for general CW
 and RTTY with the 200 Hz for critical CW only (200 Hz is
 too narrow for 170 Hz shift RTTY which, in theory, needs
 around 300 Hz to properly pass the keying sidebands).

 My own rigs have 13 KHz, 2.8 KHz, open, 500 Hz and 200 Hz
 filters.  I'm waiting on Elecraft to allow use of the 13 KHz
 filter for AM and ESSB transmit (there is no reason to not
 allow it) and will eventually add the 1.5 KHz narrow SSB
 filter.   If I were to do it again, I would have saved the
 money on the 2,8 KHz filters and gotten the 400 Hz filters
 instead.  The savings in sticking with two stock 2.7 KHz
 filters (even with matching for the sub receiver) would
 have paid for the 13 KHz Hz and 200 Hz filters.

 73,

   ... Joe, W4TV






  -Original Message-
  From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net
  [mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Bill W4ZV
  Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 10:23 AM
  To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
  Subject: Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters
 
 
 
 
  Craig D. Smith wrote:
  
   But I would recommend the 200 Hz 5 pole rather than the 250
  Hz 8 pole.
  
 
  Ditto.  W4TV (?) measured the 250 (actually 370 Hz) versus
  the 200 and the latter had more rejection at ALL frequencies,
  even though it's only a 5-pole.  I only use my 200 ~1% of the
  time (500 Hz 8-pole the other 99%) but there are times when
  it's nice to have (such as large simplex pileups).
 
  Someone previously commented on the 1000 Hz (actually ~1100
  Hz) for CW.  I had one but found it too wide to be of much
  use.  If there are NOT a lot of strong signals around, the
  stock 2.7k will work about as well.  If there ARE a lot of
  strong signals around, the 1000 allows too many of them to
  desense the rig.  This is especially true if you use a low
  pitch as I do (3-400 Hz).
  In that case the bandpass is shifted upwards from 200 Hz such
  that signals as much as 1000 Hz above zero beat will desense
  the K3 (e.g. a 200-1300 Hz bandpass for a 300 Hz pitch).
 
  73,  Bill
 
  --
  View this message in context:
  http://n2.nabble.com/My-Five-Filters-tp4586377p4586571.html
  Sent from the Elecraft mailing list archive at Nabble.com

Re: [Elecraft] My Five Filters

2010-02-17 Thread Don Wilhelm
Phil,

Don't get so stressed.  My K3 has 3 open filter slots, and it does not 
concern me at all.
How much serious contesting do you do - how much serious DX Chasing?
Consider my logic:  The DSP filtering alone is really good and will 
handle conditions under more casual situations than the above.  Just 
dial in the filtering you want.
The rub comes in when there are a lot of strong signals in the Roofing 
filter passband.  You may not hear them with the DSP filtering tightened 
up, but they will activate the hardware AGC and will de-sense the 
receiver.  The reality of that happening are not usually present in 
normal operating, but will be present in serious contest and DX Chasing 
situations.
My opinions:
1) A wide CW roofing filter is of little value.  There will be so many 
signals in the passband that at least one is likely to activate the 
hardware AGC, so I figure that the normal 2.7/2.8 kHz filter with DSP 
set somewhere between 700 and 1000 Hz width will be about as good as the 
1000 Hz filter.
2) If you are a SSB contester, go for the 1.8 filter (or even the 1.5 
from Inrad) if you want to operate in extreme SSB conditions.
3) For CW contesting and DX Chasing, you will likely want a roofer in 
the  400 Hz or even 250 Hz range - which one depends on how much you are 
willing to dig for reception under crowded conditions.  As the filter 
gets more narrow, the more critical (i.e. slowly) one must tune, or the 
desired signal will suddenly disappear outside the passband.
4) For Data modes where one tunes with the VFO rather than clicking on a 
waterfall display, a 400 Hz filter is a good thing to have - some would 
argue that a filter in the 200 to 300 Hz range would be better, and that 
is logical too - which depends on how critical you wish to tune and how 
important that elusive contact is to you.

OK, I have not said which filters to use, but for me, the ideal set 
would be 13 kHz (discard if you don't want to do FM), the 6 kHz filter 
if you want to transmit AM or ESSB (the 6 kHz is good for SWLing, 
although the 13 kHz will do fine for that too).  The 2.7 or 2.8 kHz 
filter is required.  Then the 1.8 (alternately the 1.5) for SSB 
contesting/DXing.  The 400 Hz filter for normal CW, although for general 
tuning I like 700 Hz - do that with the 2.7, 1.8, or 1.5 kHz filter and 
the narrowed DSP filter.  For extreme CW or data mode work, any roofing 
filter in the 200 to 300 Hz range will do for me.

That fills the slots - 13 kHz, 6 kHz, 2.7/2.8, 1.8/1.5 and 400/200-300 
range.  If you do not want FM, then you will have 1 empty slot.
OK, that is the ideal for me, and I am building on it - I currently have 
the 13 kHz and the 2.7 kHz filters installed.  Right now, I am not 
interested in serious DXing or contesting, so until that bug bites me, 
the other slots will remain empty.

Those are my thoughts and the reasons I have chosen this path - YMMV, 
make up your own criteria based on your operating desires.

73,
Don W3FPR

Phil Hystad wrote:
 Each morning I wake up stressed because I do not have all five filter slots 
 populated.  There is a hole in my K3 and it bothers me.  I had been saving 
 the high end for a FM filter but now decided that No, I won't be doing FM 
 with my K3.  So, my filters are: 400 Hz, 1000 Hz, 2.7 KHz (5-p), 6 KHz.

 I am thinking of adding another filter and I am thinking of the 250 Hz 
 because I prefer CW over SSB and I think I would get more use out of that end 
 of my filter lineup.

 So, is it overkill to have the 250 Hz and the 400 Hz filters in the same K3?
   

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