Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread Jon K Hellan
James Sarte wrote:

 On a separate note, apart from diversity receive, I’m curious to know 
 how other people are utilizing their sub receiver?  The reason I ask is 
 I’m finalizing my purchase of a K3, and am trying to determine whether 
 it’s necessary to fully load up both receivers now.  At this point, I’m 
 ready to purchase 2 general coverage modules plus 2 each of the 
 following filters: 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz, 13KHz.  I’d like to 
 have the ability to monitor PSK31, FM or SW broadcast on the sub, while 
 monitoring phone or engaging in a phone QSO on the main; both receivers 
 being on separate bands.  That’s just one example.  Another could be to 
 monitor SW broadcast on the main while listening to 10m FM on the sub.  
 Do I need to install the AM or FM filters in the sub to monitor SW or FM 
 or can the sub’s DSP take care of it?

Will you ever be monitoring two broadcasts at the same time, or FM and 
broadcast at the same time?
If not, one each of general coverage and FM should suffice.

Personally, I don't have a subreceiver (yet?), no general coverage, and my 
widest filter is the stock SSB one.

73
Jon LA4RT, Trondheim, Norway
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread John Lemay
James

 

I think it would be worth remembering that much of the selectivity of the K3
is carried out by the DSP, and it does it very well. It's debatable whether
you would need all the roofing filters in your list. They're quite easy to
add at a later date. You could spread the cost over a period of time if you
wanted.

 

I believe you will need the FM and AM filters in the sub receiver if you are
using the sub to monitor those modes at the appropriate bandwidth.

 

Regards

 

John G4ZTR

 

  _  

From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net
[mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of James Sarte
Sent: 10 February 2009 02:02
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

 

Hello group,

 

Someone mentioned in one of the reflector emails that the new firmware under
development will allow independent band switching/monitoring between VFO's
without a sub receiver.  Am I correct in my understanding then that without
a sub receiver, this firmware will allow tuning and monitoring of separate
bands?  If that is indeed the case, can someone please clarify for me how
that can accomplished with a single receiver?  

 

On a separate note, apart from diversity receive, I'm curious to know how
other people are utilizing their sub receiver?  The reason I ask is I'm
finalizing my purchase of a K3, and am trying to determine whether it's
necessary to fully load up both receivers now.  At this point, I'm ready to
purchase 2 general coverage modules plus 2 each of the following filters:
250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz, 13KHz.  I'd like to have the ability to
monitor PSK31, FM or SW broadcast on the sub, while monitoring phone or
engaging in a phone QSO on the main; both receivers being on separate bands.
That's just one example.  Another could be to monitor SW broadcast on the
main while listening to 10m FM on the sub.  Do I need to install the AM or
FM filters in the sub to monitor SW or FM or can the sub's DSP take care of
it?

 

73,

James KC2UEE

 



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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread Bill W4ZV

At this point, I’m ready to purchase 2 general coverage modules plus 2 each
of the following filters: 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz, 13KHz.


John Lemay wrote:
 
 I think it would be worth remembering that much of the selectivity of the
 K3
 is carried out by the DSP, and it does it very well. It's debatable
 whether
 you would need all the roofing filters in your list. 
 

Yikes...nearly $1500 in filters and BPF modules alone!  I strongly agree
with you John.  I cannot fathom why anyone would order both the 400 and
250...much less two each.  There's only 65 Hz difference in actual 6 dB
bandwidth (435 versus 370) or ~18% between them.  At least consider the new
500 in place of the 400.

At this rate Eric and Wayne will soon be flying their new G5 to hamfests and
Inrad will be listing on the NYSE.  :-)

73,  Bill

-- 
View this message in context: 
http://n2.nabble.com/K3-sub-receiver-usefulness--tp2300577p2302108.html
Sent from the Elecraft mailing list archive at Nabble.com.

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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread David Ferrington, M0XDF
Why two general coverage? Are you planning on running dual receive  
using both Main  Sub? If your just buying GC to allow you to listen  
to broadcasts outside the Ham frequencies, then surely one will be  
sufficient?
Again, are you expecting to need to listen to AM on both receivers, or  
even FM?

