Welcome
Overview
Why Quality Audio?
Goals
Disclaimer
Pictures of my Shack and other Hams
working in
Audio
Shack Photos
Photos of Other Hams
Transceiver Setup
Icom
Kenwood
Yaesu
Setting up Audio Gear
DEQ 2496
Murf Box
Setup for HamAlyzer
Connecting it all together
EQ Behringer 1100/1124
Recording
Where to get Audio Equipment
Commercial Links
Ham Links
Help with Audio Related Problems
Grounding and RFI
Questions answered #1
Questions answered #2
Questions answered #3
How to fix DSP-100 problems
(NEW) in Questions answered #3
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Why Quality Audio?
I started in amateur radio way back in 1958.
Everything for me was CW in those days and the only time I heard phone
was of course when I tuned to the part of the band where I was not
allowed to operate and listen to the boys doing AM. I would occasionally
go to one of my many Elmer’s in those days and listen to them talk on
the phone bands most of the time they were involved in traffic nets. But
still I sit there and listen with amazement and wonder looking forward
to the day I could have one of those fancy D-104 Lolly-Pop microphones
of my own. Then as I remember it along about 1960 or so we started to
hear a phone mode called SSB. Boy did that sound like Donald Duck was at
the mic. Most of the old timers laughed and said they would never go to
that mode and sound funny like that. Well I went away to college about
that time and by the time I got back on the air; everyone was sounding
like Donald Duke and liking it.
Things have progressed and transmitter
and receiver technology have made great strides. The SSB audio is still
not up to the quality that the old AM was, but there is no carrier and
over all SSB is pretty well accepted as the standard phone mode today.
Now asking what SSB audio sounds like
and what it should sound like should be and easy question to answer, but
it isn’t. What one operator likes is not necessarily what another will
think is pleasing and proper. The same type of SSB audio may or may not
be the best for all conditions and experiences in amateur radio. We have
contesting, DXing, rag chewing, traffic handling, emergency
communications and other activities that require SSB audio. I am not
sure that we should not employee different SSB audio for different
conditions and activities. I am not sure one size fits all in SSB audio.
I am working in a field of SSB audio
that I call Enhanced Audio or EA. Some have called me and ESSBer or HI
FI audio enthusiast, but I am not. ESSB stands for EXTENDED Single Side
Band. Not Enhanced Single Side Band as some think it is. To qualify for
the lowest rung of ESSB you must have a total bandwidth of at least
3Khz. That is to transmit from 0HZ to at least 3 KHz or 100Hz to 3.1 KHz
or any bandwidth equivalent. And true ESSB goes way beyond that number
up to and including 6 KHz wide for the best quality. I can do this mode,
I have the equipment and very occasionally when the band I am on is
mostly vacant, I will bring that equipment on board and operate until
someone complains or I notice the band is getting crowded.
If you are going to work in EA or
quality audio, you have to come to an understanding in your mind about
what quality audio is and is not. I have heard this phrase over and over
and you probably have too. “I get great unsolicited audio reports all
the time”. Well what does that
mean? Is the guy on the other end some kind of authority or expert? Is
he measuring your audio on some form of test equipment? Does he have a
very high quality receiver and antenna that can actually hear the great
audio? How is he listening to the great audio, in head phones over a 2
inch speaker, or with an audio amplifier and studio monitor speakers?
How does he have his receiver set up? Is he using narrow or wide
filters? Is the noise blanker on and is he zero beat? To feel good about
the great audio report, you have to be able to answer some if not all of
these questions. Maybe, just maybe, the guy on the other end thinks you
sound just like he does, so of course he has great audio, and so you.
Maybe he does not want to embarrass you so he just says you have great
audio, kind of tongue in cheek. Maybe
he is just trying to be friendly and have something to say. Maybe his
audio is so poor that everyone sounds great to him. There are many
reasons for the great audio report, and of course maybe you really do
have great audio, but what is that?
