[Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread David Cole
Hi,

All the ESSB talk got me wondering about how accurate the P3 might be
for measuring bandwidth.  Could someone review my method for this
outlined below and comment please:

1.  Use ATT if needed to avoid very strong signals
2.  Set bandwidth to 4 KHz.  See note below.
3.  Adjust Span on P3 5 KHz per side
4.  Shaded area above waterfall indicates K3 bandwidth

Watch P3.  Can one trust the waterfall display to show actual bandwidth?
If so, how accurate would it be?

Note:
I believe that the P3 is tapped prior to any BW restrictions, (of merit
to this exercise), so I understand that step 2 is just for my ears only,
and does not affect BW display on the P3.  Is that a correct assumption?

-- 
Thanks and 73's,
For equipment, and software setups and reviews see:
www.nk7z.net
for MixW support see;
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/mixw/info
for Dopplergram information see:
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/dopplergram/info
for MM-SSTV see:
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/MM-SSTV/info



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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread Alan Bloom

 I believe that the P3 is tapped prior to any BW restrictions,

Correct.  I think the best way to measure an SSB signal's bandwidth on 
the P3 is to turn on peak hold.  After a few seconds the spectrum 
display will show a pretty accurate picture of the spectral shape of the 
signal


Alan N1AL



On 04/28/2014 07:08 AM, David Cole wrote:

Hi,

All the ESSB talk got me wondering about how accurate the P3 might be
for measuring bandwidth.  Could someone review my method for this
outlined below and comment please:

1.  Use ATT if needed to avoid very strong signals
2.  Set bandwidth to 4 KHz.  See note below.
3.  Adjust Span on P3 5 KHz per side
4.  Shaded area above waterfall indicates K3 bandwidth

Watch P3.  Can one trust the waterfall display to show actual bandwidth?
If so, how accurate would it be?

Note:
I believe that the P3 is tapped prior to any BW restrictions, (of merit
to this exercise), so I understand that step 2 is just for my ears only,
and does not affect BW display on the P3.  Is that a correct assumption?


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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread Vic Rosenthal K2VCO
'Bandwidth' is measured by specifying some number of dB that a signal is 
down at a particular offset from the center frequency. A measurement in 
Hz alone is therefore meaningless.


I suspect that the number of dB needed to make the waterfall display of 
a signal disappear depends on various things, like the gain setting. So 
this is not an accurate way to measure it.


What should work is to use the spectrum display of the P3. If you want 
to know, for example, the bandwidth of a signal at 30 dB down, you just 
find the points where the 'skirts' of the signal are 30 dB below the 
peak. This is easy to do on the P3 which can display the signal strength 
in dBm.


On 4/28/2014 7:08 AM, David Cole wrote:

Hi,

All the ESSB talk got me wondering about how accurate the P3 might be
for measuring bandwidth.  Could someone review my method for this
outlined below and comment please:

1.  Use ATT if needed to avoid very strong signals
2.  Set bandwidth to 4 KHz.  See note below.
3.  Adjust Span on P3 5 KHz per side
4.  Shaded area above waterfall indicates K3 bandwidth

Watch P3.  Can one trust the waterfall display to show actual bandwidth?
If so, how accurate would it be?

Note:
I believe that the P3 is tapped prior to any BW restrictions, (of merit
to this exercise), so I understand that step 2 is just for my ears only,
and does not affect BW display on the P3.  Is that a correct assumption?



--
73,
Vic, K2VCO
Fresno CA
http://www.qsl.net/k2vco/

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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread David Cole
Hello,

Between Vic's, and Alan's answer I have what I need, thank you all!!!  I
can now measure bandwidth, and tell how many db down a signal is vs.
it's width.  Thank you gents!

Peak hold, then measure!  :)

-- 
Thanks and 73's,
For equipment, and software setups and reviews see:
www.nk7z.net
for MixW support see;
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/mixw/info
for Dopplergram information see:
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/dopplergram/info
for MM-SSTV see:
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/MM-SSTV/info


On Mon, 2014-04-28 at 08:37 -0700, Vic Rosenthal K2VCO wrote:
 'Bandwidth' is measured by specifying some number of dB that a signal is 
 down at a particular offset from the center frequency. A measurement in 
 Hz alone is therefore meaningless.
 
