Re: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-08-31 Thread K7TV


But if you leave the setting at its nominal, can you hear the difference as 
that bandwidth is selected?  I'm not sure I understand the advantage you are 
gaining by bringing the crystal filter in later; I'll do if there's 
something to be gained, it sounds an interesting approach.

David
G3UNA


David,

Say that you have a 500 Hz (nominal) roofing filter with an (actual) 6-dB
bandwidth of 550 Hz. When you choose the widest DSP bandwidth at which this
roofing filter kicks in, here is what I think about the choices you have:

1. You have it kick in at 550 Hz DSP because it matches the DSP bandwidth.
This may create the steepest slopes, but I would avoid it for digital modes
since I would expect the group delays to vary near the flanks of the xtal
filter, but not near the flanks of the (FIR) DSP filter.

2. You have it kick in at 500 Hz DSP because it is a 500 Hz filter. This
logic makes no sense, since the xtal filter is actually 550 Hz.

3. You have it kick in at 500 Hz or less DSP because you want the DSP to cut
away the group-delay-varying portion of the xtal filter passband. This would
make sense. How much of the xtal filter response would of course depend on
the group delay characteristics of the particular xtal filter. Of course if
you don't use digital modes, you may want to go with approach #1.

4. You have it kick in at 600 Hz or above. Someone on the list suggested
that this approach made the receiver sound more pleasant. The effect would
essentially be to disable the DSP for receive purposes, except for the DSP's
big improvement in ultimate rejection, and any bandwidth-unrelated DSP
function that may be enabled. I have yet to hear for myself, but operating
this way makes little sense to me unless there is something wrong with the
DSP release.

As to my original question, it seems that most respondents like to vary the
DSP bandwidth as a means of switching the narrow xtal filter in and out, and
to do this without lots of strong closeby signals. If the xtal filter kicks
in according to #1 above, the composite bandwith of the two 550-Hz filters
will be much less than 550 Hz. This will of course create an exaggerated
effect of reducing the noise you hear, and here is an obvious risk of giving
the narrow xtal filter way too much credit. If instead the kick-in point is
set according to #3, you would reduce the effect of cascading on the overall
bandwidth, and results would be more meaningful. However, as has been
pointed out, it would be necessary to carefully adjust the gain for the xtal
filter. Also, you would have to somehow work around the variations in
effective DSP bandwidth step size, which have been stated to differ from the
expected 50 Hz steps (at every 200 Hz?).

Anyway, what I really wanted to know was NOT how the filters sound with just
background hiss or average signals on the band. The justification for the
narrow roofing filter would exist only if very strong interfering signal
levels get through the standard roofing filter. I am thinking CW, and in
case there is only one such signal, the AGC pumping would be easy to
recognize. My understanding is that with current production K3's this would
happen for an interfering signal level of somewhere around 25 to 30 dB over
S9.
In my mind, the interesting question is the case where there are multiple
interfering signals within the roofing filter passband, including qrn etc.
Even though these would not add up coherently, the peak voltage would grow
with the number of signals, such that the ADC overload level would be
reached without any individual signal reaching the 25 or 30 dB over S9. This
suggests that the hardware AGC ideally should have an extremely fast attack
time, and I assume that it does. When the hardware AGC responds under these
conditions, I am guessing that the effect might be an increase in the
general background noise heard. This is really what I was after. 



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Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-08-31 Thread Guy, K2AV



. Maybe
I should have ordered the 200 Hz 5-pole instead, but I got it into my head
that maybe the 8-pole filters were better in some way.  I didn't repeat
this mistake when I ordered filters for the subreceiver.

Dick, K6KR

I know I will incur some religious wrath from some however here is the
OTHER side of that argument.  It's not that I am denying the issues that are
raised to question getting the two 8 pole CW filters (400 and 300 in
actuality).

I am solving a SINGLE happenstance which occurs over, over, over and over
again in contests, so much so that until the K3 it was in my mind the
LIMITING issue in improving 40m CW DX scores. 

I am at a contest station in eastern NC just off Pamlico Sound. On 40m to
Europe we are using a 5 element wire quad suspended across a 220 foot NE/SW
catenary between two towers. 

Broadcast signals above 7.1 routinely peg meters and light all the lights. 
So do some US stations in the NE, and so do some number of VERY LOUD
European stations (VLS).  WHAT they are doing to be so loud is not part of
my exposition. They just are very loud.

At some point in the contest, one has worked all the VLS, loud, medium and
well-antenna'd QRP signals. What remains is a bewildering and seemingly
bottomless pool of stations that can hear us (QRO on 5 elements) and are
trying to work us on antennas with the gain of a basement floor joist wet
noodle antenna. There are hundreds and hundreds of these. We have some
number of recordings made in Europe of these, and they are quite weak over
there. 

