K2 XTALS

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K2 XTALS

m1bnw
I am buiding a K2 sn 004149 from an earlier non built K2 sn 000571 up to rev 'B' on the new 'B' pc boards.
I also have an early KSB2 SSB unit.

All the above has the original XTALS for the CW filter and SSB unit.ie 4.195MHz -20.
I have read lots of comments on the audio quality because of the tight band pass of the original SSB unit.
I know that Elecraft have produced some modifications in the form of 14 new XTALs and a capacitor upgrade kit.

Does anyone have experience of these mods ?
Is there a basic capacitor upgrade that one can do first of all?
Or is changing all the XTALs and adding new capacitors the best solution?
Or is the original configuration ok?

Regards Colin M1BNW
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RE: K2 XTALS

Don Wilhelm-3
Colin,

There are 2 separate things here - Elecraft's specs to the xtal vendor for
motional inductance were tightened on or about SN 2600.  If you have a set
that is older, you will likely benefit from installing a new set of crystals
(do not mix new with the older crystals in any one filter (CW or SSB).

Secondly, yes Elecraft has widened the SSB filter bandwidth from 2.0 to 2.3
(or 2.4) kHz.  Only a few capacitors in the filter are changed, and you
likely have the capacitors for the narrower filter.  Weigh the pros and cons
of the wider or narrower bandwidth - the narrower filter provides a bit more
'punch' to a QRP SSB signal, but is a bit more critical in positioning the
passband correctly.  The wider passband results in a more natual sounding
transmitted signal.  Take your pick based on your operating desires, both
work well.

If you do decide to change the fiilter bandwidth, it is easier to install
the capacitors during initial construction - it is not really difficult to
do it after assembly, but decidedly easier to put the capacitors in before
the crystals are installed.

73,
Don W3FPR

> -----Original Message-----

>
> I am buiding a K2 sn 004149 from an earlier non built K2 sn
> 000571 up to rev 'B' on the new 'B' pc boards.
> I also have an early KSB2 SSB unit.
>
> All the above has the original XTALS for the CW filter and SSB
> unit.ie 4.195MHz -20.
> I have read lots of comments on the audio quality because of the
> tight band pass of the original SSB unit.
> I know that Elecraft have produced some modifications in the form
> of 14 new XTALs and a capacitor upgrade kit.
>
> Does anyone have experience of these mods ?
> Is there a basic capacitor upgrade that one can do first of all?
> Or is changing all the XTALs and adding new capacitors the best solution?
> Or is the original configuration ok?
>
> Regards Colin M1BNW
>
--
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Re: K2 XTALS

Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy-2
In reply to this post by m1bnw
Morning Colin,

My K2 is #3255 and the KSB2 Build is Revision C-3.  The envelope that
contained the KSB2 crystals is marked 3.7 (as was the envelope containing
the K2's IF filter crystals),  and the KSB2 crystals are marked 4.9136.  I
have not made any modifications  From 'swept' measurements the KSB2's
filter -6db bandwidth is 2.1 kHz approx if I remember correctly  Please note
that this is not a 'noise loaded' measurement, e.g. Spectrogram. The exact
figure is in my notebook which is packed away due to an invasion of
plumbers, carpenters and others - sorry about that.

Using this data and the measured audio response, mic connector to and
including the modulator, to set the carrier oscillator frequencies (BFO),
the BFO is no more than 200 Hz away from the frequencies suggested in the
KSB2 manual. With a Heil ProSet Plus and no audio mods, full specd PEP is
obtained and unsolicited audio reports are complimentary.

My personal opinion is that the 2.1 kHz bandwidth is satisfactory with the
K2, for ragchewing and DXing. Because the same intermediate sized crystal
ladder filter is used for both USB and LSB, increasing the bandwidth could
result in problems with unwanted sideband suppression when the BFO is on the
low frequency skirt of the filter. This assumes that the filter is properly
designed and terminated. It is possible to fiddle things to steepen the LF
skirt, but usually at the cost of increased ripple in the passband.

73,
Geoff
GM4ESD


----- Original Message -----
From: "m1bnw" <[hidden email]>
To: <[hidden email]>
Sent: Friday, May 27, 2005 7:18 PM
Subject: [Elecraft] K2 XTALS


I am buiding a K2 sn 004149 from an earlier non built K2 sn 000571 up to rev
'B' on the new 'B' pc boards.
I also have an early KSB2 SSB unit.

All the above has the original XTALS for the CW filter and SSB unit.ie
4.195MHz -20.
I have read lots of comments on the audio quality because of the tight band
pass of the original SSB unit.
I know that Elecraft have produced some modifications in the form of 14 new
XTALs and a capacitor upgrade kit.