 I suspect that the number of dB needed to make the waterfall display of 
 a signal disappear depends on various things, like the gain setting. So 
 this is not an accurate way to measure it.
 
 What should work is to use the spectrum display of the P3. If you want 
 to know, for example, the bandwidth of a signal at 30 dB down, you just 
 find the points where the 'skirts' of the signal are 30 dB below the 
 peak. This is easy to do on the P3 which can display the signal strength 
 in dBm.
 


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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread Jim Brown

On 4/28/2014 8:37 AM, Vic Rosenthal K2VCO wrote:
What should work is to use the spectrum display of the P3. If you want 
to know, for example, the bandwidth of a signal at 30 dB down, you 
just find the points where the 'skirts' of the signal are 30 dB below 
the peak. This is easy to do on the P3 which can display the signal 
strength in dBm. 


Yes. And as N1AL recommends, use peak hold. I've done spectrum plots of 
various signals and conditions with the P3. I usually set the SCALE for 
a pretty wide range (like 72 or the full dB), and set the SPAN to about 
10 kHz. I use both the Peak Hold Mode and the Average Mode. In both 
modes, but especially with Peak Hold, we must take care to differentiate 
sidebands from other stations. I try to set the reference level so that 
the peak of the signal is at one of the level lines and the noise level 
is near the bottom of the display.


With almost any rig, you'll see small signals down the sides of the 
slope that are intermod products, and they are usually symmetrical on a 
CW or RTTY signal. A clean SSB signal should be well confined by the 
bandpass filter limits of the audio and TX filter skirts. Anything that 
extends beyond that is IMD. When a rig is badly overdriven, it's common 
to see splatter as horizontal streaks extending above and below the 
signal frequency.


Last week, I was on 20M SSB trying to work a weak DX station, but what I 
heard was massive splatter from a QSO about 5 kHz up the band. One guy 
was relatively clean, but the other was not. I broke the QSO to tell him 
he was clobbering a weak DX station. Turns out he was an aeronautical 
mobile using whatever radio was onboard. He didn't know whether he was 
transmitting AM or SSB, but thought it was AM. I assured him that it 
was, indeed, USB, and that the problem was that he was likely 
overdriving it badly. He went QRT to figure it out.


As a percentage of transmitted signals, I don't find contesters any 
better or worse than non-contesters -- we contesters stand out because 
during a contest, there are a LOT more of us. :)  I'm retired, so I have 
access to the ham bands during the day (when I'm not working on 
something else). It's not at all uncommon to tune around 30, 40, and 80 
during a weekday and hear fewer than a half dozen signals on these bands 
(if you hear any at all), and no more than a few dozen on most of the 
higher bands. Compare that to a major contest, when there are several 
hundred workable signals on every band from any given location for the 
duration of the contest, and for stations with better antennas, perhaps 
2-4X that number. The winners of contests like the ARRL SSB Sweepstakes 
make more than 2,000 QSOs, and you can work a station only once.


73, Jim K9YC
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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread Don Wilhelm

David,

Your assumption is correct.  The P3 should show you the true width of 
the signal.


73,
Don W3FPR

On 4/28/2014 10:08 AM, David Cole wrote:

Hi,

All the ESSB talk got me wondering about how accurate the P3 might be
for measuring bandwidth.  Could someone review my method for this
outlined below and comment please:

1.  Use ATT if needed to avoid very strong signals
2.  Set bandwidth to 4 KHz.  See note below.
3.  Adjust Span on P3 5 KHz per side
4.  Shaded area above waterfall indicates K3 bandwidth

Watch P3.  Can one trust the waterfall display to show actual bandwidth?
If so, how accurate would it be?

Note:
I believe that the P3 is tapped prior to any BW restrictions, (of merit
to this exercise), so I understand that step 2 is just for my ears only,
and does not affect BW display on the P3.  Is that a correct assumption?



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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread David Cole
Jim,

Thank you for the extended explanation, it helps!  I want to be sure I
understand the rig, the Panadaptor,  and how they interrelate.  THank
you again!