It is guaranteed, only a matter of time, and sometimes immediate, that a VLS
will settle in the next slot above or below. They may be as close as 350 Hz.
The problem now is working the QRP wet noodle station who is into the noise
without hardware AGC pumping or other effects from a VLS INSIDE the roofing
filter that was set to hear stations who will call sometimes +/- 200-250 Hz.  

I need the roofing filter is to get down 30 db as quickly as possible,
without giving up too much of the +/- 250 Hz. The 400 Hz is a good width
even for VLS +/- 500 Hz.  If a VLS squeezes me on one side, I only want to
give up +/- real estate in the roofing filter on that side. The procedure is
to drop to 300 hz roofing and DSP and move the RX center 50 hz away from TX
frequency and the VLS. I give up listening so far on the side of the VLS,
but keep the real estate on the other side.  

It is a matter of the width out to the edge and the largest db drop per 10
hz in the skirts thereafter. The roofing filter keeps the VLS from getting
into the hardware AGC or pushing the DSP to the extreme.  

I have used both of these filters for years in my FT1000MP and am completely
familiar with their shape and use in a contest. 

I have heard it said that the 200 5 pole filter will do better for picking
out signals in a very crowded situation, perhaps so in an extremely tight
situation. But thus far I have been able to go narrow with the 300 8 pole
and it is the DSP handling the work there. 

At some point I would like to be able to tune the center of the DSP CW
selectivity up/down at 25 Hz rate using RIT *WITHOUT* moving the position of
the roofing filter relative to the band.  The point of the roofing filter is
to reject the VLS in the next slot above and below me. Tune the whole thing
up or down to listen to a weak station off-frequency for whatever reason and
you let one of the VLS in under the roof.

Just the view from the other side of the river... :)


73, Guy. 

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Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-08-31 Thread alsopb

Guy,

Wouldn't a deep, tunable narrow notch filter also be a solution.  
The present notch filter is as wide as a barn door and useless for CW.  
I'm not a DSP programmer, but wonder how hard it could be to implement one.

After there is a narrow notch in the present RTTY dual passband filter.
If one can do a double hump filter with notch in the middle, why not just a
narrow notch filter?

73 de Brian/K3KO  




Dick Dievendorff wrote:
 
 . Maybe
 I should have ordered the 200 Hz 5-pole instead, but I got it into my head
 that maybe the 8-pole filters were better in some way.  I didn't repeat
 this mistake when I ordered filters for the subreceiver.
 
 Dick, K6KR
 
 I know I will incur some religious wrath from some however here is the
 OTHER side of that argument.  It's not that I am denying the issues that
 are raised to question getting the two 8 pole CW filters (400 and 300 in
 actuality).
 
 I am solving a SINGLE happenstance which occurs over, over, over and over
 again in contests, so much so that until the K3 it was in my mind the
 LIMITING issue in improving 40m CW DX scores. 
 
 I am at a contest station in eastern NC just off Pamlico Sound. On 40m to
 Europe we are using a 5 element wire quad suspended across a 220 foot
 NE/SW catenary between two towers. 
 
 Broadcast signals above 7.1 routinely peg meters and light all the lights. 
 So do some US stations in the NE, and so do some number of VERY LOUD
 European stations (VLS).  WHAT they are doing to be so loud is not part of
 my exposition. They just are very loud.
 
 At some point in the contest, one has worked all the VLS, loud, medium and
 well-antenna'd QRP signals. What remains is a bewildering and seemingly
 bottomless pool of stations that can hear us (QRO on 5 elements) and are
 trying to work us on antennas with the gain of a basement floor joist wet
 noodle antenna. There are hundreds and hundreds of these. We have some
 number of recordings made in Europe of these, and they are quite weak over
 there. 
 
 It is guaranteed, only a matter of time, and sometimes immediate, that a
 VLS will settle in the next slot above or below. They may be as close as
 350 Hz. The problem now is working the QRP wet noodle station who is into
 the noise without hardware AGC pumping or other effects from a VLS INSIDE
 the roofing filter that was set to hear stations who will call sometimes
 +/- 200-250 Hz.  
 
 I need the roofing filter is to get down 30 db as quickly as possible,
 without giving up too much of the +/- 250 Hz. The 400 Hz is a good width
 even for VLS +/- 500 Hz.  If a VLS squeezes me on one side, I only want to
 give up +/- real estate in the roofing filter on that side. The procedure
 is to drop to 300 hz roofing and DSP and move the RX center 50 hz away
 from TX frequency and the VLS. I give up listening so far on the side of
 the VLS, but keep the real estate on the other side.  
 