Personally, I'd go (I went) for 400Hz, 1.8kHz  2.8KHz in both  
receivers (I've actually not got the 400Hz in my KRX3) and GP module,  
6KHz and 13KHz in in the Main
73 de M0XDF, K3 #174
-- 
i don't do caps, i'm a unix man!
david ferrington, 1953 -

On 10 Feb 2009, at 11:53, Bill W4ZV wrote:


 At this point, I’m ready to purchase 2 general coverage modules  
 plus 2 each
 of the following filters: 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz, 13KHz.


 John Lemay wrote:

 I think it would be worth remembering that much of the selectivity  
 of the
 K3
 is carried out by the DSP, and it does it very well. It's debatable
 whether
 you would need all the roofing filters in your list.


 Yikes...nearly $1500 in filters and BPF modules alone!  I strongly  
 agree
 with you John.  I cannot fathom why anyone would order both the 400  
 and
 250...much less two each.  There's only 65 Hz difference in actual 6  
 dB
 bandwidth (435 versus 370) or ~18% between them.  At least consider  
 the new
 500 in place of the 400.

 At this rate Eric and Wayne will soon be flying their new G5 to  
 hamfests and
 Inrad will be listing on the NYSE.  :-)

 73,  Bill

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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread Johnny Siu
Hello James,
 
May be not a direct answer to your question.
 
Sub-receiver is useful provided that you have installed it carefully and there 
is no birdies.
 
73
 
Johnny VR2XMC

--- 2009年2月10日 星期二,James Sarte kc2...@gmail.com 寫道﹕

寄件人: James Sarte kc2...@gmail.com
主題: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?
收件人: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
日期: 2009 2 10 星期二 上午 10:02








Hello group,
 
Someone mentioned in one of the reflector emails that the new firmware under 
development will allow independent band switching/monitoring between VFO’s 
without a sub receiver.  Am I correct in my understanding then that without a 
sub receiver, this firmware will allow tuning and monitoring of separate 
bands?  If that is indeed the case, can someone please clarify for me how that 
can accomplished with a single receiver?  
 
On a separate note, apart from diversity receive, I’m curious to know how other 
people are utilizing their sub receiver?  The reason I ask is I’m finalizing my 
purchase of a K3, and am trying to determine whether it’s necessary to fully 
load up both receivers now.  At this point, I’m ready to purchase 2 general 
coverage modules plus 2 each of the following filters: 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 
6KHz, 13KHz.  I’d like to have the ability to monitor PSK31, FM or SW broadcast 
on the sub, while monitoring phone or engaging in a phone QSO on the main; both 
receivers being on separate bands.  That’s just one example.  Another could be 
to monitor SW broadcast on the main while listening to 10m FM on the sub.  Do I 
need to install the AM or FM filters in the sub to monitor SW or FM or can the 
sub’s DSP take care of it?
 
73,
James KC2UEE
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread WILLIS COOKE
In my opinion, the most useful employment of the sub receiver is to listen to 
the pile with one and the DX with the other.  The second use is for diversity 
receive.

Willis 'Cookie' Cooke 
K5EWJ


--- On Tue, 2/10/09, Jon K Hellan hel...@acm.org wrote:

 From: Jon K Hellan hel...@acm.org
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?
 To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Date: Tuesday, February 10, 2009, 2:19 AM
 James Sarte wrote:
 
  On a separate note, apart from diversity receive,
 I’m curious to know 
  how other people are utilizing their sub receiver? 
 The reason I ask is 
  I’m finalizing my purchase of a K3, and am trying to
 determine whether 
  it’s necessary to fully load up both receivers now. 
 At this point, I’m 
  ready to purchase 2 general coverage modules plus 2
 each of the 
  following filters: 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz,
 13KHz.  I’d like to 
  have the ability to monitor PSK31, FM or SW broadcast
 on the sub, while 
  monitoring phone or engaging in a phone QSO on the
 main; both receivers 
  being on separate bands.  That’s just one example. 
 Another could be to 
  monitor SW broadcast on the main while listening to
 10m FM on the sub.  
  Do I need to install the AM or FM filters in the sub
 to monitor SW or FM 
  or can the sub’s DSP take care of it?
 
 Will you ever be monitoring two broadcasts at the same
 time, or FM and broadcast at the same time?
 If not, one each of general coverage and FM should suffice.
 
