N6BV report on K3 in SS

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N6BV report on K3 in SS

Andy Faber
With Dean's permission, I am posting to the Elecraft reflector the report by
Dean Straw, N6BV, regarding his use of the K3 at K6TA in SS CW.  As you can
see, he is a convert!
  73, andy, ae6y

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
[Report by N6BV]:
My primary motivation for operating SS CW for the last 10 years has been to
contribute to the NCCC effort to get/retain the gavel for the Unlimited Club
competition.

This year I also wanted to give K6TA's new Elecraft K3 a real run for its
money on CW, comparing it directly with a Yaesu FT1000MP. I had used a pair
of FT1000MPs in SO2R for seven years operating at the K6TA station.

RECEIVER SETUP

I had used a K3 at the semi-serious CQWW Phone competition at N6RO's place
at the end of October and I was very impressed with it (especially with the
1.8 kHz roofing filter -- SSB sounded very good even with this narrow
bandwidth). But I consider the CW SS as a much higher stress test for any
receiver, because of all the super-strong domestic signals crowding each and
every kHz of any band that happens to be open.

The K3 at K6TA had two roofing filters installed: a 2.8 kHz 8-pole filter
and a 400 Hz 8-pole filter. The venerable FT1000MP had 500 and 250 Hz
filters in both the 8 MHz and 455 kHz IFs.

For both radios I set the AGC decay time constant to "fast." The AGC
constants available in the setup configuration menu were left at factory
defaults in the K3.

I operated the K3 with the preamp "on," but on the FT1000MP I was forced to
set the IPO to "off" (the equivalent of preamp off) to hold down overload.

RECEIVER OVERLOAD

During the CW SS, even on a clear frequency, the FT1000MP has always showed
annoying low levels of what I call "diddley boops" -- more commonly referred
to as "IMD products" -- created somewhere in the receiver chain. (I've been
told that the IMD is better in FT1000MPs that have had the Inrad roofing
filter modification installed, but this had not been done for the FT1000MP
at K6TA.) In SSB operation and in casual CW operation, I've never been
bothered by FT1000MP IMD. But the CW SS is a different sort of animal, as I
said.

By contrast, the K3 exhibited no IMD, even when I opened up the receive
bandwidth to 2.8 kHz and discovered that I was surrounded by S9+30 dB
signals. No "diddley boops" at all. Furthermore, the number of signals with
objectionable key clicks was far less than I heard using the FT1000MP,
especially when the rain static on Saturday night rose to S9+20 dB and I was
forced to use the Noise Blanker on each radio to try to knock down the
noise. The K3's Noise Blanker, used with non-aggressive settings for both
hardware and DSP noise blanking, did help knock down rain static (to only S8
or so) while creating far less overload problems than did the 'MP's Noise
Blanker.

Interestingly, the K3's 400 Hz filter sounded somehow narrower than the 500
Hz filters in the 'MP, more than the nominal difference between the rated
filter bandwidths. I used the 250-Hz filters in the 'MP when I used it for
S&P in SO2R on the second band, while I kept the K3 bandwidth (both roofing
and DSP) set to 400 Hz 95% of the time I used it as the CQ radio. And I didn
't find that I had to use the RIT very often with the 400 Hz filter, while I
did have to use the RIT often when I had to narrow the DSP filtering down to
250 Hz while CQing.

COPYING THE FULL EXCHANGE

The quality of the K3's audio, the lack of overload and the action of the
AGC seemed to make copying a full exchange much easier for me. I feel like I
required less fills on the K3 than on the FT1000MP. (We'll see after log
checking whether my UBN report is actually better.) Even when a QRP station
faded considerably, the K3 had enough gain reserve and sensitivity so that
the station didn't disappear altogether.

In fact, the "presence" of signals on the K3 reminds me of the way my old
Collins 75S3B used to work, with strong signals sounding stronger (without
blasting your ears), while weak signals sounded weaker, but still copiable.
I think Elecraft has gotten the "AGC slope" characteristics right in the K3.
(That refers to the curve of output audio level versus input RF signal to
the receiver.)

