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Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: You don't seem to understand there is NO quality difference in audio quality between FM & AM, unless you're equipment is faulty and introducing distortion. I've used AM & FM with amateur radio and been a professional Broadcast Engineer for 30 years so believe me you are wrong! Odd that FM seems to sweep AM out of so many markets, then. All the FM transmissions I've heard were superior to AM. I believe FM's principle advantage over AM is superior immunity to certain classes of noise - audio fidelity per se should be equal. Here's what my copy of "The ARRL Handbook for Radio Amateurs, 2002" says about FM: "The primary advantage of FM is its ability to produce a high signal-to- noise ratio when receiving a signal of only moderare strength. This has made FM popular for mobile communications services and high-quality broadcasting. However, because of the wide bandwidth required and the distortion suffered in skywave propagation, the use of FM has generally been limited to frequencies higher than 29 MHz." |
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Odd that FM seems to sweep AM out of so many markets, then. All the FM transmissions I've heard were superior to AM. That's the reason for your error. You are relying on your experience with broadcast radio, without compensating for other differences. Broadcast FM has huge bandwidth. (look it up - don't just take it from me) Broadcast AM has tiny bandwidth. (look that up too) It is the bandwidth difference that makes broadcast FM look better than broadcast AM, not the encoding difference. Think of it this way - they make concrete highways and dirt roads. Station wagons are allowed only on dirt roads, sedans are allowed only on concrete highways. I can get from NY to CA much faster in a sedan. Are sedans inherenly faster? Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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On Mon, 04 Sep 2006 18:15:29 GMT, Jose
wrote: Mxsmanic wrote: Odd that FM seems to sweep AM out of so many markets, then. All the FM transmissions I've heard were superior to AM. That's the reason for your error. You are relying on your experience with broadcast radio, without compensating for other differences. Yes, thank you for understanding that! Broadcast FM has huge bandwidth. (look it up - don't just take it from me) Broadcast AM has tiny bandwidth. (look that up too) It is the bandwidth difference that makes broadcast FM look better than broadcast AM, not the encoding difference. Think of it this way - they make concrete highways and dirt roads. Station wagons are allowed only on dirt roads, sedans are allowed only on concrete highways. I can get from NY to CA much faster in a sedan. Are sedans inherenly faster? Jose At this point I'll give up with the troll but I hope those of you who are pilots heave learned something useful. |
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On Mon, 04 Sep 2006 17:59:41 -0000, Jim Logajan
wrote: Mxsmanic wrote: writes: You don't seem to understand there is NO quality difference in audio quality between FM & AM, unless you're equipment is faulty and introducing distortion. I've used AM & FM with amateur radio and been a professional Broadcast Engineer for 30 years so believe me you are wrong! Odd that FM seems to sweep AM out of so many markets, then. All the FM transmissions I've heard were superior to AM. I believe FM's principle advantage over AM is superior immunity to certain classes of noise - audio fidelity per se should be equal. Here's what my copy of "The ARRL Handbook for Radio Amateurs, 2002" says about FM: "The primary advantage of FM is its ability to produce a high signal-to- noise ratio when receiving a signal of only moderare strength. This has made FM popular for mobile communications services and high-quality broadcasting. However, because of the wide bandwidth required and the distortion suffered in skywave propagation, the use of FM has generally been limited to frequencies higher than 29 MHz." Yes you're correct "audio fidelity per se should be equal" but you also mention bandwidth, that's critical. There are some advantages with FM, until the signal gets weak! The other reason for FM is you can easily modulate the carrier at low level. With AM you need a higher power modualtor which uses more power. |
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On Mon, 04 Sep 2006 19:47:13 +0200, Mxsmanic
wrote: writes: You don't seem to understand there is NO quality difference in audio quality between FM & AM, unless you're equipment is faulty and introducing distortion. I've used AM & FM with amateur radio and been a professional Broadcast Engineer for 30 years so believe me you are wrong! Odd that FM seems to sweep AM out of so many markets, then. All the FM transmissions I've heard were superior to AM. Because it's simple to modulate at low level and generally uses a wider bandwidth. It is only superior in signal to noise as long as the receiver detector is limiting but once the signal drops it's useless. I don't know if you would get much multipath distortion from the ground to an aircraft but if you do you would get noticable distortion. I cannot remember the exact figures but I seem to remember communication quality AM is about 8db better than the equivalent FM. SSB is about 13db better than FM. Remember you need also to specify power. |
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