 Personally, I don't have a subreceiver (yet?), no
 general coverage, and my widest filter is the stock SSB one.
 
 73
 Jon LA4RT, Trondheim, Norway
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread KC2UEE
Hi Johnny,

Birdies was one thing that I'm worried about with the sub receiver option.
I've heard reports from people experiencing a lot of problems with birdies.
I think alot of it has to do with improper cable routing, or poor
shielding.  How are you all testing for birdies?  Just tuning through the
bands with no antenna?  What are the current proposed solutions?

73,
James KC2UEE
On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 8:40 AM, Johnny Siu vr2...@yahoo.com.hk wrote:

   Hello James,

 May be not a direct answer to your question.

 Sub-receiver is useful provided that you have installed it carefully and
 there is no birdies.

 73

 Johnny VR2XMC


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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread Brian Machesney
Johnny,

The beautiful thing about Elecraft products is that you don't have to make
the final decision now. You can purchase the rig without the second receiver
and buy it when you figure what you need it for.

That said, I think the question you want to ask yourself is, What could I
do if I had *two* K3s?

I can scarcely think of a day that passes that I *don't* use the second
receiver. For example, at sunrise and sunset, I scan the 160m band with one
receiver and listen with the other receiver to see who comes back to the big
guns who are calling CQ. It's a great way to see where the band might be
open to and sometimes I can call the same stations a kc or two up and get a
reply. With the forthcoming band independence between the main and sub
receivers, I plan to enjoy a shortwave station on one receiver while I troll
a dead band for signs of life. Come on, sunspots!!

Perhaps the most common practice is listening to both a DX station and the
pileup at the same time. I became accustomed to this with my FT1KMP, but
lost the ability when I switched to my K2 for its more bullet proof receiver
and also missed it with my Ten Tec Omni VII. Since having it again in the
K3, I spend *a lot* less time trying to bust a pileup simply because I have
a lot better chance of putting my signal in a quieter spot where the DX will
hear it. Sure, you *can* sort of do this without the second receiver, but in
my experience not nearly as effectively. I plan to take this to the next
level and use the radio as a single-box SO2R in future contests - that
should be interesting!!
Like most engineering questions, the answer is, It depends. It depends on
what you want to do and what you're comfortable doing. I admit that after 40
years in the hobby, it has taken a little practice to integrate two K3s
into my operating style. Now I definitely would not want to do without it.

73,

Brian K1LI
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread KC2UEE
Thank you Rick for your insight.  I'll look closer into my filter and
module choices, and perhaps save a bit of money in the process.

After looking at the filter plots (didn't see any for the 5-poles
though), I'll probably end up with the following:

13KHz FM filter - main only (will use for 10m FM transmit also)
6KHz AM filter - (I'm tempted to buy 2, one for the main and one for
the sub... I'll probably put the gen coverage module in the sub)
2.7KHz 5-pole; 1 in the main and 1 in the sub.
500 Hz 5 pole - main only
250 Hz 8 pole - main only

I'm mostly a SSB and 10m FM guy (local repeaters), but also do a bit
of PSK31 and RTTY when the mood strikes me.  How does this arrangement
sound at present?  As for the 6KHz AM filter, to my understanding In
order to receive and transmit AM, I will need this filter for sure.
Just not sure how many I'll need, now that I only plan to purchase one
general coverage module.  I'm not really sure which receiver would be
best suited for general coverage as well.

73,
James KC2UEE



On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Rick Tavan N6XI rta...@gmail.com wrote:
 With only one receiver you can only hear one band at a time. With the new
 firmware, however, you can set the two VFOs to different bands and flip
 between them using the A/B switch. I don't think cross-band SPLIT will be
 available at first, if ever.

 I use my sub-rx to monitor both a DX station and its split frequency pileup
 at the same time. Many others are using it for diversity reception with two
 antennas. I plan to do that once I have a better filter complement.

 Unless you plan to listen to two broadcast stations at the same time, I
 don't see any reason to put a general coverage bandpass filter in both
 receivers. Put one in the one receiver you intend to use for SWLing.