-- 
Thanks and 73's,
For equipment, and software setups and reviews see:
www.nk7z.net
for MixW support see;
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/mixw/info
for Dopplergram information see:
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/dopplergram/info
for MM-SSTV see:
http://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/MM-SSTV/info


On Mon, 2014-04-28 at 09:27 -0700, Jim Brown wrote:
 On 4/28/2014 8:37 AM, Vic Rosenthal K2VCO wrote:
  What should work is to use the spectrum display of the P3. If you want 
  to know, for example, the bandwidth of a signal at 30 dB down, you 
  just find the points where the 'skirts' of the signal are 30 dB below 
  the peak. This is easy to do on the P3 which can display the signal 
  strength in dBm. 
 
 Yes. And as N1AL recommends, use peak hold. I've done spectrum plots of 
 various signals and conditions with the P3. I usually set the SCALE for 
 a pretty wide range (like 72 or the full dB), and set the SPAN to about 
 10 kHz. I use both the Peak Hold Mode and the Average Mode. In both 
 modes, but especially with Peak Hold, we must take care to differentiate 
 sidebands from other stations. I try to set the reference level so that 
 the peak of the signal is at one of the level lines and the noise level 
 is near the bottom of the display.
 
 With almost any rig, you'll see small signals down the sides of the 
 slope that are intermod products, and they are usually symmetrical on a 
 CW or RTTY signal. A clean SSB signal should be well confined by the 
 bandpass filter limits of the audio and TX filter skirts. Anything that 
 extends beyond that is IMD. When a rig is badly overdriven, it's common 
 to see splatter as horizontal streaks extending above and below the 
 signal frequency.
 
 Last week, I was on 20M SSB trying to work a weak DX station, but what I 
 heard was massive splatter from a QSO about 5 kHz up the band. One guy 
 was relatively clean, but the other was not. I broke the QSO to tell him 
 he was clobbering a weak DX station. Turns out he was an aeronautical 
 mobile using whatever radio was onboard. He didn't know whether he was 
 transmitting AM or SSB, but thought it was AM. I assured him that it 
 was, indeed, USB, and that the problem was that he was likely 
 overdriving it badly. He went QRT to figure it out.
 
 As a percentage of transmitted signals, I don't find contesters any 
 better or worse than non-contesters -- we contesters stand out because 
 during a contest, there are a LOT more of us. :)  I'm retired, so I have 
 access to the ham bands during the day (when I'm not working on 
 something else). It's not at all uncommon to tune around 30, 40, and 80 
 during a weekday and hear fewer than a half dozen signals on these bands 
 (if you hear any at all), and no more than a few dozen on most of the 
 higher bands. Compare that to a major contest, when there are several 
 hundred workable signals on every band from any given location for the 
 duration of the contest, and for stations with better antennas, perhaps 
 2-4X that number. The winners of contests like the ARRL SSB Sweepstakes 
 make more than 2,000 QSOs, and you can work a station only once.
 
 73, Jim K9YC
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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread Bill Frantz
For a look at good bandwidth control, tune down into the AM 
broadcast band with the K3 and P3. Note that AM stations are 
powerful enough that you can receive them at the upper end of 
the broadcast band even without the extended receive option for 
the K3.


When I tuned down there in the San Francisco Bay Area, I could 
see stations right next to each other, each with significant 
power stretching for nearly the full 10 KHz permitted bandwidth 
and a very small sliver of clear bandwidth between each station. 
It is a wonderful demonstration of good spectrum utilisation.


Cheers - Bill, AE6JV

---
Bill Frantz|We used to quip that password is the most common
408-356-8506   | password. Now it's 'password1.' Who said 
users haven't

www.pwpconsult.com | learned anything about security? -- Bruce Schneier

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Re: [Elecraft] [P3] How to measure bandwidth of RX signal

2014-04-28 Thread Phil Kane
On 4/28/2014 8:57 AM, David Cole wrote:

 Between Vic's, and Alan's answer I have what I need, thank you all!!!  I
 can now measure bandwidth, and tell how many db down a signal is vs.
 it's width.  Thank you gents!

As others will probably tell you as well, Occupied Bandwidth is defined
as the spectrum occupied between the --26 dB points.  This defines 99%
of the signal.
-- --
73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane
Elecraft K2/100   s/n 5402

From a Clearing in the Silicon Forest
Beaverton (Washington County) Oregon
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