Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-17 Thread Jim Brown
Our engineering prototype parts guy had a sign behind his desk that said:

Failure to plan ahead on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part

73  - Jim  W5ZIT

--- On Sun, 8/16/09, Paul Plack pl...@xmission.com wrote:

From: Paul Plack pl...@xmission.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio  compression
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, August 16, 2009, 9:19 AM






 





  


No, John, I was never been a CE, but a PD several 
times.
 
This same guy was the first to have on his door a sign I've 
since seen several other places:
 
Procrastination on Your Part
    Does Not Constitute
 An Emergency on My Part
 
73,
Paul, AE4KR
 
__

 

















  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-17 Thread STeve Andre'
[snip]
  - Original Message -
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio
  compression
 
   At 8/14/2009 17:54, you wrote:
  Sounds like, in essence, it was a closed repeater. Only those meeting
   some tough standards were allowed.
  
   Oh, it was very open.  How tough can it be to simply speak up?
  
   Bob NO6B

Well, I can think of at least two hams I've known with throat problems,
such that they could not speak loudy.  Yes, a pain but that was their
disability.  That repeater would have shut them out, which I consider
rather unforunate.

There is also the issue of emergencies: someone in some kind of
accident (think auto) who either got a damaged mic, or is injured
themselves, trying to use the repeater.

While not likely in either case, its very real for that person if it
happens.

--STeve Andre'
wb8wsf  en82


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-17 Thread George Henry
That's right up there with

Our credit manager is Helen Waite.  If you want credit, go to Helen Waite


George, KA3HSW / WQGJ413


- Original Message - 
From: Jim Brown w5...@yahoo.com
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, August 17, 2009 5:04 AM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio 
compression


Our engineering prototype parts guy had a sign behind his desk that said:

Failure to plan ahead on your part does not constitute an emergency on my 
part

73 - Jim W5ZIT



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-16 Thread JOHN MACKEY
Apparently you are one of the former Chief Engineers at the station I am
currently the engineer of!

-- Original Message --
Received: Sat, 15 Aug 2009 10:36:11 AM PDT
From: Paul Plack pl...@xmission.com
 In my years in broadcast radio, I often saw program directors and general
managers who wanted engineering to alter equipment to accommodate some prima
donna morning talent too lazy to exercise proper mic technique or maintain
proper levels. One particularly brave chief engineer responded, I'm sorry,
this is engineering. You're describing a human resources problem.




Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-16 Thread Paul Plack
No, John, I was never been a CE, but a PD several times.

This same guy was the first to have on his door a sign I've since seen several 
other places:

Procrastination on Your Part
Does Not Constitute
 An Emergency on My Part

73,
Paul, AE4KR

  - Original Message - 
  From: JOHN MACKEY 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Sunday, August 16, 2009 2:00 AM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression


Apparently you are one of the former Chief Engineers at the station I am
  currently the engineer of!

  -- Original Message --
  Received: Sat, 15 Aug 2009 10:36:11 AM PDT
  From: Paul Plack pl...@xmission.com
   In my years in broadcast radio, I often saw program directors and general
  managers who wanted engineering to alter equipment to accommodate some prima
  donna morning talent too lazy to exercise proper mic technique or maintain
  proper levels. One particularly brave chief engineer responded, I'm sorry,
  this is engineering. You're describing a human resources problem.



  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-16 Thread Nate Duehr

On Aug 10, 2009, at 4:41 PM, Laryn Lohman wrote:

 Nate, your comments about compression and bad-sounding audio coming  
 in from IRLP just goes to show, at least in part, that improperly  
 set-up compression/AGC sounds bad.


Totally agreed.  I have been fighting improperly built/designed AGC's  
in telco for years.