 I don't think it's prudent to have both the 250 and 400 Hz filters. The
 actual width of the 250 is wider and the actual width of the 400 is narrower
 so the two end up being very close to each other. If I felt a need for
 something narrower than my 400, which I don't for my operating, I would get
 the 200. The 250 and the 500 might also be a reasonable choice.

 I think the 200 is a tad narrow for 170 Hz RTTY but the 250 is fine.
 However, I'm guessing as I have only a little RTTY experience.

 Unless you need to transmit AM, you probably don't need the 6 KHz. I have
 one and it works fine but I'd just as soon use the 13 for AM SWLing. I'll
 probably sell my 6. YMMV, especially if SWLing on a band full of very loud
 BC stations (S9+40 +) is important to you.

 Unless you plan to do diversity reception on FM, you don't need two 13 KHz
 filters. All transmitting is done through the filters on the main board.

 If you want to operate SSB on crowded bands consider a 1.8 or 2.1 KHz
 filter.

 GL  73,

 /Rick N6XI

 On 2/9/09, James Sarte kc2...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hello group,



 Someone mentioned in one of the reflector emails that the new firmware
 under development will allow independent band switching/monitoring between
 VFO's without a sub receiver.  Am I correct in my understanding then that
 without a sub receiver, this firmware will allow tuning and monitoring of
 separate bands?  If that is indeed the case, can someone please clarify for
 me how that can accomplished with a single receiver?



 On a separate note, apart from diversity receive, I'm curious to know how
 other people are utilizing their sub receiver?  The reason I ask is I'm
 finalizing my purchase of a K3, and am trying to determine whether it's
 necessary to fully load up both receivers now.  At this point, I'm ready to
 purchase 2 general coverage modules plus 2 each of the following filters:
 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz, 13KHz.  I'd like to have the ability to
 monitor PSK31, FM or SW broadcast on the sub, while monitoring phone or
 engaging in a phone QSO on the main; both receivers being on separate
 bands.  That's just one example.  Another could be to monitor SW broadcast
 on the main while listening to 10m FM on the sub.  Do I need to install the
 AM or FM filters in the sub to monitor SW or FM or can the sub's DSP take
 care of it?



 73,

 James KC2UEE



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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread Joe Subich, W4TV

 As for the 6KHz AM filter, to my understanding In order to 
 receive and transmit AM, I will need this filter for sure. 
 Just not sure how many I'll need, now that I only plan to 
 purchase one general coverage module.

No, you only need the AM filter if you plan to TRANSMIT AM 
or ESSB and then only because Elecraft will not enable AM 
and ESSB transmit with the FM filter.  

I would specifically not bother with the AM filter in the 
subreceiver - nor would I get the FM filter for the subRX 
unless I were also adding the general coverage front-end 
filter.   

If Elecraft would enable AM and ESSB transmit with the FM 
filter, my suggestions would be FM, 2.7, 400 and 200 in the 
main receiver with FM, 2.7 and 400 in the subreceiver.  A 
1.5 or 1.8 KHz narrow SSB filter can be added later if you 
feel the need for a high performance option for contesting. 

73, 

   ... Joe, W4TV 
  


 -Original Message-
 From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net 
 [mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of KC2UEE
 Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 5:48 PM
 To: Rick Tavan N6XI
 Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?
 
 
 Thank you Rick for your insight.  I'll look closer into my 
 filter and module choices, and perhaps save a bit of money in 
 the process.
 
 After looking at the filter plots (didn't see any for the 
 5-poles though), I'll probably end up with the following:
 
 13KHz FM filter - main only (will use for 10m FM transmit 
 also) 6KHz AM filter - (I'm tempted to buy 2, one for the 
 main and one for the sub... I'll probably put the gen 
 coverage module in the sub) 2.7KHz 5-pole; 1 in the main and 
 1 in the sub. 500 Hz 5 pole - main only 250 Hz 8 pole - main only
 
 I'm mostly a SSB and 10m FM guy (local repeaters), but also 
 do a bit of PSK31 and RTTY when the mood strikes me.  How 
 does this arrangement sound at present?  As for the 6KHz AM 
 filter, to my understanding In order to receive and transmit 
 AM, I will need this filter for sure. Just not sure how many 
 I'll need, now that I only plan to purchase one general 
 coverage module.  I'm not really sure which receiver would be 
 best suited for general coverage as well.
 
