The simple answer is because Amateur Radio is a hobby and because some
stations want to sound very good, and the operators work very hard on their
station and they do sound very good.

PWM has great promise, but why does this design or use of big iron have any
factor in this discussion?

Why don't you ask the operator about his signal, or if that is too
bothersome, why not adjust your receiver so that it will ignore that part of
the audio spectrum?

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jeff Edmonson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

>
> Charlie, (and Bill and others) the whole point is, why are some hams
trying
> to sound better than most broadcast stations?
>
> If you listen to most broadcast stations, there's some distortion there
that
> you'd hope you'd never see on your Ham station, but those stations are
> TRYING to pass frequencies lower than 50hZ - in fact, they're trying to
> pass as low as 30hZ and that requires some BIG iron, UNLESS you're
> using PWM/PDM.
>
> Methinks most mic equalizers could use some tweaking, and some rolling
> off of the bass.
>
> 73 = Best Regards,
> -=Jeff/W5OMR=-
>
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