Does anyone have experience of these mods ?
Is there a basic capacitor upgrade that one can do first of all?
Or is changing all the XTALs and adding new capacitors the best solution?
Or is the original configuration ok?

Regards Colin M1BNW

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RE: K2 XTALS

Ron D'Eau Claire-2
Geoff wrote:

 Because the same intermediate sized crystal ladder filter is used for both
USB and LSB, increasing the bandwidth could result in problems with unwanted
sideband suppression when the BFO is on the low frequency skirt of the
filter. This assumes that the filter is properly designed and terminated. It
is possible to fiddle things to steepen the LF skirt, but usually at the
cost of increased ripple in the passband.

---------------------------------------
Geoff brings up a number of legitimate concerns when messing with the filter
bandwidth.

Fortunately, one of our most thorough and experienced technical guru's, John
Grebenkemper, KI6WX, took these issues into consideration in designing the
filter mods for increased bandwidth and less passband ripple. That's why the
modifications are "official" Elecraft options and one can order from
Elecraft (SSBCAPKT). The mod kit includes all the capacitors needed for one
of several of different bandwidths.

This mod kit assumes one has the new crystals and, for pre S/N 3000 units,
the 2ND XFIL mod has been installed. The 2ND XFIL mod is required for best
sounding receive SSB. It does not affect transmit audio.

My modified filters are a full 2.6 kHz wide. I made the change as much for
CW than SSB. While I'll pick up the mic on occasion, I work CW 99% of the
time and I enjoy scanning the bands with a very wide bandwidth in which I
can hear several QSO's at once. I only crank down the bandwidth when an
unwanted signal become so loud it's obnoxious.

Still, getting the best quality audio was an interesting project, even if I
don't do a lot of SSB work. The receive audio is really surprisingly good.
AM stations at the upper part of the North American AM broadcast band sound
as good as they do on most regular AM radios when properly tuned in. Of
course, accurate tuning is critical. A 10 or 20 Hz error is obvious and
irritating when listening to music.  

The issues with opposite sideband suppression that Geoff raised do not come
up because there is no need or desire to move the lower edge of the audio
bandpass closer to the carrier frequency for transmit. What John's mods did
was to provide a smoother, flatter, wider bandpass while maintaining the
roll-off at the skirts.

Normally, this wider bandwidth will be used to pass the higher-frequency
sibilances that are so important for best speech intelligibility.  Passing
more of the low-frequency tone in human voices is usually a waste of power.
That low frequency energy is simply what is called a "drone", or the
fundamental note, produced by the throat. It's rich in audio harmonics, and
it's those audio harmonics spread across the audio spectrum up to several
kc/s that get modulated by one's mouth to make speech.

My voice has been, on occasion, described as sounding a bit like a metal
trash can being dragged along a gravel road. That's my natural, sometimes
rough, low frequency drone. I find the most natural and intelligible setting
for my voice rolls off the low frequencies from about 400 Hz down. Other
voices might sound better passing frequencies down as low as 300 or even 200
Hz. That's where actual listening tests are important. When listening to our
own voice in headphones, much of that low frequency sound comes right
through our bones. Unless that bone conduction is taken into consideration,
it's easy to arrive at a filter setting that sounds great when listening to
oneself in the headphones but which sounds unnatural and tinny to others on
the air. I suggest recording your signal then playing it back to hear what
others actually hear.

Keep in mind that only FL1 is used on transmit! No matter what filter is
selected for receive, the K2 switches to FL1 when the PTT is pressed. So
only FL1 need be set for optimum transmit audio. FL2, FL3 and FL4 can be set
to move the passband up or down to adjust the bass/treble response on other
signals or to help move away from nearby QRM. It works a bit like "passband
tuning" in some rigs. For example, I have one position set to bring the low
frequency rolloff down to about 100 Hz for listening to broadcast stations.
Of course you can also assign some of these filter positions to the CW
filters to provide a more restricted bandpass for listening to weak signals
in difficult band conditions.

Ron AC7AC


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RE: K2 XTALS

Stewart Baker
On Sat, 28 May 2005 07:26:21 -0700, Ron D'Eau Claire wrote:

> My voice has been, on occasion, described as sounding a bit like a metal
> trash can being dragged along a gravel road. That's my natural, sometimes
> rough, low frequency drone. I find the most natural and intelligible setting
> for my voice rolls off the low frequencies from about 400 Hz down.

For any LF voices such as your Ron, it might be worth reducing the value of
coupling C's in the mic audio chain of the KSB2. The values supplied let enough  
low frequency component get through that Humped Back Whales would have no
difficulty working the DX....

73
Stewart G3RXQ

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RE: K2 XTALS

Ron D'Eau Claire-2
Stewart G3RXQ wrote:
For any LF voices such as your Ron, it might be worth reducing the value of
coupling C's in the mic audio chain of the KSB2. The values supplied let
enough  
low frequency component get through that Humped Back Whales would have no
difficulty working the DX....