 It is a matter of the width out to the edge and the largest db drop per 10
 hz in the skirts thereafter. The roofing filter keeps the VLS from getting
 into the hardware AGC or pushing the DSP to the extreme.  
 
 I have used both of these filters for years in my FT1000MP and am
 completely familiar with their shape and use in a contest. 
 
 I have heard it said that the 200 5 pole filter will do better for picking
 out signals in a very crowded situation, perhaps so in an extremely tight
 situation. But thus far I have been able to go narrow with the 300 8 pole
 and it is the DSP handling the work there. 
 
 At some point I would like to be able to tune the center of the DSP CW
 selectivity up/down at 25 Hz rate using RIT *WITHOUT* moving the position
 of the roofing filter relative to the band.  The point of the roofing
 filter is to reject the VLS in the next slot above and below me. Tune the
 whole thing up or down to listen to a weak station off-frequency for
 whatever reason and you let one of the VLS in under the roof.
 
 Just the view from the other side of the river... :)
 
 
 73, Guy. 
 
 

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RE: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-08-31 Thread Joe Subich, W4TV

Guy, 

 I need the roofing filter is to get down 30 db as quickly as 
 possible, without giving up too much of the +/- 250 Hz.

A careful comparison of the 500 Hz 5-pole filter, 400 Hz 8-pole 
filter, 250 Hz 8 pole filter and 200 Hz 5 pole filter shows 
some interesting things ... 

1) my 500 Hz filter is really 470 Hz at - 6dB ... this is 
   consistent (460 - 490 Hz) with measurements reported by 
   others.  I intend to check the two other 500 Hz filters 
   received with my second K3/KRX3 when I have some time. 

2) the -30 dB bandwidth of my 500 Hz filter (780 Hz) is not 
   significantly different than the -30 dB bandwidth of the 
   400 Hz filter reported on the Elecraft web site (680 Hz) 
   when cascaded with a DSP filter at 400 or 500 Hz.  

   I set my K3 so the 500 Hz filter engages at 450 Hz.  It 
   is on-line when normalizing the CW filters but is off-line 
   when selecting a composite bandwidth wider than the filter. 

3) the 200 Hz five pole filter (209 Hz measured) is narrower 
   than the 250 Hz filter down to at least -40 dB without any 
   any benefit from cascading with DSP.  

For CW specifically, it's hard to justify the 400/250 Hz pair 
with their relatively small difference in bandwidth and their 
significantly greater cost compared to the 500/200 Hz pair. 

To be an effective alternative to the 400 Hz (450 Hz from 
Inrad curves, 435 Hz from Elecraft curves) filter, the 250 Hz 
8-pole really needs to be held to the nominal 250 Hz bandwidth 
so that the difference will be useful.  Even in a worst case 
(e.g. 40 meters in Europe) scenario, reducing the pre-DSP 
bandwidth from 450 to 370 Hz is not likely to be significant.  

 I have used both of these filters for years in my FT1000MP 
 and am completely familiar with their shape and use in a 
 contest. 

The 250 Hz filters in an FT1000MP is an entirely different 
situation.  In the FT-1000D/FT-1000MP, there are two filters 
- each approximately 350 Hz wide - in cascade yielding a 
composite 250 Hz (at -6dB) bandwidth.

73, 

   ... Joe, W4TV 
 


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Guy, K2AV
 Sent: Sunday, August 31, 2008 10:46 AM
 To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter
 
 
 
 
 
 . Maybe
 I should have ordered the 200 Hz 5-pole instead, but I got it 
 into my head that maybe the 8-pole filters were better in 
 some way.  I didn't repeat this mistake when I ordered 
 filters for the subreceiver.
 
 Dick, K6KR
 
 I know I will incur some religious wrath from some 
 however here is the OTHER side of that argument.  It's not 
 that I am denying the issues that are raised to question 
 getting the two 8 pole CW filters (400 and 300 in actuality).
 
 I am solving a SINGLE happenstance which occurs over, over, 
 over and over again in contests, so much so that until the K3 
 it was in my mind the LIMITING issue in improving 40m CW DX scores. 
 
 I am at a contest station in eastern NC just off Pamlico 
 Sound. On 40m to Europe we are using a 5 element wire quad 
 suspended across a 220 foot NE/SW catenary between two towers. 
 
 Broadcast signals above 7.1 routinely peg meters and light 
 all the lights. 
 So do some US stations in the NE, and so do some number of 
 VERY LOUD European stations (VLS).  WHAT they are doing to be 
 so loud is not part of my exposition. They just are very loud.
 
 At some point in the contest, one has worked all the VLS, 
 loud, medium and well-antenna'd QRP signals. What remains is 
 a bewildering and seemingly bottomless pool of stations that 
 can hear us (QRO on 5 elements) and are trying to work us on 
 antennas with the gain of a basement floor joist wet noodle 
 antenna. There are hundreds and hundreds of these. We have 
 some number of recordings made in Europe of these, and they 
 are quite weak over there. 
 
