RST or S - meter readings?

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RST or S - meter readings?

Kevin Rock
Do people really use a meter to give signal reports to people?  I thought RST was to be honest reportage.
   Kevin.  KD5ONS



-----Original Message-----

>From: Thom LaCosta <[hidden email]>
>Sent: Jun 7, 2007 2:39 PM
>To: Julian G4ILO <[hidden email]>
>Cc: elecraft <[hidden email]>
>Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Re: K3: S-meter calibration (redux)
>
>On Thu, 7 Jun 2007, Julian G4ILO wrote:
>
>> But who cares about S meters? I run QRP.
>
>Well, with a fully adjustable S-Meter...you could simply ask the other station
>what S-Meter report he would like.
>
>Thom,EIEIO
>Email, Internet, Electronic Information Officer
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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Thom LaCosta
On Thu, 7 Jun 2007, Kevin Rock wrote:

> Do people really use a meter to give signal reports to people?  I thought RST was to be honest reportage.

Well, all we need do is observe signal reports in contests and the quaint notion
of RST being an honest report is nullified.

I rememeber years ago, at least a 1000, being on 75 meters AM and giving folks S
meter reports....until some real ole timer(he had to look like the folks in the
Jeeves cartoons in QST asked us where we were measuring the S units...and how.

It suddendly dawned on me that:
A. I didn't know
B. I had no interest in learning how it was done

But, I guess if the meter is there...you are tempted to use it.  Now folks with
insensitive meters had "scotch s-meters"...but we can't say that now, since it
ain't PC.

I'd really like to have a magic-eye tube instead of an S-meter...they are so
interesting...and for output power a neon bulb at least 6 inches long....they
are really interesting as you adjust your antenna and the SWR changes.

Thom,EIEIO
Email, Internet, Electronic Information Officer
k3hrn

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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

k6dgw
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
Kevin Rock wrote:
> Do people really use a meter to give signal reports to people?  I thought RST was to be honest reportage.
>    Kevin.  KD5ONS
>

It's context dependent, Kevin.  If it's a DXpedition or a contest,
everyone is 5NN.  If it's a QRP contest or QSO, everyone is 56N.  If you
get a report from me, be aware ... I made it up.  Best way to tell your
real report at my QTH is to watch and see if I answer your questions.

Can't tell you the last time I heard a CW signal that wasn't "xxN"
although chirp is a bit more common.  The whole system is an
anachronism, but old habits die hard.  We call it "CW" and mean
"communications using the International Morse Code" when CW means
"continuous waves."

But then, Sam Morse didn't exactly invent the code which carries his
name either.

73,

Fred K6DGW
- Northern California Contest Club
- CU in the 2007 CQP Oct 6-7
- www.cqp.org
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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Mike Morrow-3
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
> We call it "CW" and mean "communications using the International
> Morse Code" when CW means "continuous waves."

"Communications using Morse code by keyed continuous waves" in contrast to "communications using Morse code by keyed damped waves," which was the type of signal emitted by those old spark and arc transmitters of yesteryear, until alternators and vacuum tube oscillators were available to emit continuous waves during key-down.  CW vs. DW!

I wish that there were allowances for damped wave transmissions by amateurs somewhere above 1500 meters for one night each year.  Dust off that crystal set.

73,
Mike / KK5F
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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Ian Stirling, G4ICV, AB2GR
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
On Thursday 07 June 2007 17:44:31 Kevin Rock wrote:

> Do people really use a meter to give signal reports to people?

  I don't and never have done in my 28 years as a Radio Amateur.
My K2's bar meter is switched off.

Ian, G4ICV, AB2GR, K2 #4962
--

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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Bob Nielsen
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock

On Jun 7, 2007, at 2:44 PM, Kevin Rock wrote:

> Do people really use a meter to give signal reports to people?  I  
> thought RST was to be honest reportage.

Only when the meter needle is stuck on 9.  :^)

Maybe we should use meters calibrated for power density or field  
strength, taking into account antenna gain and feedline loss.  That  
would be honest and consistent.

73, Bob N7XY

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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy-2
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
IMHO you are correct. As I understand it R and S were intended to report on
how well a signal was being received with T being an honest report of 'tone'
in the case of CW signals. I believe that the matter of signal reports began
to become 'confused' sometime before I first got on the air in 1946 when
somebody had proposed that a 50uV signal at the receiver's input should
result in a S9 reading on the 'S' meter, and that each S unit should
represent a 6db change in signal level from S9 downwards. This 'standard'
had been used certainly in Regions 1 and 2 as far as I know by or before
1946, but most people gave reports based on how well a signal was being
received not by S meter readings (if you had a S meter!!). As an aside I
have the manual for an ancient Eddystone 640 receiver which makes note of
this 'standard'.

Worthy of note is that the input impedance of different types of receiver
having a 'S' meter varied considerably, some as high as 600 ohms for direct
connection to open wire feeders, with the result that the signal power level
required to produce a 'standard' S9 reading was not the same in all cases.

My personal preference is for a real 'S' meter that wiggles calibrated in
dbm at receiver input, but I do not use the 'S' meter when giving reports
unless antenna comparisons are being made for example.

