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I have noticed significant and unpleasant audio filter spectrum shape
differences by ear when I change filter bandwidths as well as change from LSB to USB or CW to CW reverse. This is not an issue at CW filter bandwidths but can be annoying at phone bandwidths using the 6 KHz filter. When LSB is equalized for a flat pass band (minor tweaks), USB audio is highly skewed at high frequencies. Level at 2.7 KHz is 14dB above the level at 500 Hz in USB. I am wondering if anyone else has notice the effects I am reporting on here and whether there is something I can do about it. Unless I have a bad filter, I see a possible need to save Rx equalization by selected filter and operating mode. Either that or something is wrong on my end. My guess is that the Tx audio has the same issue but I have done nothing to test that yet. The changes in sound quality are not trivial. Filters are properly enabled and set up with proper offset and gain. There were no signals in the pass band when the data below was collected. I collected data to characterize the issue using Spectrum Laboratory V2.7, using K3 line level out. The two filters characterized here are the stock 2.7 KHz five-pole filter and the 6 KHz 8-pole filter. I illustrate measurements at BW = 2.7 KHz and BW = 2.8 KHz below with USB and LSB. I first set up the Rx audio equalization to obtain a maximally flat pass band on LSB and the 2.7 KHz filter at 2.7 KHz BW. For LSB The 2.7 KHz filter at 2.7 KHz BW is flat (zero slope) from 250 Hz to 2750 Hz with an absolute level of -62 dB at 1KHz, an arbitrary reference point to compare overall gain changes. When I shift BW to 2.8 KHz (now using 6 KHz roofing filter) the audio spectrum has a slope of -1.7 dB per KHz and the 1 KHz level went down 2 dB. The LSB data isn't too bad. The problem is USB on the 6 KHz filter. For USB The 2.7 KHz filter at 2.7 KHz BW has a spectrum slope of +1.7 dB per KHz and the 1 KHz level is -64 dB. When I shift BW to 2.8 KHz (now using 6 KHz roofing filter) the audio spectrum has a slope of +5.3 dB per KHz. This is very noticeable to the ear. There is also a droop or saddle in the filter response down 6 dB in the center of the pass band and the overall level drops 8 dB (S-meter drops 2-S units on background noise). The overall effect is unpleasant with the accentuated highs and it requires an audio gain adjustment and I lose S-meter calibration. Detailed data... FL2 FL3 (Rx Eq. adjusted for flat response) LSB 2.8Khz 2.7KHz Level@1 KHz -64 dB -62 dB Slope -1.7 dB/Khz 0 dB/KHz Saddle -4 dB 0 dB FL2 FL3 USB 2.8 KHz 2.7 KHz Level@1 KHz -72 dB -64 dB Slope 5.3 dB/KHz 1.7 dB/KHz Saddle -6 dB -3 dB Saddle is defined as middle of spectrum maximum drop in level from the high points somewhere in the spectrum. The data usually "looked" like a saddle except for when it was flat. Mike Scott - AE6WA Tarzana, CA (DM04 / near LA) K3-100 #508/ KX1 #1311 _______________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Post to: [hidden email] You must be a subscriber to post to the list. Subscriber Info (Addr. Change, sub, unsub etc.): http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/subscribers.htm Elecraft web page: http://www.elecraft.com |
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