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Oh, good lord. This is ridiculous. "The noise was so bad on my K3 i had to go back to my S-38C with external Q-multiplier just to work the contest" ... and on and on.
With no personal affronts intended, perhaps just learning to use the radio would help. Grant/NQ5T On Feb 2, 2010, at 7:20 PM, Lance Wilson wrote: > > I have started a new thread on this as there are multiple threads that are > difficult to keep track of. > > Today a number of other hams have also reported "noise", signal distortion > and other noise and signal issues that are a bit on the strange. T ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
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I think you are wrong that this is not related to AGC Threshold. However, if THR = 8 is not enough to raise the level of the threshold above the noise you probably won't see a difference. The noise will still modulate the AGC which makes the radio seem noisier, and weak signals will be reduced by the AGC to the same loudness as the noise.
There seems to be a growing body of evidence including the figures quoted by W4TV that the K3's AGC Threshold cannot be set high enough at least for some radios / some user situations. If others think it is fine, that may just be due to gain variations or people being blessed with living in quiet locations. If you cannot lift the AGC threshold above the noise then perhaps you can try reducing the noise below the threshold by turning the preamp off and using the attenuator. I don't think the RF Gain will help with this as I seem to recall reading that it is really an IF gain control.
Julian, G4ILO. K2 #392 K3 #222 KX3 #110
* G4ILO's Shack - http://www.g4ilo.com * KComm - http://www.g4ilo.com/kcomm.html * KTune - http://www.g4ilo.com/ktune.html |
Hello folks Just to follow up on this thread...listening to quite strong CW sigs with Slow AGC setting is not too flash. I would guess sigs over 75 uV or so which is well into the 9+ region. It is hard to exactly describe but sounds like the Hardware AGC loop is pumping. It is fine on SSB or weak CW. Not a big deal, I would prefer a longer hardware AGC Hang time, but thats personal preference. I have an aversion to riding RF gain controls, reminds me of the bad old days of rubbish receivers without product detectors :-] cheers Paul zl1ajy 3051 |
Hello Paul,
Do you hear any "raspy" sound when listening to quite strong CW sigs - not the sound of real band or thermal noise, but more like the sound of paper being torn? I should not be asking as I do not own a K3, but curiousity is killing this cat! 73, Geoff GM4ESD paulb <[hidden email]> wrote on Wednesday, February 03, 2010 at 10:27 AM > Hello folks > > Just to follow up on this thread...listening to quite strong CW sigs > with Slow AGC setting is not too flash. I would guess sigs over > 75 uV or so which is well into the 9+ region. > It is hard to exactly describe but sounds like the Hardware AGC > loop is pumping. It is fine on SSB or weak CW. Not a big deal, > I would prefer a longer hardware AGC Hang time, but thats > personal preference. > I have an aversion to riding RF gain controls, reminds me of the bad old > days of rubbish receivers without product detectors :-] > > cheers > > Paul > zl1ajy > 3051 ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
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In reply to this post by Grant Youngman
Spot on Grant...doesn't this remind you of Orion a few years ago? FYI here's a note I got from Rob Sherwood NC0B regarding his experience with the K3 in the CQ 160 last weekend. I believe everyone knows Rob is one of the most objective critics around when it comes to evaluating radios. My point in posting this is that we need to consider the source before taking many complaints at face value. In most cases, these are reflecting lack of knowledge of some of the posters more than performance of the K3. Said another way, always use some caution when reading comments here or on eHam (especially if they're from folks who use screen names only and don't have the guts to post their calls). ################################################## Hi Bill, I did post a comment on how the K3 performed. Using 40 ohm