I also like the way the K3's RF Gain control works like a conventional AGC
system (the FT1000MP does also), with the S meter rising as the RF Gain
control is backed off, in effect setting the AGC threshold level. (I dislike
the way the RF Gain control works in my Orion I, but that's another story.)

K3 TRANSMITTER

K6TA is located relatively close to N6RO, and he was using two K3s in SO2R
this SS CW. I tuned across Ken's S9+30 dB signal numerous times and marveled
at his complete lack of key clicks. Elecraft got this right on the K3, for
sure. I still heard far too many weaker signals ("only" S9) with really
objectionable key clicks.

Before the contest, K6TA marveled at how the Alpha 87 "enjoyed" the RF
coming from the K3 -- with no leading-edge spikes in power that would
occasionally shut off the amplifier while using the FT1000MP.

Oh yes, this is the first SS I've used Win-Test. It is a pleasure to use,
especially to someone who has used CT for more than 15 years. Win-Test made
it easy to set up packet and worked perfectly without any crashes of any
sort. The ability to point-and-click on unworked stations in the bandmaps
was wonderful. Of course, the number of blown packet spots remains high
enough that I don't think I'll get totally addicted to this kind of
operation!

I experimented with my sleep strategy, but I'm not convinced that helped my
final score. And I'm not going to claim that using the K3 made Sunday
afternoon actually fun during CW SS, but it made it more tolerable. I think
my error rate went down compared to previous years.

I thank Ken (K6TA) and Kay (K6KO) for their wonderful hospitality and for
the use of their great station. They are fantastic hosts.

73, Dean, N6BV

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Filter questions

Dave-W5UN
I will ask here before calling Elecraft.

First, I have the following filters installed on the main rcvr, all 8
pole: 6 Khz, 2.8kHz, 1.8 kHz, 400 Hz, 250 Hz.

There are two issues:

1. When I turn my 250 Hz filter on in config, and then select that
filter (which is FL5 here)I can hear noise coming through but no cw
signals come through. I can see the signals on my PowerSDR/LP-PAN
setup and CW Skimmer. Signal comes through all the rest of the
filters O.K. Yes, I opened the radio, and all the filters are installed.

2. I run CW Skimmer with my K3. When I change filters, the CW offset
signal shown on CW Skimmer changes. I thought the 8 pole filters had
no offset. Is anyone else experiencing this? Any comment appreciated.

Dave, W5UN

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RE: Filter questions

Dick Dievendorff
Is it possible that your narrow filter has cut off the desired signal?

Make sure your CW pitch is reasonable and you've tuned a little bit for the
signal with the narrow filter.  

If your CW pitch is different from where you're listening at a wider
bandwidth, the signal can disappear when you tighten the bandwidth.  I'd
recommend tuning in a steady carrier with the CWT and/or spot buttons, and
then narrow the bandwidth.

If the CWT doesn't center at a comfortable pitch (this is a personal
preference), adjust it by entering CW mode, HOLD the Pitch button (it's
labeled "Spot" for its tap function) and rotate VFO A until you get a pitch
you like.  I prefer about 400 Hz, your preference may be different than
this.

Also make sure that the Filter Configuration has the filters enabled by
mode. The K3 Utility's Crystal Configuration Dialog can be used to quickly
view the filter configuration, it's available by clicking the "Edit Crystal
Filters" button on the K3 Utility's Config menu.

I understand that you may have tried all this...

Dick, K6KR


-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email]
[mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of W5UN
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2008 9:23 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: [Elecraft] Filter questions

I will ask here before calling Elecraft.

First, I have the following filters installed on the main rcvr, all 8
pole: 6 Khz, 2.8kHz, 1.8 kHz, 400 Hz, 250 Hz.

There are two issues:

1. When I turn my 250 Hz filter on in config, and then select that
filter (which is FL5 here)I can hear noise coming through but no cw
signals come through. I can see the signals on my PowerSDR/LP-PAN
setup and CW Skimmer. Signal comes through all the rest of the
filters O.K. Yes, I opened the radio, and all the filters are installed.

2. I run CW Skimmer with my K3. When I change filters, the CW offset
signal shown on CW Skimmer changes. I thought the 8 pole filters had
no offset. Is anyone else experiencing this? Any comment appreciated.