(Imagine a glass-walled conference room.  Why do people put glass  
walls in conference rooms anyway?!   Looks pretty, but totally  
impractical for audio engineering... LOL!  Also worked for a place  
that built completely CIRCULAR conference rooms, and then put the  
speakerphones in the center of the table.  Yeah... you can probably  
guess what that sounded like... and how shocked everyone was that the  
solution was, Move the phone over here..., as you slide it to the  
edge of the table... sigh.  Other favorites have been room mics in the  
ceiling right next to HVAC outlets, um... let's see... what else...  
oh, there's more than I can even remember.  Kinda freaky when you can  
just have someone call you can you can recognize them by how they  
sound, too... Oh, you have X microphone and it's near the corner of  
the room, right?)

--
Nate Duehr, WY0X
n...@natetech.com



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-16 Thread Nate Duehr

On Aug 11, 2009, at 10:30 AM, skipp025 wrote:

 Hi Nate,

   re: An advocate for a little audio compression.

  Nate Duehr n...@... wrote:
  You're a brave man to say it, Skipp.

  Here's my problem with it. Let's just say there's a very
  large linked repeater system that decided MANY years ago
  that they could fix the incoming audio from their IRLP
  link from BADLY CONFIGURED IRLP NODES by adding a commercial
  compressor-limiter in-line.

 Depends on what's coming out of the IRLP source... it's not
 the job of a limiter/compressor to improve already over crunched
 bad audio. My advocate for a little audio compression
 statement is meant to deal with helping soft talking, non
 booming (higher pitch) voice types. The specific case I
 referenced was a simple repeater with one half-duplex link
 radio.


Understand.  They were RAISING low-level nodes that hadn't bothered to  
set their audio properly.  Problem was, good sounding, higher level  
nodes were obviously having some horrible effect on their compressor/ 
limiter they weren't really aware of, since they had so many bad- 
sounding ones calling them regularly.  :-)
  Hey guess what folks. The audio left here JUST FINE...
  someone on that end decided to muck around with it. Not
  much I can do about that.

 If you were close to them... you could offer to have a look
 at the levels and crank the controls back down to a more
 realistic value. But when things progress to this level... you
 very often have to deal with some type of control freak who's
 going to crank the knob back up after you and Elvis have left
 the building.


They were thousands of miles away... I decided it wasn't my  
problem.  :-)

  Do I realize that the vast majority of folks setting up IRLP
  nodes don't bother setting levels CORRECTLY to a network
  standard? Oh heck, yes. I rant about that at least once
  a year on the IRLP list... to mostly deaf ears.

 A lot of Amateurs lack the resources of a decent Communications
 Service Monitor, some experience or a knowledgeable friend offering
 to help. The human ear is not a linear device so most cases
 of setting levels by perceived audio value are not good.


Yeah, understand.  I always offer to help with the test gear if I'm  
in range of a reasonable drive, and not too busy.

 I think you're focused on the wrong issue... I run Multi-Hub
 and Chained Repeater Links with well thought out audio levels
 and they do include a very modest amount of limiting type
 compression... and they sound great. You probably need to vent
 a stronger opinion against bad audio level choices made by the
 over casual repeater system/equipment owner/operator(s).


LOL... Yeah, I doubt any systems you're engineering are casually  
engineered.  LOL!

:-)

 I'd like to say I've done a lot of the proper homework... and
 I suspect few users can tell the brand name of the majority
 of our repeaters from the on-air audio. And there's a fairly
 large mix of many different equipment brands...


You have, I'm sure.

--
Nate Duehr, WY0X
n...@natetech.com



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-15 Thread Paul Holm
I have to say, it IS very annoying when users have very low audio.  We have 
a guy around here that always insists on speaking softly.  I think he does 
it to try to set an example because he thinks most other users are way too 
loud.  Then everyone's having to reach for their volume control.  Very 
agrevating, especially when he runs a net.  I ask him to repeat every other 
thing he says, even if I heard him the first time.  Maybe the light bulb 
will come on for him.

73  Paul


- Original Message - 
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio 
compression


 At 8/14/2009 17:54, you wrote:
Sounds like, in essence, it was a closed repeater. Only those meeting some
tough standards were allowed.