per channel stereo headphones, I was not bothered by any audio distortion issues. I ran the AGC the whole time, and noted no problems. I am not into the RF gain back and the audio up method. I have the AGC setting on SOFT, an option that came out last summer I believe. Due to the QRN on Saturday, I ran the attenuator most of the time. No use having the band noise reading up scale a few S units. I only spent about 10 to 12 hours on the contest, as I was not feeling well on Friday or Saturday. Worked 15 different countries and 8 JAs. Russia was a struggle for me, as I only worked one, and a few western Europe. No VKs this time like in W1BB contest. Used the K3 about 80% of the time. Semi-breaking with the Alpha 89 was flawless. Didn't have some setting right to make it full QSK, not that I normally run that way. Will sort that out next weekend. I had to drop down to 150 Hz BW several times due to adjacent QRM. The roofing filter switches in at 400 Hz, but I did not notice any problem with the DSP between 300 Hz and 150 Hz, not that I expected that to be an issue. Key clicks were a problem at times, but nothing fixes that, and I did hear one station in Idaho that I could copy from his phase noise 1 kHz away on either side. 73, Rob ####################################################### Regarding Grant's "S-38C in the CQ 160" comment, below are the current Top Ten claimed scores (Multiop and Single op) for the CQ 160 CW (IMHO the world's toughest environment for any receiver). I've indicated (***before the call) stations that I know for a fact were using K3s...there could be others in the list, but I'm sure of these: http://lists.contesting.com/pipermail/3830/2010-February/191049.html Call QSOs StPrv DX hr Score Club USA Multi-Op HP ***KC1XX 1870 59 80 40 1,154,256 YCCC K1TTT 1672 59 77 40 967,096 YCCC ***W2FU 1756 58 77 38 936,765 Rochester (NY) DX As NQ4I 1573 59 82 39.5 829,362 SECC K1LT 1559 58 75 39 776,587 MRRC N7DD 1410 59 83 33 752,032 Arizona Outlaws Cont K0RF 1494 59 74 33 707,693 AK9F(@WB9Z) 1542 59 75 40 700,418 SMC ***N1LN 1552 58 70 41.5 679,936 PVRC ***W8RT(@W8TOP) 1354 57 74 35.5 622,381 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ USA Single Op HP K1DG(@N1LI) 1741 59 82 30 1,292,265 YCCC K8PO 1702 58 76 30 1,185,900 YCCC ***K3ZM 1627 57 81 30 1,095,582 ***K1UO 1441 58 77 30 941,895 ***W4ZV 1542 58 68 30 829,332 PVRC KU1CW(@N0NI) 1473 59 75 30 803,062 ***AA1K 1405 58 67 30 735,750 FRC ***K5NA 1397 58 71 30 653,901 CTDXCC W1MK 1285 55 55 18.5 637,560 YCCC NR5M(NM5M) 1359 58 65 32 595,074 CTDXCC I seriously doubt many of these folks considered swapping their K3 for an S-38C! My point is, when you see ridiculous comments like Grant quoted above, always consider the source before taking them at face value. As to learning the radio, the **current online** manual and errata should be your first stop: http://www.elecraft.com/K2_Manual_Download_Page.htm#K3 The following links are also good learning resources with multiple links/pages in each: http://www.elecraft.com/K3/K3FAQ.htm http://www.elecraft.com/K3/k3_operating_tips.htm http://n1eu.com/ (click K3 link to the left) http://www.zerobeat.net/mediawiki/index.php/K3_Wiki_at_ZeroBeat.NET In most cases, Elecraft's default settings are a good starting point. The K3 is sort of like having a sports car with automatic everything. However, when you're ready to take it to a higher level of performance, the hooks are there to do so, but you need to understand what you're doing first by educating yourself. 73, Bill W4ZV |
I should have also included K8ZOA's excellent webpage: http://cliftonlaboratories.com/elecraft_k2_and_k3_transceivers.htm Use some caution because some of Jack's comments/measurements were made prior to some of the latest hardware/firmware revisions. The K3 is a moving target because Elecraft keeps improving it...and that's a good thing! :-)) 73, Bill |
In reply to this post by Lance Wilson
Hi Lance,