 It is guaranteed, only a matter of time, and sometimes 
 immediate, that a VLS will settle in the next slot above or 
 below. They may be as close as 350 Hz. The problem now is 
 working the QRP wet noodle station who is into the noise 
 without hardware AGC pumping or other effects from a VLS 
 INSIDE the roofing filter that was set to hear stations who 
 will call sometimes +/- 200-250 Hz.  
 
 I need the roofing filter is to get down 30 db as quickly as 
 possible, without giving up too much of the +/- 250 Hz. The 
 400 Hz is a good width even for VLS +/- 500 Hz.  If a VLS 
 squeezes me on one side, I only want to give up +/- real 
 estate in the roofing filter on that side. The procedure is 
 to drop to 300 hz roofing and DSP and move the RX center 50 
 hz away from TX frequency and the VLS. I give up listening so 
 far on the side of the VLS, but keep the real estate on the 
 other side.  
 
 It is a matter of the width out to the edge and the largest 
 db drop per 10 hz in the skirts thereafter. The roofing 
 filter keeps the VLS from getting

Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-08-31 Thread Bill W4ZV



DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL wrote:
 
 As for pumping the AGC, you can always turn the AGC off and ride the
 RF gain.  But it has been my experience that (a) either the loud guy
 who is close will move away (b) trying to fight such a situation (and
 trying to win) can cost you more points than it is worth.  And if the
 other guy is THAT CLOSE and you are both running, then there is always
 some doubt as to which one of you the weak DX is actually answering
 (again, bad for the score).
 

Doug's last sentence is a very astute observation from someone who is
clearly an experienced contester.  It's probably the major reason I try to
avoid extremely close spacings.  Sure we can use 200 Hz bandwidths to
eliminate QRM but we have no control over the guys who call off-frequency. 
I'm hoping the K3 with its CWT function becomes more popular and helps
reduce the range of off-frequency callers.  

73,  Bill
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RE: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-08-31 Thread Guy, K2AV



 I have used both of these filters for years in my FT1000MP 
 and am completely familiar with their shape and use in a 
 contest. 

The 250 Hz filters in an FT1000MP is an entirely different 
situation.  In the FT-1000D/FT-1000MP, there are two filters 
- each approximately 350 Hz wide - in cascade yielding a 
composite 250 Hz (at -6dB) bandwidth.

In my MP, having INRAD pairs at 400 and 250, one often used tactic was
leaving the 455 IF at 400 (500 on the panel) and switching in the 250 in
the 2nd If, to deal with a VLS squeezing in from above or below. Though it
was certainly useful, the other cr*p being generated by the IF in the MP
prevented making best use of the filters.  I don't expect anything else
roofing wise from them in the K3. The mere 100 Hz difference in the two is
enough to deal with a squeezing-in VLS 

I already had compared the K3 website curves with my measured MP curves on
the two filters with the 455 IF set wide, so I knew exactly what I was
getting. In the WAE, this setup performed spendidly as expected. I had dsp
width set to get the wider CW filter at 500 Hz dsp, narrower CW filter at
300 dsp. 

That's why *I* bought the two, with my eyes wide open, I make no claims to
have the fully portable mantra for everyone to follow, just a view from
another perspective.

73, and even if your mileage may vary may it still take you where you want
to be.

Guy, K2AV
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Re: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-08-31 Thread K7TV

When the hardware AGC responds under these conditions, I am guessing that the
effect might be an increase in the general background noise heard. This is
really what I was after. 






After looking at the clock last night and finishing off my post too quickly,
I got poster's remorse about the last sentence. Of course, if the hardware
agc works perfectly, I would expect the general effect to be a decrease in
noise. Behind my sentence were two muddled thoughts: 1. If the agc hang or
decay is very short, the random peaks in composite signal might cause very
rapid sequences of normal/desensed noise, and this staccato effect might be
perceived as an addition in noise although not increasing noise amplitude,
and 2. This being a new radio design, it would not be inconceivable if some
aspect of the agc design were flawed, resulting in actual increases in noise
amplitude when the hardware agc kicks in repeatedly at a high rate.

I received one response, off-list, that was aimed at this part of my post.
The gentleman provided a great deal of insight into what might go wrong with
the agc action and the second mixer. Those details went far beyond my
thoughts. Unfortunately he did not actually have a K3, so there was no test
data.

