Here in Altamonte Springs it's wdae day and night. I get spanish at night as well. Another question. I can hear 540 wflf blasting away on 620. Any ideas? I'll have to try and see if it happens away from my house.
How far away are you from WFLF's tower site? You're probably getting a harmonic of some sort.
Hello. I'm in Altamonte Springs FL. I have no idea how far that is from wflf's transmitter sight. I just bought a cc 2e radio and that radio has no 540 harmonics on 620.
Looks like you're about 20 miles from WFLF's site, which would likely be a little far for a harmonic....although it is 50kw on the low end of the dial, pretty much aimed right at you. Still, Bruce is more knowledgeable about this stuff than me, so you're probably better off with his diagnosis of the issue.
Here in Altamonte Springs it's wdae day and night. I get spanish at night as well. Another question. I can hear 540 wflf blasting away on 620. Any ideas? I'll have to try and see if it happens away from my house.
Looks like you're about 20 miles from WFLF's site, which would likely be a little far for a harmonic....although it is 50kw on the low end of the dial, pretty much aimed right at you. Still, Bruce is more knowledgeable about this stuff than me, so you're probably better off with his diagnosis of the issue.
Please let's keep the technical terms correct
Please let's keep the technical terms correct....a Harmonic is the primary signal multiplied....2x, 3x, 4x ,etc.....A signal on another channel that is not harmonically related is either a spurious emissions from the main signal source or due to a mix of other signals (intermodulation mixing distortion...or IMD or just plain intermod)
Could also be due to front end overload......a spectrum analyzer would show if 540 is clean or not....
I am trying to figure out what combination of local stations could also mix with the LO and somehow produce an image of 540 on the dial at 620. The LO of the radio should be operating at 995 kHz. It might potentially have a second harmonic at 1440. But 1440 is also a local station. If it interacts with 1520, you would have 80 kHz. That would give the offset, but how it might be mixing it - I don't know. The point is - antenna and RF stages are not brick walls, anything down the slope in the stop bands will mix with the LO in the radio. And the LO might not be a perfect sine wave, if it has a second harmonic then you will get images of locals at strange places.
Which leads me to a potential solution to an issue of my own. My $31 Radio Shack wonder LW, SW, AM, FM radio I recently got on clearance has an interesting issue. There is no 540 here, but there is a 1520 that pumps out 25kW just a few miles up the road. I get an image of them right on 620 - so - 1520 minus 900 kHz and you get 620! That station is leaking into the LO of my radio and acting like a second LO frequency! I suspect your issue is similar. The slightest touch of alignment might get rid of it, or perhaps shield the LO better. My Radio Shack is pretty open layout inside: http://earmark.net/gesr/2000629.htm - see step 13. That is more space than I would like to the oscillator section. But I don't use it for AM, its strong point is FM.
The radio's an updated ATS505, schematic is available online for the original (they use a different AF chip on the Radio Shack World Receiver than they did on earlier 505's -- maybe new ATS505's have them also).
As you probably figured out (I just looked at your tech page) the SW goes through a separate RF amp transistor, but the MW section runs into the IF chip similarly to your average boombox or clock radio.
Mine has great selectivity on MW, for some reason (maybe the ceramic filter is a good one). I have no overload issues on MW on mine, but I'm in a low signal area. Works well with an external loop. I was able to DX some weak adjacents with the 20-629 I couldn't with some of my other radios (Superadios, TRF, DX-375, etc.).
PS -- on your tech page you mention the MW performance might be impaired because of the short loopstick. I'm wondering if it isn't something else. I have other Sangean / RS radios with similar sized loopsticks that are hotter on MW (sensitivity wise) -- including the DX-350's, which circuitry wise aren't much different from a boombox / clock radio on MW -- just the antenna going into the IF chip through the standard coils & stuff (i.e., no external RF amp).
I patched in a 200 mm loop antenna and AM was as good as any non-tuned RF radio I own. But there isn't really room in the case for a bigger ferrite bar, and the LW coil is a problem. So I left it stock. It's strong point is FM - with the narrow ceramic filters it is better than any other portable I own.
If you have a link to the schematic of the other radio, I would be grateful.