> Indeed, activating the attenuator does improve the situation quite a bit but > as I operate 20M and above for the most part I do not want to operate the K3 > with ATT on all of the time. I was going to ask. Assuming that "no ATT" is not a religious thing, and engaging ATT works, why NOT use it, if the performance of the AGC is the end-all kill-all aspect of the K3 for you? All that we are talking about is how much system gain is in use between the antenna and the analog to digital converter. 20m ambient noise here on my C31XR at 76 feet is around 1 uV here for SSB bandwidths, which IS engaging the AGC because it is S3. Use ATT before you reduce RF gain, as it provides the best headroom in the overall circuit. "RF gain" is applied in the IF amp at Q1, as can be determined by reading the schematics on the Elecraft web site. The other thing, have you tried setting CONFIG:AGC DCY to SoFt? Soapbox mode on: I think part of the reason for the continued reemergence of this subject is the p**s-poor performance of earlier receivers and that fact that their AGC and S meters typically did not engage until what was really S5 and reported it as S1. In other words we are expecting our new K3 to behave just as garbage on low signals as the old stuff, just because we're used to it. And when the K3 reports 1 uV as S3 and turns on the AGC, we think it's busted and noisy. In olden telephone days, the accumulated noise of strung together circuits created quite a bit of noise, and someone describing the other person on the end of a long distance call as "distant" was really a euphemism for noise. People complained a lot about noise. When the new "N" carrier systems came out and were being deployed, the engineers were proud that they had created a quiet system (they had) and would ease customer complaints about noise on the line. The telephone company was deluged with customer complaints that the lines sometimes sounded "dead". Telco was forced to spend a lot of money to retrofit a noise injector which was set to a minor level of noise. One of the maintenance tasks I had when routining "N" carrier was to calibrate the noise injection pot. They paid me real money to do that. To this day I think that was one of the silliest things going. Do we REALLY want to morph the K3 back to bad old days analog just so it sounds familiar? Can't we just figure out how this bright new digital radio is different, adjust and move on? I won't even mention RTFM for fear of having to dodge bricks. mode off. 73, Guy. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
On Wed, 2010-02-03 at 17:41 -0500, Guy Olinger K2AV wrote:
... > When the new "N" carrier systems came out and were being deployed, the > engineers were proud that they had created a quiet system (they had) > and would ease customer complaints about noise on the line. The > telephone company was deluged with customer complaints that the lines > sometimes sounded "dead". Telco was forced to spend a lot of money to > retrofit a noise injector which was set to a minor level of noise. ... They do the same thing with cellular phone systems. Some systems go completely silent when the other person is not talking, which made people think they were disconnected. So they had to add a little "comfort noise" to let people know everything is still working. Al N1AL ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
The same thing was done during the transition from mechanical analog switching to electronic analog matrix and digital switching. All the clunks and thunks that marked the progress of call connection largely disappeared with electronic analog and digital switches. So the switch vendors added artificial progress tones/noises just to give the caller that comfort factor that a connection was still in progress ...
it's kind of silly when you think about it, but turns out to be pretty important in the overall user interface .. :-) Grant/NQ5T On Feb 3, 2010, at 4:52 PM, Alan Bloom wrote: > > people think they were disconnected. So they had to add a little > "comfort noise" to let people know everything is still working. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
In reply to this post by Guy, K2AV
> I think you just did:-)
73, Rick K7MW > I won't even mention > RTFM for fear of having to dodge bricks. > > mode off. > > 73, Guy. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
All I can say is that I love my K3 but maybe that's because I use it to operate on the bands instead of performing all kinds of nit picking tests on noise, AGC, NB and whatever else I can think of.