I guess I had better be patient and wait until my K3 arrives! It should be
easy to study the hardware agc action by using an external preamp to bring
up the average signal level on a crowded band. I might hang one scope
channel on the 8 MHz signal after the filter, and another channel on the
hardware agc voltage, while listening to the radio. Of course, since noone
on the list is obsessing about this aspect of K3 behavior, it will probably
turn out to be unimportant to the overall performance of the radio.




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RE: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Darwin, Keith
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Erik N Basilier

My K3 ... interesting to do an A/B comparison to see how the receiver
sounds with/without the narrow crystal filter for a given bandwidth.

...

What has been observed by the group?
---

I've not attempted such a complex test as you described (which I snipped
out).  I have the 500 Hz filter in my rig.  As I narrow the DSP from 2
KHz to 550 Hz, I can hear a predictable narrowing of the passband with
each step.  When I step to 500 Hz and the narrow roofing filter kicks
in, I can hear a distinct change, more than just the DSP narrowing I'd
heard while stepping from 1000 Hz to 550 Hz.  The effect is very
noticeable.  I don't think you'd have to construct some sort of
(artificial) double-blind test to see what it does.  Besides, what you
really want to know is how does it play on the air.  The best way to
learn that is to play on the air :-)

I have been able to get AGC pumping if I try.  In all cases, going from
550 Hz to 500 Hz bandwidth took care of the pumping (roofing filter
works)

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -
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Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Jan Erik Holm

Darwin, Keith wrote:

each step.  When I step to 500 Hz and the narrow roofing filter kicks
in, I can hear a distinct change, more than just the DSP narrowing I'd
heard while stepping from 1000 Hz to 550 Hz.  The effect is very
noticeable.

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -

Keith,

Can you describe this change closer.

73 Jim SM2EKM


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RE: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Darwin, Keith
Keith Darwin wrote:
 each step.  When I step to 500 Hz and the narrow roofing filter kicks

 in, I can hear a distinct change, more than just the DSP narrowing
I'd 
 heard while stepping from 1000 Hz to 550 Hz.  The effect is very 
 noticeable.

Jim replied:
 Keith, Can you describe this change closer.

We'll, let's see.  When the 500 Hz filter kicks in, the resulting audio
becomes more focused.  There are noticeably less highs and esp. lows.
Any low rumbly grunge from off freq. signals drops to zero and high
freq chatter becomes much weaker.  I like the effect and find the rig to
be more pleasing to use at 500 Hz than at 550 Hz due to the steeper
compound filter skirts.  I'm considering a 1000 Hz roofing filter to
make the rig sound better between 550 and 1000 Hz bandwidth.

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -
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RE: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread G4ILO



Darwin, Keith wrote:
 
 
 I've not attempted such a complex test as you described (which I snipped
 out).  I have the 500 Hz filter in my rig.  As I narrow the DSP from 2
 KHz to 550 Hz, I can hear a predictable narrowing of the passband with
 each step.  When I step to 500 Hz and the narrow roofing filter kicks
 in, I can hear a distinct change, more than just the DSP narrowing I'd
 heard while stepping from 1000 Hz to 550 Hz.  The effect is very
 noticeable. 
 

That's just what I find, too. Particulaly when operating PSK, when I reduce
the filter with towards 500Hz I hear the tones of out of band stations
gradually being reduced by each step. When the 500Hz filter kicks in the
tones suddenly disappear altogether.

-
Julian, G4ILO  K3 s/n: 222 K2 s/n: 392
G4ILO's Shack: www.g4ilo.com
KComm for K2/K3: www.g4ilo.com/kcomm.html
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Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread hank k8dd
- Original Message - 
From: Jan Erik Holm [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2008 8:31 AM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter



Darwin, Keith wrote:

each step.  When I step to 500 Hz and the narrow roofing filter kicks
in, I can hear a distinct change, more than just the DSP narrowing I'd
heard while stepping from 1000 Hz to 550 Hz.  The effect is very
noticeable.

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -

Keith,

Can you describe this change closer.

73 Jim SM2EKM


Get two pieces of plastic pipe about a foot long.
One six inches in diameter.
One three inche in diameter.
Close one eye and look at the mountains in the horizon and you will see a 
wide view.  6000 Hz
Put the six inch pipe up to the other eye.  You will see a portion of the 
horizon - like 1000 Hz.

Put the three inch pipe up to your eye.  500 Hz.
The effect, as Keith says, is very noticeable!

73HankK8DD


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Re: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread d.cutter
Fine observations when you change the filter setting knob, but what makes you 
think you are hearing the effect of the roofing filter and not the dsp filter?  

David
G3UNA

 
 From: hank  k8dd [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Date: 2008/07/08 Tue PM 02:29:08 BST
 To: Jan Erik Holm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 CC: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: Jan Erik Holm [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2008 8:31 AM
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter
 
 
  Darwin, Keith wrote:
  each step.  When I step to 500 Hz and the narrow roofing filter kicks
  in, I can hear a distinct change, more than just the DSP narrowing I'd
  heard while stepping from 1000 Hz to 550 Hz.  The effect is very
  noticeable.
 