 73,
 James KC2UEE
 
 
 
 On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Rick Tavan N6XI 
 rta...@gmail.com wrote:
  With only one receiver you can only hear one band at a 
 time. With the 
  new firmware, however, you can set the two VFOs to 
 different bands and 
  flip between them using the A/B switch. I don't think 
 cross-band SPLIT 
  will be available at first, if ever.
 
  I use my sub-rx to monitor both a DX station and its split 
 frequency 
  pileup at the same time. Many others are using it for diversity 
  reception with two antennas. I plan to do that once I have a better 
  filter complement.
 
  Unless you plan to listen to two broadcast stations at the 
 same time, 
  I don't see any reason to put a general coverage bandpass filter in 
  both receivers. Put one in the one receiver you intend to use for 
  SWLing.
 
  I don't think it's prudent to have both the 250 and 400 Hz filters. 
  The actual width of the 250 is wider and the actual width 
 of the 400 
  is narrower so the two end up being very close to each other. If I 
  felt a need for something narrower than my 400, which I 
 don't for my 
  operating, I would get the 200. The 250 and the 500 might also be a 
  reasonable choice.
 
  I think the 200 is a tad narrow for 170 Hz RTTY but the 250 
 is fine. 
  However, I'm guessing as I have only a little RTTY experience.
 
  Unless you need to transmit AM, you probably don't need the 
 6 KHz. I 
  have one and it works fine but I'd just as soon use the 13 for AM 
  SWLing. I'll probably sell my 6. YMMV, especially if SWLing 
 on a band 
  full of very loud BC stations (S9+40 +) is important to you.
 
  Unless you plan to do diversity reception on FM, you don't 
 need two 13 
  KHz filters. All transmitting is done through the filters 
 on the main 
  board.
 
  If you want to operate SSB on crowded bands consider a 1.8 
 or 2.1 KHz 
  filter.
 
  GL  73,
 
  /Rick N6XI
 
  On 2/9/09, James Sarte kc2...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  Hello group,
 
 
 
  Someone mentioned in one of the reflector emails that the new 
  firmware under development will allow independent band 
  switching/monitoring between VFO's without a sub receiver.  Am I 
  correct in my understanding then that without a sub receiver, this 
  firmware will allow tuning and monitoring of separate 
 bands?  If that 
  is indeed the case, can someone please clarify for me how that can 
  accomplished with a single receiver?
 
 
 
  On a separate note, apart from diversity receive, I'm 
 curious to know 
  how other people are utilizing their sub receiver?  The 
 reason I ask 
  is I'm finalizing my purchase of a K3, and am trying to determine 
  whether it's necessary to fully load up both receivers 
 now.  At this 
  point, I'm ready to purchase 2

Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread James Sarte
Hi Joe,

Just to make sure I understand you, the AM filter is only required if one
desires to transmit in AM or use ESSB.  Otherwise, AM reception like SW can
still be piped through the 13KHz FM filter?  

How does the audio of AM SW sound going through the FM filter?  Bandwidth is
obviously wider, so I'm assuming higher fidelity?

73,
James KC2UEE

-Original Message-
From: Joe Subich, W4TV [mailto:li...@subich.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 7:40 PM
To: 'KC2UEE'; 'Rick Tavan N6XI'
Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: RE: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?


 As for the 6KHz AM filter, to my understanding In order to 
 receive and transmit AM, I will need this filter for sure. 
 Just not sure how many I'll need, now that I only plan to 
 purchase one general coverage module.

No, you only need the AM filter if you plan to TRANSMIT AM 
or ESSB and then only because Elecraft will not enable AM 
and ESSB transmit with the FM filter.  

I would specifically not bother with the AM filter in the 
subreceiver - nor would I get the FM filter for the subRX 
unless I were also adding the general coverage front-end 
filter.   

If Elecraft would enable AM and ESSB transmit with the FM 
filter, my suggestions would be FM, 2.7, 400 and 200 in the 
main receiver with FM, 2.7 and 400 in the subreceiver.  A 
1.5 or 1.8 KHz narrow SSB filter can be added later if you 
feel the need for a high performance option for contesting. 

