Thank you ajaynejr.
btw- yes, I think the rolled off treble you mentioned was mostly a result of narrow RF bandwidth used to improve selectivity and reduce interference from adjacent channel stations, and other strong stations on the AM band.
As a young teenager I made a radio that was just a tuned circuit with a wire on one end for an antenna, a diode and a capacitor, driving an audio amp. Bandwidth was huge, the audio had excellent high end. Predictably, I heard only the local stations at sound volume in proportion of each station's signal strength at my location.
A most interesting part of this was static from lightning strikes was heard as clicking pulse, not a crash with low end audio. This suggests subsequent bandwidth restriction in superheterodyne radio IF stages might have "smeared" the brief pulses into the booming crashes of thunderstorms when they were demodulated to audio. This in turn suggests RF noise blanking in analog early days was done at the initial RF stage, where static had a short rise time and minimum duration, and then the demodulator "integrates" it into something that might sound reasonable.
btw- yes, I think the rolled off treble you mentioned was mostly a result of narrow RF bandwidth used to improve selectivity and reduce interference from adjacent channel stations, and other strong stations on the AM band.
As a young teenager I made a radio that was just a tuned circuit with a wire on one end for an antenna, a diode and a capacitor, driving an audio amp. Bandwidth was huge, the audio had excellent high end. Predictably, I heard only the local stations at sound volume in proportion of each station's signal strength at my location.
A most interesting part of this was static from lightning strikes was heard as clicking pulse, not a crash with low end audio. This suggests subsequent bandwidth restriction in superheterodyne radio IF stages might have "smeared" the brief pulses into the booming crashes of thunderstorms when they were demodulated to audio. This in turn suggests RF noise blanking in analog early days was done at the initial RF stage, where static had a short rise time and minimum duration, and then the demodulator "integrates" it into something that might sound reasonable.
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