But maybe that's just me. 73 Bill NZ0T |
In reply to this post by Guy, K2AV
> 20m ambient noise here on my C31XR at 76 feet is around 1 uV here for > SSB bandwidths, which IS engaging the AGC because it is S3. > > Use ATT before you reduce RF gain, as it provides the best headroom in > the overall circuit. With an MDS around -136 dBm and 1 uV being -107 dBm, the noise is about 30 dB over MDS. Adding even 20 dB of input attenuation wouldn't harm weak signal reception and would provide 20 dB more headroom for nearby strong signals before they started to bother you. The K3 has a 10 dB input attenuator. However, you can use a trick to get a 10/20/30 dB input attenuator if you have a KXV3 or KXV3A and aren't using a separate Rx antenna. Just insert a 20 dB attenuator between the RX ANT IN and RX ANT OUT jacks on the KXV3/A panel. If you need 10 db ATT, use the ATT button. If you need 20 dB, remove the 10 dB ATT and select RX ANT. For 30 dB select both RX ANT and ATT. You still can use PRE to get +10 dB, so you now have 40 dB of front end gain control in 10 dB steps to allow you to match the front end sensitivity of the K3 to current band/noise conditions. The downside is that the S Meter will read 20 dB lower when you have RX ANT engaged since the DSP doesn't know about the attenuator. Enjoy! 73, Lyle KK7P ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
In reply to this post by Lance Wilson
Lance,
The ATTenuator and Preamp settings are remembered per band. So you can have it on for one band and off for another - no constant button pushing. 73, Don W3FPR Lance Wilson wrote: > Indeed, activating the attenuator does improve the situation quite a bit but > as I operate 20M and above for the most part I do not want to operate the K3 > with ATT on all of the time. > > ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
In reply to this post by Bill W4ZV
Rob and I are in agreement on the AGC thing. I believe Wayne has said much the same. When high-end receivers had two pentode -r-f stages driving a pentagrid mixer and barn door selectivity, it made sense to reduce the r-f gain. IMHO, riding the r-f gain control (really i-f gain in the K3) in a properly designed receiver should be totally unnecessary. If it necessary, then the "properly-designed" nomenclature doesn't apply, except in the rarest of circumstances. Furthermore, unless you've done the r-f gain calibration in your K3, reducing the r-f (i-f) gain with AGC on might severely degrade the SNR. Fire at will. Wes N7WS --- On Wed, 2/3/10, Bill W4ZV <[hidden email]> wrote: FYI here's a note I got from Rob Sherwood NC0B regarding his experience with the K3 in the CQ 160 last weekend. I did post a comment on how the K3 performed. Using 40 ohm per channel stereo headphones, I was not bothered by any audio distortion issues. I ran the AGC the whole time, and noted no problems. I am not into the RF gain back and the audio up method. I have the AGC setting on SOFT, an option that came out last summer I believe. ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
Wes,
I agree that constant "riding the RF Gain" should not be necessary, But on any one band, reducing the RF Gain to the point where the atmospheric noise is not readily apparent does make a lot of sense to me. Set in that way, one does not have to listen to a lot of band noise and the AGC still works (albeit at a reduced level), and there is still S-meter response for those who want to give reports based on the meter reading. Once set for any one band, it does not need to be changed - AGC and the AF Gain will take care of the rest - I would not refer to that as "riding the RF Gain control". Now --, if one wants to turn off the AGC altogether, yes, the only technique that makes sense is to use the RF Gain as the 'volume' control (in addition to preamp and attenuator controls) - the technique as I learned it is to disconnect the antenna and turn up the AF Gain to the point where the internal receiver noise is apparent, but not bothersome (leave it set there), and use the RF Gain to set the desired output audio level - in this case, changing the RF Gain is the only way to control the volume of what is coming out of the headphones (or speaker). I cannot imagine anyone operating that way on a normal basis with a modern receiver with good AGC, but I know some do that based on habits formed long ago with old receivers using diode detectors - we had to do it that way because the BFO would overload the AGC and kill the receiver gain. 73, Don W3FPR Wes Stewart wrote: > IMHO, riding the r-f gain control (really i-f gain in the K3) in a properly designed receiver should be totally unnecessary. > > > ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
In reply to this post by Bill W4ZV
There were at least a few of us running LP and QRP who did OK with our K3's : K1HTV, OH1VR/VP9, OK1FKD... and, at least, one future convert that I know about.
Many of us "little guns" don't have the antenna advantages of the "big boys", both the K2 and K3 have been great equalizers in the rough and tumble 160M contesting arena. 73, Julius n2wn
Julius Fazekas
N2WN Tennessee Contest Group http://www.k4ro.net/tcg/index.html Tennessee QSO Party http://www.tnqp.org/ Elecraft K2 #4455 Elecraft K3/100 #366 Elecraft K3/100 |
I wasn't trying to list every K3 in the contest...just those used in the Top Ten of the two most competitive categories (Multi Op High Power and Single Op High Power). If you want to see more detail of all K3s in the contest, I posted how to do that below: http://www.mail-archive.com/elecraft@mailman.qth.net/msg90719.html 73, Bill |
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