73, 

   ... Joe, W4TV 
  


 -Original Message-
 From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net 
 [mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of KC2UEE
 Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 5:48 PM
 To: Rick Tavan N6XI
 Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?
 
 
 Thank you Rick for your insight.  I'll look closer into my 
 filter and module choices, and perhaps save a bit of money in 
 the process.
 
 After looking at the filter plots (didn't see any for the 
 5-poles though), I'll probably end up with the following:
 
 13KHz FM filter - main only (will use for 10m FM transmit 
 also) 6KHz AM filter - (I'm tempted to buy 2, one for the 
 main and one for the sub... I'll probably put the gen 
 coverage module in the sub) 2.7KHz 5-pole; 1 in the main and 
 1 in the sub. 500 Hz 5 pole - main only 250 Hz 8 pole - main only
 
 I'm mostly a SSB and 10m FM guy (local repeaters), but also 
 do a bit of PSK31 and RTTY when the mood strikes me.  How 
 does this arrangement sound at present?  As for the 6KHz AM 
 filter, to my understanding In order to receive and transmit 
 AM, I will need this filter for sure. Just not sure how many 
 I'll need, now that I only plan to purchase one general 
 coverage module.  I'm not really sure which receiver would be 
 best suited for general coverage as well.
 
 73,
 James KC2UEE
 
 
 
 On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Rick Tavan N6XI 
 rta...@gmail.com wrote:
  With only one receiver you can only hear one band at a 
 time. With the 
  new firmware, however, you can set the two VFOs to 
 different bands and 
  flip between them using the A/B switch. I don't think 
 cross-band SPLIT 
  will be available at first, if ever.
 
  I use my sub-rx to monitor both a DX station and its split 
 frequency 
  pileup at the same time. Many others are using it for diversity 
  reception with two antennas. I plan to do that once I have a better 
  filter complement.
 
  Unless you plan to listen to two broadcast stations at the 
 same time, 
  I don't see any reason to put a general coverage bandpass filter in 
  both receivers. Put one in the one receiver you intend to use for 
  SWLing.
 
  I don't think it's prudent to have both the 250 and 400 Hz filters. 
  The actual width of the 250 is wider and the actual width 
 of the 400 
  is narrower so the two end up being very close to each other. If I 
  felt a need for something narrower than my 400, which I 
 don't for my 
  operating, I would get the 200. The 250 and the 500 might also be a 
  reasonable choice.
 
  I think the 200 is a tad narrow for 170 Hz RTTY but the 250 
 is fine. 
  However, I'm guessing as I have only a little RTTY experience.
 
  Unless you need to transmit AM, you probably don't need the 
 6 KHz. I 
  have one and it works fine but I'd just as soon use the 13 for AM 
  SWLing. I'll probably sell my 6. YMMV, especially if SWLing 
 on a band 
  full of very loud BC stations (S9+40 +) is important to you.
 
  Unless you plan to do diversity reception on FM, you don't 
 need two 13 
  KHz filters. All transmitting is done through the filters 
 on the main 
  board.
 
  If you want to operate SSB on crowded bands consider a 1.8 
 or 2.1 KHz 
  filter.
 
  GL  73,
 
  /Rick N6XI
 
  On 2/9/09, James Sarte kc2...@gmail.com wrote:
 
  Hello group,
 
 
 
  Someone mentioned in one of the reflector emails that the new 
  firmware under development will allow independent band 
  switching/monitoring between VFO's without a sub receiver.  Am I

Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-10 Thread Joe Subich, W4TV


 Just to make sure I understand you, the AM filter is only 
 required if one desires to transmit in AM or use ESSB.  
 Otherwise, AM reception like SW can still be piped through 
 the 13KHz FM filter?  

Correct, I use the FM filter for listening to AM broadcast or 
SWL on a fairly regular basis. 

 How does the audio of AM SW sound going through the FM 
 filter?  Bandwidth is obviously wider, so I'm assuming 
 higher fidelity?

Somewhat higher fidelity.  The K3's DSP has a fairly sharp 
cutoff at 4200 Hz so you will never get more than that but 
the FM filter allows the full 4.5 KHz where the AM filter 
starts to roll off at 3 KHz but still has some audio response 
down the filter skirts.  I hope that someday Elecraft will 
open up the audio in AM so we can hear 5.5 or 6 KHz which 
as good as it gets these days. 