  - Keith N1AS -
  - K3 711 -
  Keith,
 
  Can you describe this change closer.
 
  73 Jim SM2EKM
 
 Get two pieces of plastic pipe about a foot long.
 One six inches in diameter.
 One three inche in diameter.
 Close one eye and look at the mountains in the horizon and you will see a 
 wide view.  6000 Hz
 Put the six inch pipe up to the other eye.  You will see a portion of the 
 horizon - like 1000 Hz.
 Put the three inch pipe up to your eye.  500 Hz.
 The effect, as Keith says, is very noticeable!
 
 73HankK8DD
 
 
 GET FREE SMILEYS FOR YOUR IM  EMAIL - Learn more at 
 http://www.inbox.com/smileys
 Works with AIM®, MSN® Messenger, Yahoo!® Messenger, ICQ®, Google TalkT and 
 most webmails
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RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Darwin, Keith
Not sure, David, if your Q was to me or to Hank.  I can only answer for
me.

When I adjust the filter width knob, I'm most definitely hearing the
combined effect of the DSP bandwidth reduction and the change in roofing
filters.  But, since I can change DSP without changing the roofing
filter (by stepping from 1500 Hz down to 550 Hz) I can get a good feel
for how the DSP filter sounds.  Then, stepping to 500 Hz, I can see the
combined effect of one more DSP step plus the insertion of the 500 Hz
roofing filter.  The observed big change from 550 Hz to 500 Hz is
*mostly* due to the roofing filter.

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -

Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Fine observations when you change the filter setting knob, but what
makes you think you are hearing the effect of the roofing filter and not
the dsp filter?  

David
G3UNA

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RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Dick Dievendorff
A couple of related points, which may not be new news to anyone:

You can set the K3's filter bandwidth configuration to cause the roofing
filter to switch at points other than the bandwidth printed on the filter.
Maybe you would like your (nominally) 500 Hz filter to switch in at 450 or
550 Hz.  My 8-pole 250 Hz filter is a bit broader than 250 Hz, and I've set
it to switch at 300 Hz.  

You can also turn off a filter (set its bandwidth to zero temporarily) to
evaluate whether a change you're hearing is due to the roofing filter or the
change in bandwidth provided by the DSP.

And you should attempt to adjust the filter gain compensation so that there
is no change in the volume of the note you're tuned to.  Rene, who guides
the assembly of K3s built by Elecraft, told me that he uses a voltmeter on
the speaker terminals when adjusting the gain compensation and can get
usually get within a half decibel.

I notice a definite qualitative change as the narrower filters switch in. It
sounds quieter, and it seems like the volume is being turned down. I think
I'm responding to the reduced low and high frequency components that are
supposed to be cut off.  The DSP-related changes seem more gradual. 

Dick, K6KR


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Darwin, Keith
Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2008 7:43 AM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

Not sure, David, if your Q was to me or to Hank.  I can only answer for
me.

When I adjust the filter width knob, I'm most definitely hearing the
combined effect of the DSP bandwidth reduction and the change in roofing
filters.  But, since I can change DSP without changing the roofing
filter (by stepping from 1500 Hz down to 550 Hz) I can get a good feel
for how the DSP filter sounds.  Then, stepping to 500 Hz, I can see the
combined effect of one more DSP step plus the insertion of the 500 Hz
roofing filter.  The observed big change from 550 Hz to 500 Hz is
*mostly* due to the roofing filter.

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -

Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Fine observations when you change the filter setting knob, but what
makes you think you are hearing the effect of the roofing filter and not
the dsp filter?  

David
G3UNA

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RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Bill W4ZV

K6KR wrote:

I notice a definite qualitative change as the narrower filters switch in.
It
sounds quieter, and it seems like the volume is being turned down. I think
I'm responding to the reduced low and high frequency components that are
supposed to be cut off.  The DSP-related changes seem more gradual. 

Dick made some very good points about using the K3Utility to enable
different filters and about the need to set gain correctly for each filter. 
Here's a simple test that may surprise you:

1.  Disable all filters but your 2.7 or 2.8 for CW (using Dick's K3Utility).
2.  SLOWLY rotate WIDTH from 1.5 to 0.05.
3.  Note how the character of the noise changes.