Dave, W5UN

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RE: Filter questions

Paul-285

>I prefer about 400 Hz, your preference may be different than this.

Dick,

What process did you go through to arrive at 400 cycles?

I ask because I'm relatively new to CW and have experimented with the
available frequencies in the K3, and find that if the signal is down
in the noise, that higher frequencies seem to jump out of the noise
better. However if the signal is strong, I prefer lower frequencies
such as 400.

OTOH, being relatively new to CW, I am open minded and defer to
experience and would like to hear what you and others have to say on
this subject.

73,

Paul

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RE: Filter questions

Dick Dievendorff
Don't defer to anyone else's experience, use your own preferences!

Some of this depends on your personal aural frequency response curve. My
high-end response is down because of my age (I'm nearing my 62nd birthday),
and perhaps some questionable decisions I made in the past about music
volume, operating mainframe chain printers with the cover open because it's
quicker to change paper that way, radio contests with the headphone volume
up way too high in an attempt to dig weak signals out of the noise, and some
exposure to Naval gunfire.  

Some CW enthusiasts opt for relatively low frequencies because they are able
to discern one signal from another more easily if the relative frequency
difference is larger.

Eric Scace, K3NA, is usually worth listening to (or reading) on a lot of
topics; psychoacoustics seem to be of particular interest to Eric. He has an
interesting post on the TopBand Forum on this topic:

http://lists.contesting.com/_topband/2006-11/msg00205.html

There's also a link to a hearing test to help you understand your own
capabilities in that post.

One of the most proficient pileup competitors I have ever encountered is
Fred Laun, K3ZO.  He regularly appears at the top at the Dayton Pileup
Competition.  Fred recalled that he used to hone his pileup skills when he
was operating from Thailand. His was a rare DX prefix to many.  He'd get on
one evening and just work stations from, for example, Poland, ignoring all
the others in the pileup for that evening.

There's a post about Fred and his preference for low-frequency CW pitch
here:

http://www.mail-archive.com/elecraft@.../msg51753.html

And my ex-roommate Ward Silver has a couple of paragraphs on the ARRL
Contest Rate Sheet:

http://www.arrl.org/contests/update/index.html?issue=2006-12-13

Again, this is a personal preference issue, there are no "right" or "wrong"
answers.  

It takes a while to get used to listening at lower CW pitch.

If you're trying to dig a single signal out of the noise you may have one
preference.
 
If you're being called by a dozen loud callers and want to be able to pull
one complete call sign out of the pileup each time, you may have a different
preference.

73 de Dick, K6KR






-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email]
[mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of [hidden email]
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2008 12:55 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: RE: [Elecraft] Filter questions


>I prefer about 400 Hz, your preference may be different than this.

Dick,

What process did you go through to arrive at 400 cycles?

I ask because I'm relatively new to CW and have experimented with the
available frequencies in the K3, and find that if the signal is down
in the noise, that higher frequencies seem to jump out of the noise
better. However if the signal is strong, I prefer lower frequencies
such as 400.

OTOH, being relatively new to CW, I am open minded and defer to
experience and would like to hear what you and others have to say on
this subject.

73,

Paul

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Re: Filter questions

Bill W4ZV
In reply to this post by Dave-W5UN

Dave Blaschke wrote
I will ask here before calling Elecraft.

First, I have the following filters installed on the main rcvr, all 8
pole: 6 Khz, 2.8kHz, 1.8 kHz, 400 Hz, 250 Hz.

There are two issues:

1. When I turn my 250 Hz filter on in config, and then select that
filter (which is FL5 here)I can hear noise coming through but no cw
signals come through. I can see the signals on my PowerSDR/LP-PAN
setup and CW Skimmer. Signal comes through all the rest of the
filters O.K. Yes, I opened the radio, and all the filters are installed.

2. I run CW Skimmer with my K3. When I change filters, the CW offset
signal shown on CW Skimmer changes. I thought the 8 pole filters had
no offset. Is anyone else experiencing this? Any comment appreciated.