The whole point is that most of the other up conversion radios 
have 20 or even 30 KHz wide first IF filters.  There's not 
much reason to deal with both the FM and AM filters ... most 
AM work is not that critical with regard to bandwidth at 
the first IF.  The DSP sets the ultimate response in any case. 

73, 

   ... Joe, W4TV 
  


 -Original Message-
 From: James Sarte [mailto:kc2...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 9:17 PM
 To: li...@subich.com; 'KC2UEE'; 'Rick Tavan N6XI'
 Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: RE: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?
 
 
 Hi Joe,
 
 Just to make sure I understand you, the AM filter is only 
 required if one desires to transmit in AM or use ESSB.  
 Otherwise, AM reception like SW can still be piped through 
 the 13KHz FM filter?  
 
 How does the audio of AM SW sound going through the FM 
 filter?  Bandwidth is obviously wider, so I'm assuming higher 
 fidelity?
 
 73,
 James KC2UEE
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Joe Subich, W4TV [mailto:li...@subich.com] 
 Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 7:40 PM
 To: 'KC2UEE'; 'Rick Tavan N6XI'
 Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
 Subject: RE: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?
 
 
  As for the 6KHz AM filter, to my understanding In order to
  receive and transmit AM, I will need this filter for sure. 
  Just not sure how many I'll need, now that I only plan to 
  purchase one general coverage module.
 
 No, you only need the AM filter if you plan to TRANSMIT AM 
 or ESSB and then only because Elecraft will not enable AM 
 and ESSB transmit with the FM filter.  
 
 I would specifically not bother with the AM filter in the 
 subreceiver - nor would I get the FM filter for the subRX 
 unless I were also adding the general coverage front-end 
 filter.   
 
 If Elecraft would enable AM and ESSB transmit with the FM 
 filter, my suggestions would be FM, 2.7, 400 and 200 in the 
 main receiver with FM, 2.7 and 400 in the subreceiver.  A 
 1.5 or 1.8 KHz narrow SSB filter can be added later if you 
 feel the need for a high performance option for contesting. 
 
 73, 
 
... Joe, W4TV 
   
 
 
  -Original Message-
  From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net
  [mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of KC2UEE
  Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 5:48 PM
  To: Rick Tavan N6XI
  Cc: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
  Subject: Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?
  
  
  Thank you Rick for your insight.  I'll look closer into my
  filter and module choices, and perhaps save a bit of money in 
  the process.
  
  After looking at the filter plots (didn't see any for the
  5-poles though), I'll probably end up with the following:
  
  13KHz FM filter - main only (will use for 10m FM transmit
  also) 6KHz AM filter - (I'm tempted to buy 2, one for the 
  main and one for the sub... I'll probably put the gen 
  coverage module in the sub) 2.7KHz 5-pole; 1 in the main and 
  1 in the sub. 500 Hz 5 pole - main only 250 Hz 8 pole - main only
  
  I'm mostly a SSB and 10m FM guy (local repeaters), but also
  do a bit of PSK31 and RTTY when the mood strikes me.  How 
  does this arrangement sound at present?  As for the 6KHz AM 
  filter, to my understanding In order to receive and transmit 
  AM, I will need this filter for sure. Just not sure how many 
  I'll need, now that I only plan to purchase one general 
  coverage module.  I'm not really sure which receiver would be 
  best suited for general coverage as well.
  
  73,
  James KC2UEE
  
  
  
  On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 4:59 PM, Rick Tavan N6XI
  rta...@gmail.com wrote:
   With only one receiver you can only hear one band at a
  time. With the
   new firmware, however, you can set the two VFOs to
  different bands and
   flip between them using the A/B switch. I don't think
  cross-band SPLIT
   will be available at first, if ever.
  
   I use my sub-rx to monitor both a DX station and its split
  frequency
   pileup at the same time. Many others are using it for diversity
   reception with two antennas. I plan to do that once I 
 have a better 
   filter complement.
  
