yeah that all makes sense.
I would have thought an HT's receive selectivity would be far to wide to
properly tune a band pass can properly?
You could get it in the right ball park no doubt, but it would be difficult
to find the center peak with a typical HT on FM.
Will the hampod speak signal generator output level in micro volts? IE, if
you want to check the sensativity of a receiver, you adjust the signal
generator down until you can no longer hear the 1K tone, then bring it up a
hair until you just hear the tone through the open squelch...IE 0.18uV etc?
Or if you are aligning/peaking the receiver in a repeater, can you quiery
the hampod to tell you what the signal generator out put is in UV so you can
have a general starting point to see how much it needs to be peaked?
73
Colin, V A6BKX
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Butch Bussen" <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2014 5:31 PM
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: The mystery transceiver is identified!
> Actually, the scop has a bunch of switches which don't do us much good.
> There are 4 main rotary switches, generate, receive dup, and dup-gen.
> Mode switch, fm, am ssb and so forth, and a range-mode switch for each
> meter. Hope that makes sense. Tone levels are set by pots, but deviation
> can be read on the meter with speech. H T H.
> 73
> Butch
> WA0VJR
> Node 3148
> Wallace, ks.
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