73,
Geoff
GM4ESD


Kevin Rock <[hidden email]> wrote:

> Do people really use a meter to give signal reports to people?  I thought
> RST was to be honest reportage.
>   Kevin.  KD5ONS


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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy-2
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
IMHO you are correct. As I understand it R and S were intended to report on
how well a signal was being received with T being an honest report of 'tone'
in the case of CW signals. I believe that the matter of signal reports began
to become 'confused' sometime before I first got on the air in 1946 when
somebody had proposed that a 50uV signal at the receiver's input should
result in a S9 reading on the 'S' meter, and that each S unit should
represent a 6db change in signal level from S9 downwards. This 'standard'
had been used certainly in Regions 1 and 2 as far as I know by or before
1946, but most people gave reports based on how well a signal was being
received not by S meter readings (if you had a S meter!!). As an aside I
have the manual for an ancient Eddystone 640 receiver which makes note of
this 'standard'.

Worthy of note is that the input impedance of different types of receiver
having a 'S' meter varied considerably, some as high as 600 ohms for direct
connection to open wire feeders, with the result that the signal power level
required to produce a 'standard' S9 reading was not the same in all cases.

My personal preference is for a real 'S' meter that wiggles calibrated in
dbm at receiver input, but I do not use the 'S' meter when giving reports
unless antenna comparisons are being made for example.

73,
Geoff
GM4ESD

Kevin Rock <[hidden email]> wrote:

> Do people really use a meter to give signal reports to people?  I thought
> RST was to be honest reportage.
>   Kevin.  KD5ONS


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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

David Pratt-2
In a recent message, Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy
<[hidden email]> wrote ...
>each S unit should
>represent a 6db change in signal level from S9 downwards. This 'standard'
>had been used certainly in Regions 1 and 2 as far as I know by or before
>1946, but most people gave reports based on how well a signal was being
>received not by S meter readings (if you had a S meter!!). As an aside I
>have the manual for an ancient Eddystone 640 receiver which makes note of
>this 'standard'.

FWIW the external plug-in Eddystone S-meter (Cat.669/E)for the 640 has
printed on the scale "1 DIVISION = 4db", OTOH the internal S-meter on my
680X says "1R = 6db".
--
David G4DMP
Leeds, England, UK
------


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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Geoffrey Mackenzie-Kennedy-2
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
David Pratt <[hidden email]> wrote:

> FWIW the external plug-in Eddystone S-meter (Cat.669/E)for the 640 has
> printed on the scale "1 DIVISION = 4db", OTOH the internal S-meter on my
> 680X says "1R = 6db".
 ------------------------------------------------------------

Interesting, the 640 manual I have refers to the external S-meter ( no Cat.
reference) as a 200 uA full scale deflection meter, and then goes on to list
S units from 1 to 9 in terms of current indicated quote "based on a figure
of 6db change per unit" unquote, after the meter had been set to zero with
the "aerial and earth terminals shorted". From this and your comment it
would appear that there were two versions of  'S' meter used with the 640
based on different values of S unit increment.

73,
Geoff
GM4ESD



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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

N2EY
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
In a message dated 6/7/07 7:22:30 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
[hidden email] writes:


> Communications using Morse code by keyed continuous waves" in contrast to
> "communications using Morse code by keyed damped waves," which was the type of
> signal emitted by those old spark and arc transmitters of yesteryear, until
> alternators and vacuum tube oscillators were available to emit continuous
> waves during key-down.  CW vs. DW!
>
>

I could be mistaken, but it is my understanding that arc transmitters (like
the Poulsen arc) generated continuous (undamped) waves.

73 de Jim, N2EY


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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Jack Smith-6
Jim:

Correct -- arc transmitters operated on the negative resistance
principle, as a portion of the E vs I curve for an arc has an area of
negative resistance. As such, the arc worked as an amplifier or
oscillator, thus yielding a continuous wave. (Same concept as a  tunnel
diode, as a matter of fact.)

See pages 44-55 of "The Science of Radio" by Paul Nahin.

Jack


[hidden email] wrote:

> In a message dated 6/7/07 7:22:30 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> [hidden email] writes:
>
>
>  
>> Communications using Morse code by keyed continuous waves" in contrast to
>> "communications using Morse code by keyed damped waves," which was the type of
>> signal emitted by those old spark and arc transmitters of yesteryear, until
>> alternators and vacuum tube oscillators were available to emit continuous
>> waves during key-down.  CW vs. DW!
>>
>>
>>    
>
> I could be mistaken, but it is my understanding that arc transmitters (like
> the Poulsen arc) generated continuous (undamped) waves.
>
> 73 de Jim, N2EY
>
>
> **************************************
>  See what's free at
> http://www.aol.com.
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>  
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Re: RST or S - meter readings?

Mike Morrow-3
In reply to this post by Kevin Rock
Jim wrote:

>...it is my understanding that arc transmitters (like
>the Poulsen arc) generated continuous (undamped) waves.

Right you are.  My mistake.

I don't have any transmitters of that era in my collection, though I do have the remanants of a 100-year-old coherer receiver, and a complete WWI U.S. Army SCR-54-A (BC-14-A) crystal receiver.  The latter was designed to receive signals from observation aircraft transmitting on a BC-15 spark transmitter.

Mike / KK5F
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