I find abrupt changes in noise character between some DSP settings...and
this is *not* due to the roofing filter since that is held constant at 2.7k. 
The abrupt changes I hear using a 350 Hz CW pitch setting are:

1.1 - 1.0
0.90-0.85
0.70-0.65
0.50-0.45
0.30-0.25
0.20-0.15

Do you see a pattern in the above?  I hear something which repeats almost
every 0.20 increment...(and I bet Lyle can explain why).  I recall seeing
this on Spectrogram when I was closely looking at DSP BWs shortly after I
got my unit.  We did discover some serious offset problems at the low end
(which Lyle has since fixed), but I recall the DSP BW changes were never
exactly linear as you reduced BW.  This is not a particular concern to me
but curious nevertheless.

73,  Bill
-- 
View this message in context: 
http://www.nabble.com/Hearing-the-effect-of-narrower-roofing-filter-tp18329150p18342146.html
Sent from the Elecraft mailing list archive at Nabble.com.

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RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Brett Howard
I agree with this assessment and when I get my rig back plan on upping
my 250 filter to kick in at 350.  But I had 4dB of gain on the 250 and
it still seemed like things got a lot quieter when switching to the 250.
I'd have to measure and see if I had the actual same level there (and I
can do that now that I have the XG2) :)  But I did have 4dB thrown
in for good measure! :)  I found myself using the 250 all the time for
rag chewing... But I use 250 on my K1 for its lowest filter position
too..  

I tend to generally like things pretty quiet.  I use 850 for scanning
the band (as that is as wide as the K1 can go).  I use 500 to 550 for
calling CQ if they're further away than that then I guess I don't get to
hear them... And then I crank it down to 200 to 250 when I'm talking
with a guy.  It not only ensures that I'm pretty close to zero beat with
him but also makes things quieter and gets rid of a lot of the
electrical hash I have in my area.  The K1's noise blanker doesn't hold
a candle to the noise in my area but the K3 was doing a pretty fantastic
job! 

On Tue, 2008-07-08 at 08:02 -0700, Dick Dievendorff wrote:
 A couple of related points, which may not be new news to anyone:
 
 You can set the K3's filter bandwidth configuration to cause the roofing
 filter to switch at points other than the bandwidth printed on the filter.
 Maybe you would like your (nominally) 500 Hz filter to switch in at 450 or
 550 Hz.  My 8-pole 250 Hz filter is a bit broader than 250 Hz, and I've set
 it to switch at 300 Hz.  
 
 You can also turn off a filter (set its bandwidth to zero temporarily) to
 evaluate whether a change you're hearing is due to the roofing filter or the
 change in bandwidth provided by the DSP.
 
 And you should attempt to adjust the filter gain compensation so that there
 is no change in the volume of the note you're tuned to.  Rene, who guides
 the assembly of K3s built by Elecraft, told me that he uses a voltmeter on
 the speaker terminals when adjusting the gain compensation and can get
 usually get within a half decibel.
 
 I notice a definite qualitative change as the narrower filters switch in. It
 sounds quieter, and it seems like the volume is being turned down. I think
 I'm responding to the reduced low and high frequency components that are
 supposed to be cut off.  The DSP-related changes seem more gradual. 
 
 Dick, K6KR
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Darwin, Keith
 Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2008 7:43 AM
 To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter
 
 Not sure, David, if your Q was to me or to Hank.  I can only answer for
 me.
 
 When I adjust the filter width knob, I'm most definitely hearing the
 combined effect of the DSP bandwidth reduction and the change in roofing
 filters.  But, since I can change DSP without changing the roofing
 filter (by stepping from 1500 Hz down to 550 Hz) I can get a good feel
 for how the DSP filter sounds.  Then, stepping to 500 Hz, I can see the
 combined effect of one more DSP step plus the insertion of the 500 Hz
 roofing filter.  The observed big change from 550 Hz to 500 Hz is
 *mostly* due to the roofing filter.
 
 - Keith N1AS -
 - K3 711 -
 
 Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Fine observations when you change the filter setting knob, but what
 makes you think you are hearing the effect of the roofing filter and not
 the dsp filter?  
 
 David
 G3UNA
 
 ___
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 No virus found in this incoming message.
 Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com 
 Version: 8.0.138 / Virus Database: 270.4.6/1540 - Release Date: 7/8/2008
 6:33 AM
 
 
 
 No virus found in this incoming message.
 Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com 
 Version: 8.0.138 / Virus Database: 270.4.6/1540 - Release Date: 7/8/2008
 6:33 AM
 
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Re: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread David Cutter
The reason I'm particularly interested is because I fancy doing diversity 
reception and de-select my roofing filters in the main rx so there is no 
phase shifting relative to the second rx without filters.


Have you de-selected the roofing filters to do a comparison with and 
without?