   Unless you plan to listen to two broadcast stations at the
  same

Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-09 Thread Brett Howard
On Mon, 2009-02-09 at 21:02 -0500, James Sarte wrote:
 Hello group,
 
  
 
 Someone mentioned in one of the reflector emails that the new firmware
 under development will allow independent band switching/monitoring
 between VFO’s without a sub receiver.  Am I correct in my
 understanding then that without a sub receiver, this firmware will
 allow tuning and monitoring of separate bands?  If that is indeed the
 case, can someone please clarify for me how that can accomplished with
 a single receiver?  
 
You can monitor two different bands at once with a single receiver yes
but you can't listen to both of them at the same time.  Essentially you
still have the exact same setup that the radio does today.  You have VFO
A and VFO B just like you already do.  The only difference is that VFO A
and VFO B can be on different bands now.  

So you can have VFO A on 7.029 and VFO B on 14.029 and as you press the
A/B button you kick back and forth between the two bands.  You can also
press and hold REV and switch between them temporarily.

This change will also allow you to use split mode across bands.  Many
other radio's allow this.  
  
 
 On a separate note, apart from diversity receive, I’m curious to know
 how other people are utilizing their sub receiver?  The reason I ask
 is I’m finalizing my purchase of a K3, and am trying to determine
 whether it’s necessary to fully load up both receivers now.  At this
 point, I’m ready to purchase 2 general coverage modules plus 2 each of
 the following filters: 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz, 13KHz.  I’d like
 to have the ability to monitor PSK31, FM or SW broadcast on the sub,
 while monitoring phone or engaging in a phone QSO on the main; both
 receivers being on separate bands.  That’s just one example.  Another
 could be to monitor SW broadcast on the main while listening to 10m FM
 on the sub.  Do I need to install the AM or FM filters in the sub to
 monitor SW or FM or can the sub’s DSP take care of it?
 
One thing is that while in a QSO you won't be able to hear out of any of
them while in TX.  But when you're monitoring you'll be able to hear
both at once.  You'll need the filters to be able to receive those modes
in full glory but you can receive AM just fine with just the 2.7K filter
in SSB mode.  You can get a lot done with just the stock radio.  Often
you can get a lot done with just one general coverage rx filter but
you'll have more flexibility and the ability to listen to two out of
band freqs...
  
 
 73,
 
 James KC2UEE
 
  
 
 
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Re: [Elecraft] K3 sub-receiver usefulness?

2009-02-09 Thread Don Wilhelm
James,

You might want to reconsider whether you are listening to the SW 
broadcast on the main or on the sub. The low pass filter will be on the 
main antenna band selection, and if the subreceiver is attempting to 
receive a signal above the main receiver frequency, you will see a 
message flashed in the VFO B saying USE SUB RX. That is an indication 
that the main RX LPF is attenuating the sub-rx signal.

If the main RX is at a higher frequency than the sub-rx, I do not 
believe that is any problem, but when the situation is reversed, the LPF 
will cut the response on the sub-rx.

73,
Don W3FPR

James Sarte wrote:

 Hello group,

 Someone mentioned in one of the reflector emails that the new firmware 
 under development will allow independent band switching/monitoring 
 between VFO’s without a sub receiver. Am I correct in my understanding 
 then that without a sub receiver, this firmware will allow tuning and 
 monitoring of separate bands? If that is indeed the case, can someone 
 please clarify for me how that can accomplished with a single receiver?

 On a separate note, apart from diversity receive, I’m curious to know 
 how other people are utilizing their sub receiver? The reason I ask is 
 I’m finalizing my purchase of a K3, and am trying to determine whether 
 it’s necessary to fully load up both receivers now. At this point, I’m 
 ready to purchase 2 general coverage modules plus 2 each of the 
 following filters: 250KHz, 400KHz, 2.8Khz, 6KHz, 13KHz. I’d like to 
 have the ability to monitor PSK31, FM or SW broadcast on the sub, 
 while monitoring phone or engaging in a phone QSO on the main; both 
 receivers being on separate bands. That’s just one example. Another 
 could be to monitor SW broadcast on the main while listening to 10m FM 
 on the sub. Do I need to install the AM or FM filters in the sub to 
 monitor SW or FM or can the sub’s DSP take care of it?

 73,

 James KC2UEE


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