 Oh, it was very open.  How tough can it be to simply speak up?

 Bob NO6B




Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-15 Thread Paul Plack
It's no more closed than a repeater with CTCSS or even a tight squelch, but 
what a pain in the butt for users with equipment set properly! You hear the 
repeater drop, wait for the beep, and then are doubling with someone? That's a 
solution?

This sounds like the work of a passive-aggressive type who'd rather automate 
the punishment than offer help. Most people coming into the hobby today come 
from a world of horrid bluetooth headsets and auto record levels, and have 
never seen a VU meter. What? It matters how loud or close I am?

In my years in broadcast radio, I often saw program directors and general 
managers who wanted engineering to alter equipment to accommodate some prima 
donna morning talent too lazy to exercise proper mic technique or maintain 
proper levels. One particularly brave chief engineer responded, I'm sorry, 
this is engineering. You're describing a human resources problem.

I always thought it might be useful to record a local ARES net, edit excerpts 
of people with really bad audio, and make them available as MP3 files on a 
website afterward. You can tell someone his audio is so low you can't 
understand him, but until he hears it, he may think you're just picky.

73,
Paul, AE4KR

  - Original Message - 
  From: ae6zm 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Friday, August 14, 2009 6:54 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression


Sounds like, in essence, it was a closed repeater. Only those meeting some 
tough standards were allowed. Nothing wrong with that, as long as one doesn't 
call it an OPEN repeater. OPEN being anyone operating within the limits of 
the FCC rules is welcome.

It would be ANDed with the COS, so that anyone too 
soft-spoken would drop out of the repeater.
   
We had one repeater around here with that feature. AFAIK 
it worked quite well. 
  


  . 

  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-14 Thread no6b
At 8/14/2009 08:54, you wrote:

Let me get this straight... someone installed a circuit
that would cut off the transmission if the user didn't talk
with a loud enough voice into the mic?

Actually, I think it looked for sufficient modulation to activate the 
repeater.  Once it was up, it would stay up until COS drop.

Think anyone might have ever left in frustration? ... maybe
embarrassed or felt chased away by not clearly understanding
what was required of them?

... or were they all eventually well trained?  ... at least
those who stuck around?

IIRC, that repeater was fairly busy back in the day when the VOX was in 
place.  So I'd say most were well trained,  the few that left probably 
gave the lesser-used low-level repeaters more use.  Win-win.

Bob NO6B



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-14 Thread no6b
At 8/14/2009 17:54, you wrote:
Sounds like, in essence, it was a closed repeater. Only those meeting some 
tough standards were allowed.

Oh, it was very open.  How tough can it be to simply speak up?

Bob NO6B



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-13 Thread no6b
At 8/13/2009 08:11, you wrote:

  Any ol' audio detector/filter/comparitor would do.  Nothing
  fancy like the SmartVox we use for Shuttle audio (which
  doesn't work on amplitude, but rather changes in audio
  frequency), just something that says I saw peaks over 4
  kHz or average deviation over the past 5 seconds was at
  least 1.5 kHz.
  Bob NO6B

What action does the above circuit take?

It would be ANDed with the COS, so that anyone too soft-spoken would drop 
out of the repeater.

We had one repeater around here with that feature.  AFAIK it worked quite 
well.  It was removed when the entire repeater was replaced; I suspect the 
trustee didn't want to bother grafting the old circuit into the new 
repeater.  Besides, by then the user base was likely well trained.

Bob NO6B



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-12 Thread Jim Brown
One way might be to set the transmitter deviation to 5 kHz for a 2.5 kHz 
deviation input signal.  Set the VOX threshold to trip at about 3 kHz input 
deviation and use it to switch in a 6 dBV pad to cut the deviation back down.  
A fast attack VOX with a slow release would keep the audio from pumping up and 
down.

73 - Jim  W5ZIT

--- On Wed, 8/12/09, skipp025 skipp...@yahoo.com wrote:

From: skipp025 skipp...@yahoo.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio  compression
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, August 12, 2009, 10:54 AM






 





   n...@... wrote:

 Yes, but increasing the user's deviation to the proper 

 level would help a lot more. 



