Cheif was asking about a wideband air monitor in another thread. I've liked some Sonys, my 1936 Philcos, some car radios, etc,
all of which are fine with my 100mw, but all consumer gear presumes it won't get used in near-field AM reception.
No shielding, AC line not bypassed both sides to common, poor agc in high DC condition, bandwidth limitations,
and non-linearities of PLL detection makes it hard to find anything that sounds quite like the audio you're really putting out.
My favorites have always the cleanest. So he reminded of the air monitor used at WNWI at Valpo Tech.
This place was built by hi-fi nuts at a radio engineering school. Foot-thick doors, all the glass, Main studio, conference studio,
and production booth, Hand built huge bass traps and incredibly hi-fidelity monitor sound in the main studio.
The station was about 200 feet from the tower, and in one class or another, I learned that the air monitor was a diode at
the tower base, into to the monitor amp and that sent back to the studio.
Then I wondered why I'd never tried that here at home on my play pipsqueak 100mw.
Tapped the antenna out with 100 pf, one side that to a germanium diode, shunted with 100 ohms.
Connected mic input of laptop across the diode loaded by the hundred ohms.
Naturally, a real station wouldn't need no stinkin 100 puffs to couple it.
Whew! I'me just sorta blown away here with the headphones for the past hour.
The definition seems impossible, it's not just frequency response, it's the elimination of so many places
in receivers where non-linearities accumulate in the sound of every design.
It's like an AM audio macro lens. Is anybody out there in professional AM land doing it this way, is it, was it common?
It's far too cheap for you not to try this out.
This whole receiver is hanging in mid-air literally, allygator clipped into the parts hand twisted, then allygator clipped to
the end of audio cable into the laptop. And it's so shockingly clear, compared to the most expensive and finest AM tuners I have
encountered in my whole life, and I've been at it 45 years. No hum, no buzz, no frequency distortion from any "selectivity".
Every element sounds like there's no transmitter at all in the way. Which is what I was trying for, all along.
all of which are fine with my 100mw, but all consumer gear presumes it won't get used in near-field AM reception.
No shielding, AC line not bypassed both sides to common, poor agc in high DC condition, bandwidth limitations,
and non-linearities of PLL detection makes it hard to find anything that sounds quite like the audio you're really putting out.
My favorites have always the cleanest. So he reminded of the air monitor used at WNWI at Valpo Tech.
This place was built by hi-fi nuts at a radio engineering school. Foot-thick doors, all the glass, Main studio, conference studio,
and production booth, Hand built huge bass traps and incredibly hi-fidelity monitor sound in the main studio.
The station was about 200 feet from the tower, and in one class or another, I learned that the air monitor was a diode at
the tower base, into to the monitor amp and that sent back to the studio.
Then I wondered why I'd never tried that here at home on my play pipsqueak 100mw.
Tapped the antenna out with 100 pf, one side that to a germanium diode, shunted with 100 ohms.
Connected mic input of laptop across the diode loaded by the hundred ohms.
Naturally, a real station wouldn't need no stinkin 100 puffs to couple it.
Whew! I'me just sorta blown away here with the headphones for the past hour.
The definition seems impossible, it's not just frequency response, it's the elimination of so many places
in receivers where non-linearities accumulate in the sound of every design.
It's like an AM audio macro lens. Is anybody out there in professional AM land doing it this way, is it, was it common?
It's far too cheap for you not to try this out.
This whole receiver is hanging in mid-air literally, allygator clipped into the parts hand twisted, then allygator clipped to
the end of audio cable into the laptop. And it's so shockingly clear, compared to the most expensive and finest AM tuners I have
encountered in my whole life, and I've been at it 45 years. No hum, no buzz, no frequency distortion from any "selectivity".
Every element sounds like there's no transmitter at all in the way. Which is what I was trying for, all along.