David
G3UNA





When I adjust the filter width knob, I'm most definitely hearing the
combined effect of the DSP bandwidth reduction and the change in roofing
filters.  But, since I can change DSP without changing the roofing
filter (by stepping from 1500 Hz down to 550 Hz) I can get a good feel
for how the DSP filter sounds.  Then, stepping to 500 Hz, I can see the
combined effect of one more DSP step plus the insertion of the 500 Hz
roofing filter.  The observed big change from 550 Hz to 500 Hz is
*mostly* due to the roofing filter.

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -

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Re: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread David Cutter
But if you leave the setting at its nominal, can you hear the difference as 
that bandwidth is selected?  I'm not sure I understand the advantage you are 
gaining by bringing the crystal filter in later; I'll do if there's 
something to be gained, it sounds an interesting approach.


David
G3UNA



A couple of related points, which may not be new news to anyone:

You can set the K3's filter bandwidth configuration to cause the roofing
filter to switch at points other than the bandwidth printed on the filter.
Maybe you would like your (nominally) 500 Hz filter to switch in at 450 or
550 Hz.  My 8-pole 250 Hz filter is a bit broader than 250 Hz, and I've 
set

it to switch at 300 Hz.

You can also turn off a filter (set its bandwidth to zero temporarily) to
evaluate whether a change you're hearing is due to the roofing filter or 
the

change in bandwidth provided by the DSP.

And you should attempt to adjust the filter gain compensation so that 
there

is no change in the volume of the note you're tuned to.  Rene, who guides
the assembly of K3s built by Elecraft, told me that he uses a voltmeter on
the speaker terminals when adjusting the gain compensation and can get
usually get within a half decibel.

I notice a definite qualitative change as the narrower filters switch in. 
It

sounds quieter, and it seems like the volume is being turned down. I think
I'm responding to the reduced low and high frequency components that are
supposed to be cut off.  The DSP-related changes seem more gradual.

Dick, K6KR



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RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Darwin, Keith
 
Nope, I have not.  My operating (near zero right now due to life
getting in the way) is 99.9% CW, old school, with manual keys.  I'm not
pushing the envelop so I'm not trying new  novel things.  These days, I
pretty much just use my rig rather than playing  testing with it.

- Keith N1AS -
- K3 711 -


-Original Message-

Have you de-selected the roofing filters to do a comparison with and
without?
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RE: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

2008-07-08 Thread Dick Dievendorff
I'm not completely sure what to do with this capability, other than perhaps
have the switchover occur at a bandwidth that more closely matches the
filter you actually have.  What I've done is tell the K3 that my 250 Hz
filter is really 300 Hz (it's really probably more like 370 Hz). 

I also have a 400 Hz filter. I didn't make a particularly wise choice of
filter bandwidths. To those who have pointed out the error of my ways, my
defense is that I chose the filters on first order day before the curves
were published on the web site.  I don't view this as a severe issue. Maybe
I should have ordered the 200 Hz 5-pole instead, but I got it into my head
that maybe the 8-pole filters were better in some way.  I didn't repeat
this mistake when I ordered filters for the subreceiver.

Dick, K6KR


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Cutter
Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2008 10:18 AM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: Re: [Elecraft] Hearing the effect of narrower roofing filter

But if you leave the setting at its nominal, can you hear the difference as 
that bandwidth is selected?  I'm not sure I understand the advantage you are

gaining by bringing the crystal filter in later; I'll do if there's 
something to be gained, it sounds an interesting approach.

David
G3UNA


A couple of related points, which may not be new news to anyone:

 You can set the K3's filter bandwidth configuration to cause the roofing
 filter to switch at points other than the bandwidth printed on the filter.
 Maybe you would like your (nominally) 500 Hz filter to switch in at 450 or
 550 Hz.  My 8-pole 250 Hz filter is a bit broader than 250 Hz, and I've 
 set
 it to switch at 300 Hz.

 You can also turn off a filter (set its bandwidth to zero temporarily) to
 evaluate whether a change you're hearing is due to the roofing filter or 
 the
 change in bandwidth provided by the DSP.

 And you should attempt to adjust the filter gain compensation so that 
 there
 is no change in the volume of the note you're tuned to.  Rene, who guides
 the assembly of K3s built by Elecraft, told me that he uses a voltmeter on
 the speaker terminals when adjusting the gain compensation and can get
 usually get within a half decibel.

 I notice a definite qualitative change as the narrower filters switch in. 
 It
 sounds quieter, and it seems like the volume is being turned down. I think
 I'm responding to the reduced low and high frequency components that are
 supposed to be cut off.  The DSP-related changes seem more gradual.

 Dick, K6KR

 
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No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com 
Version: 8.0.138 / Virus Database: 270.4.6/1540 - Release Date: 7/8/2008
6:33 AM



No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com 
Version: 8.0.138 / Virus Database: 270.4.6/1540 - Release Date: 7/8/2008
6:33 AM

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