A lot of people have voices, which are not considered Radio 

or Broadcast Quality in both pitch and volume. Add a little 

mic shyness and you're often stuck with lower average deviation. 



Trying to inform and fix users about close talking the mic 

at higher volume levels does a good job of scaring some folks 

off. 



 A simple VOX ANDed with the COS would take care of that.

 

  Bob NO6B



I would be interested in a description of the above... 



cheers, 

s. 



 At 8/11/2009 08:28, you wrote:

 Hi Paul,

 

 One has to deal with reality... while you might consider a

 soft talking person not properly trained, more than a fair

 number of users don't have a booming voice. In a larger number

 of cases a little bit of added audio compression/ limiting

 helps resolve the low (higher/soft pitch) perceived volume

 level difference.

 

 The brain is pretty good about picking a voice from background

 audio so just being able to hear the receive audio better is

 going to help.

 








 

  




 

















  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-12 Thread no6b
At 8/12/2009 08:54, you wrote:
  n...@... wrote:
  Yes, but increasing the user's deviation to the proper
  level would help a lot more.

A lot of people have voices, which are not considered Radio
or Broadcast Quality in both pitch and volume. Add a little
mic shyness and you're often stuck with lower average deviation.

Still, no reason they can't close-talk the mic with whatever voice they have.

Trying to inform and fix users about close talking the mic
at higher volume levels does a good job of scaring some folks
off.

I guess this is where philosophical issues come to play.  I don't care if I 
lose users that are incapable of properly modulating their radios.

  A simple VOX ANDed with the COS would take care of that.
 
   Bob NO6B

I would be interested in a description of the above...

Any ol' audio detector/filter/comparitor would do.  Nothing fancy like the 
SmartVox we use for Shuttle audio (which doesn't work on amplitude, but 
rather changes in audio frequency), just something that says I saw peaks 
over 4 kHz or average deviation over the past 5 seconds was at least 1.5 
kHz.

Bob NO6B



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-11 Thread no6b
At 8/11/2009 08:28, you wrote:
Hi Paul,

One has to deal with reality... while you might consider a
soft talking person not properly trained, more than a fair
number of users don't have a booming voice. In a larger number
of cases a little bit of added audio compression/limiting
helps resolve the low (higher/soft pitch) perceived volume
level difference.

The brain is pretty good about picking a voice from background
audio so just being able to hear the receive audio better is
going to help.

Yes, but increasing the user's deviation to the proper level would help a 
lot more.  A simple VOX ANDed with the COS would take care of that.

Bob NO6B



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression

2009-08-10 Thread Rev. Robert P. Chrysafis
is a desktrac repeater capable of audio compression?


- Original Message - 
From: Laryn Lohman lar...@hotmail.com
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, August 10, 2009 6:41 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: An advocate for a little audio compression



 Nate, your comments about compression and bad-sounding audio coming in 
 from IRLP just goes to show, at least in part, that improperly set-up 
 compression/AGC sounds bad.

 For several years, I ran an Alesis 3630 on the audio coming in from IRLP 
 and feeding our local repeater transmitter.  I had it set for 3 second 
 release (the slowest it would do), fastest attack it would do, around 12db 
 of gain reduction, and around 6:1 ratio.  It sounded absolutely fine, with 
 no wierd stuff, no pumping, nothing obvious at all.  Only consistent, 
 good-level audio.  It can work and sound great.  And there's really 
 nothing inherently different betweeen audio from IRLP and audio from your 
 local receiver feeding your repeater transmitter.  As I stated in an 
 earlier post, the RC850 has internal AGC, and when properly set up, also 
 works very well with few artifacts.

 I think where it begins to sound bad is when the release time gets too 
 short.  That's when any background noise instantly sucks-up between words, 
 and quickly becomes ugly-sounding.

 Laryn K8TVZ



 



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