--------------------

Excellent suggestion Stewart!

The lower frequencies in my voice are more rough than "low". Unfortunately,
I don't have one of those voices that is usually pressed into service for
broadcast work.

The capacitor technique is a good one. I used it in a couple of tube-type AM
rigs over the years. With the K2, I really appreciated the flexibility of
the BFO and Filter setup that allowed me to tailor the speech bandpass
without resorting to swapping component values.

It does leave open the issue of whether some of the low frequency components
that are being cut off intentionally by the SSB filter might be triggering
the compressor or audio ALC functions, affecting the overall speech amp
gain. I seem to have adequate for full output across the spectrum on SSB, so
I hadn't looked into it further.

Ron AC7AC


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Re: K2 XTALS

Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy-2
In reply to this post by Ron D'Eau Claire-2
Ron,

Thank you for your comments. Forgive me if I split up my reply.

On May 28, 2005 at 3:26 PM you wrote:

The issues with opposite sideband suppression that Geoff raised do not come
up because there is no need or desire to move the lower edge of the audio
bandpass closer to the carrier frequency for transmit.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--

          Perhaps.  If the only consideration is the transmitted audio
spectrum, yes I would agree. As you correctly point out, passing more of the
low frequencies is usually a waste of power. Of course the frequency
response of the microphone and Tx audio circuitry needs to be included in
this consideration.  But the group delay characteristics of the filter
should also be thought about. A typical Cohn ladder filter, for example, has
wicked gyrations at the corner frequencies which requires that the carrier
frequency be moved up the filter's skirt to reduce distortion at those audio
frequencies that contribute to intelligibility. This of course increases the
level of unwanted sideband unless at the same time, the Tx audio rolls off
very sharply at the lower audio frequencies. To avoid this, Gaussian,
Gaussian to 6db or 12db or the equiripple families of ladder filter which
approximate constant delay can be used, and are the most useful from the
distortion viewpoint. Although not relevant to this discussion, a narrowband
Cohn ladder as might be used in a CW receiver will ring.

          Without seeing the delay and frequency response plots of the
modified filters, any further comment would be guessing on my part.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------

My voice has been, on occasion, described as sounding a bit like a metal
trash can being dragged along a gravel road. That's my natural, sometimes
rough, low frequency drone.

          Pass!!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------


That's where actual listening tests are important. When listening to our
own voice in headphones, much of that low frequency sound comes right
through our bones. Unless that bone conduction is taken into consideration,
it's easy to arrive at a filter setting that sounds great when listening to
oneself in the headphones but which sounds unnatural and tinny to others on
the air. I suggest recording your signal then playing it back to hear what
others actually hear.


          Totally agree.

73,
Geoff.
GM4ESD

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RE: K2 XTALS

Ron D'Eau Claire-2
Geoff, GM4ESD, wrote:

Of course the frequency response of the microphone and Tx audio circuitry
needs to be included in this consideration.  But the group delay
characteristics of the filter should also be thought about. A typical Cohn
ladder filter, for example, has wicked gyrations at the corner frequencies
which requires that the carrier frequency be moved up the filter's skirt to
reduce distortion at those audio frequencies that contribute to
intelligibility. This of course increases the level of unwanted sideband
unless at the same time, the Tx audio rolls off very sharply at the lower
audio frequencies. To avoid this, Gaussian, Gaussian to 6db or 12db or the
equiripple families of ladder filter which approximate constant delay can be
used, and are the most useful from the distortion viewpoint. Although not
relevant to this discussion, a narrowband Cohn ladder as might be used in a
CW receiver will ring.

          Without seeing the delay and frequency response plots of the
modified filters, any further comment would be guessing on my part.

-----------------------------

Those are good points that I haven't addressed since I'm not a filter
specialist. As an operator I've heard first-hand some of the awful stuff a
filter can produce in response to signals on the edge of its bandpass.

The K2 filters went through a long cycle of testing and optimization at the
hands of John Grebenkemper, KI6WX, with consultations with Wayne at Elecraft
and possibly others. I presume these issues were considered at that time.
Obviously, a complete redesign that would involve more crystals or a
different filter topology was out of the question since such changes
wouldn't fit on the SSB module. So I won't speculate on what compromises he
may have made in his choices. He did publish a detailed "how-to" description
of his recommendations in a paper that can be downloaded:
http://tinyurl.com/8emeu. This is a document written for the typical
Elecraft builder and does not go into the analytical work behind his
recommendations.

If you're curious, I'd suggest visiting John's web site
(http://tinyurl.com/8cs8w) and perhaps dropping him an e-mail. I've always
found him to be a very knowledgeable and patient in describing his work.

Ron AC7AC


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