Dave, W5UN
Both issues sound like there could be an offset problem in the 250 Hz filters.  I only have 5-pole CW filters here but I know Ed W0YK has reported offsets in his 8-pole 400/250s of up to 80 Hz.  Given that the 250 Hz 8-pole is actually around 370 Hz wide according to Inrad plots, I don't see how even an 80 Hz offset could cause the problem you noted in #1 above.  However I believe most of the 8-pole filters will have the problem in #2 above since they do not truly have zero offset.  

If I used 8-pole CW filters, I would measure the actual offset and enter it into the Filter Configuration menu.  This would solve problem #2 above and it might also tell you whether you have a defective 250 Hz filter causing #1 above.
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Re: Filter questions

Dave-W5UN
Elecraft believes the 250 hz filter problem is a defective filter,
and is sending a new replacement..

Bill, does your  CW Skimmer signals stay right on frequency as you
switch filters (as happens automatically with changing  DSP width
when filters are enabled)?

Dave, W5UN

At 23:03 11/17/2008, you wrote:



>Dave Blaschke wrote:
> >
> > I will ask here before calling Elecraft.
> >
> > First, I have the following filters installed on the main rcvr, all 8
> > pole: 6 Khz, 2.8kHz, 1.8 kHz, 400 Hz, 250 Hz.
> >
> > There are two issues:
> >
> > 1. When I turn my 250 Hz filter on in config, and then select that
> > filter (which is FL5 here)I can hear noise coming through but no cw
> > signals come through. I can see the signals on my PowerSDR/LP-PAN
> > setup and CW Skimmer. Signal comes through all the rest of the
> > filters O.K. Yes, I opened the radio, and all the filters are installed.
> >
> > 2. I run CW Skimmer with my K3. When I change filters, the CW offset
> > signal shown on CW Skimmer changes. I thought the 8 pole filters had
> > no offset. Is anyone else experiencing this? Any comment appreciated.
> >
> > Dave, W5UN
> >
>
>Both issues sound like there could be an offset problem in the 250 Hz
>filters.  I only have 5-pole CW filters here but I know Ed W0YK has reported
>offsets in his 8-pole 400/250s of up to 80 Hz.  Given that the 250 Hz 8-pole
>is actually around 370 Hz wide according to Inrad plots, I don't see how
>even an 80 Hz offset could cause the problem you noted in #1 above.  However
>I believe most of the 8-pole filters will have the problem in #2 above since
>they do not truly have zero offset.
>
>If I used 8-pole CW filters, I would measure the actual offset and enter it
>into the Filter Configuration menu.  This would solve problem #2 above and
>it might also tell you whether you have a defective 250 Hz filter causing #1
>above.
>
>--
>View this message in context:
>http://n2.nabble.com/N6BV-report-on-K3-in-SS-tp1462519p1511809.html
>Sent from the Elecraft mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
>_______________________________________________
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>
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Re: Filter questions

Bill W4ZV
> On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 6:45 PM, W5UN <[hidden email]> wrote:

> Elecraft believes the 250 hz filter problem is a defective filter, and is
> sending a new replacement..

 I thought so...

> Bill, does your  CW Skimmer signals stay right on frequency as you switch
> filters (as happens automatically with changing  DSP width when filters are
> enabled)?

No Skimmer does shift.  PowerSDR does not shift because Larry N8LP and
Scott WU2X read the filter offsets and adjust accordingly.

 73,  Bill  W4ZV
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RE: Filter questions

Jim Brown-10
In reply to this post by Dick Dievendorff
On Mon, 17 Nov 2008 14:42:22 -0800, Dick Dievendorff wrote:

>Eric Scace, K3NA, is usually worth listening to (or reading) on a lot of
>topics; psychoacoustics seem to be of particular interest to Eric. He has an
>interesting post on the TopBand Forum on this topic:

>http://lists.contesting.com/_topband/2006-11/msg00205.html

As a member of the Acoustical Society, Fellow of the Audio Engineering
Society, and a student of psychoacoustics (the science of how we hear and
interpret sound), I can vouch for the wisdom of Eric's advice. I've
independently given the same advice.

Someone else noted another good reason for listening to lower pitched CW --
hearing loss tends to be greatest at high frequencies!

73,

Jim K9YC


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