rorban said:Tom Wells said:I have read this over before, a quick look at the chart of sample radios is very telling.
Why is the 100th percentile bandwidth radio 10 db down at 9600 khz?
Top of my head response -- it's probably one of the Wal-Mart cheapies with a minimal amount of IF filtering. If so, it will squeal like the proverbial stuck pig after sundown because of 10 kHz beats.
Making a usable wideband radio used to be expensive because of the need for a stable 10 kHz notch filter and a quick rolloff above 10 kHz. DSP-based radios make this cheaper, but they are still not down to the $20 price point that many customers look for.
A passive filter in the low-impedance path of the speaker is simple, stable and cheap. It can achieve a >very< narrow -42 db notch with only 2 db insertion loss. I found the design in a Radio-Electronics magazine from 1947 presented as an improvemnt over trying to create a tight notch in high-impedance
circuits, where you can't achieve high enough Q. It was designed for use in AM hi-fis of the day, most of which whistled pretty well.
You don't want to roll off the high frequencies, it is the audio equivalent of sharp vision. You do want to kill the whistle itself.
We correct vision loss and hearing loss in individuals. I cannot accept creating "hearing loss" intentionally to an extent that it's crippling intelligibility
and makes music sound awful.
I know parts count in cheapies is critical, but this requires one inductor, two caps and a resistance calibrated to R of the voice coil.
I have added them to almost all my AM radios and leave them in circuit, where they do affect the FM sound minimally.
When you hear AM with high frequency response above 10 khz with the beat only stripped out, you'd never believe how much
info is there, masked by the whistle or in the roll-off of narrowband radios.
For a decent quality radio, the parts count increase is well worth the result. There is no good reason why such ready-to-go networks could not
be available to match standard speaker R values, resistance, not impedance. It would be one more part on a board.
If a low-r trimmer were used, one design would match all speakers. I can find the values and post this simple circuit if any are interested in adding
it to your radios. I also wound one up for 5 khz for shortwave listening on the '36 Philco, but made it switchable.
And yes, there's monkey chatter on overlap of program material when signal ratio of desired/adjacent gets too low.
Rotate the antenna, try sidetuning to see if one sideband is cleaner,
then consider that maybe the radio needs alignment or is hopelessly wide.
Or that you're listening to a pretty weak signal.
Cheap radios aren't necessarily insensitive. Every single radio is subject to being a "good one" or a dog, unless the design itself
offers no hope due to inadequacy.