My definition is not simple or
completely black or white. Great audio must change with the conditions
and activities you are doing. I do not believe there is one audio, or
universal audio that is great for all areas of amateur radio. For those
who get so emotional and over blown and start screaming and interfering
with an on going QSO because you do not like what they sound like, well
all I can say is get a life and turn the VFO knob. ESSBers screaming at
DXers and contesters, and DXers and contesters screaming at ESSBers or
guys with what they would consider wider than normal audio is also not
helpful. In my mind good conversational audio and I mean that type of
audio you would use with your buddies in a round table chat on the bands
should be as close to what you sound like if you were in the room with
the person as possible. Limited background noise, with voice tones as
close to a male if you are a male and like a female if that is what you
are. Not like you do on the telephone that is not real.
Now here is the question that I want to
ask anyone reading this to send me mail and answer this question. I do
not want to hear anything about extra wideness or IMD or anything else,
because we are talking about the best world here where everything is
working as it should and everything is setup correctly.
If
a typical male voice has meaningful audio levels down to 80 Hz, as most
professional studies and universities have found, how can you duplicate
the natural voice when you roll off everything below 400Hz? How can you
duplicate the male voice when you artificially boost audio at around 2
KHz by means of the design of a particular line of microphones? I am
talking hear about band conditions where most everyone in the group is
59 or better.
I
agree right of the top that it is hard to have long distance
communications going if you do not employee these audio techniques. That
is a given. But still in ideal conditions, whey is doing the above
mentioned the correct way to duplicate the male voice realistically?
Unless you can give me a better answer than anyone else has so far I
will submit that it is best to start right off buying equipment and
setting up your station so that you can faithfully reproduce your SSB
audio voice as close to what you would sound like in your living room.
Nothing better and nothing worse.
Conversely, I will say here again as I
have in other places on this page that guys who are intentionally
boosting frequencies below 70, 60, 50, or lower in the audio spectrum
are just as bad as the guys who boost the 2 KHz zone, cut their voices
off at 400 Hz and run their rigs at a total band pass of 1.8 KHz or
less. There is nothing down there in almost all voices but rumble and
noise. It sounds boomy, mushy, and just plain bad. You are doing a
disservice to those who are earnestly trying to have quality audio. It
does not sound sexy, it does not sound good at all. Every professional
working in amateur radio will tell you that those frequencies should be
left to recording studios and they have no place in amateur radio. You
are really causing IMD and guys adjacent to you do have a right to tell
you so, you had better listen. I have guys send me EQs and I ask for
them sometimes. I am amazed when I see boosts at those low frequencies.
The guys who know what they are doing have cuts down there not boosts.
I have heard many guys working contests
and DX. Most sound reasonable but not conversational. They get through
and work the DX. Many times the DX station sounds as bad as they do. But
this is still no excuse to butcher your audio. You are still responsible
for putting out clean understandable quality audio. I have worked every
entity on the current DXCC list. I am at the top of the Honor Roll. I do
not, and will not, butcher my audio just to get a new one. I may not use
my best conversational audio setup, but I am not going to put all knobs
to the right and sound awful just to work some new DX station.
Back to the great audio reports again.
What do they mean? They mean nothing. I have gotten them with narrow tin
can audio, ESSB audio, what I call clicker or had mic audio, and just
about every combination. I have had DX pileups stop while the operator
tells me how great I sound. I have had latterly hundreds if not
thousands of guys come by on 14.178 and tell me how wonderful I sound.
It is nice to hear but it means very little. What really matters is when
someone who I know, knows what they are doing comes in and tells me that
I have to big a valley at 320 Hz or I am cracking on the top end or that
I have too much background noise on my signal. I know they are giving
good advice and are not just blowing smoke up my skirt like a lot the
great audio reports are in fact.
Ok there you have it, why have good
audio? Now I will click my heals and go back over the rainbow to the land of OZ
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