1
1st of 5
Guest
Last night, while dxing the AM band, I came across 1440 which was appeared to be an echo of KRLD 1080. Was this just a mixing product or does KRLD translate to somewhere on this freq?
1st of 5 said:Yeah, only by about 300 miles. It could be a mixing product, but what is it mixing with?
KeithE4 said:1st of 5 said:Yeah, only by about 300 miles. It could be a mixing product, but what is it mixing with?
Do you have a strong local station on 720 or 1260? Could be third-order (2x-y) intermod caused by receiver overload or other non-linearity in the RF and/or mixer circuits. If x=1080 and y=720, 2x-y = 1440. If x=1260 and y=1080, 2x-y=1440.
scanman1809 said:KeithE4 said:1st of 5 said:Yeah, only by about 300 miles. It could be a mixing product, but what is it mixing with?
Do you have a strong local station on 720 or 1260? Could be third-order (2x-y) intermod caused by receiver overload or other non-linearity in the RF and/or mixer circuits. If x=1080 and y=720, 2x-y = 1440. If x=1260 and y=1080, 2x-y=1440.
I believe this explains the issue I am dealing with. I live near AM 970's transmitter and I am receiving other local stations at multiple locations on the AM band. I can pick up AM 790 on 1150, AM 840 on 1100, AM 900 on 1040, and AM 1080 on 860.