Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A while back I posted a message complaining of poor reception of some
distant FM stations on my Onkyo TX-8011. I asked for recommendations for a better tuner. I received many responses, almost all suggesting that it was unlikely a new tuner would help since most were no better, and that my best bet would be to get a better antenna. (I live in a building where it is not possible to install an outside antenna). I have since tried the Terk Tower amplified antenna and another indoor antenna (donąt know the name) which were no better than a folded dipole made of 300 ohm twin lead I had been using. I intend to try the Terk FM-50 next. If find it interesting that a Bose wave radio I had been using in another room was placed next to the Onkyo, using its own antenna built into the the line cord, received FM better than the Onkyo. I have been following this newsgroup for years and am aware of the constant bashing of Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Norman" wrote ...
A while back I posted a message complaining of poor reception of some distant FM stations on my Onkyo TX-8011. I asked for recommendations for a better tuner. I received many responses, almost all suggesting that it was unlikely a new tuner would help since most were no better, and that my best bet would be to get a better antenna. (I live in a building where it is not possible to install an outside antenna). I have since tried the Terk Tower amplified antenna and another indoor antenna (donąt know the name) which were no better than a folded dipole made of 300 ohm twin lead I had been using. I intend to try the Terk FM-50 next. If find it interesting that a Bose wave radio I had been using in another room was placed next to the Onkyo, using its own antenna built into the the line cord, received FM better than the Onkyo. I have been following this newsgroup for years and am aware of the constant bashing of Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? Bose is a big enough operation that they may have accidentally hired a competent RF engineer? Accidents happen. I'm sure it was inadvertent and that they will correct that anomoly with their next model or revision. The bean-counters will see to it. |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Norman" wrote ... A while back I posted a message complaining of poor reception of some distant FM stations on my Onkyo TX-8011. I asked for recommendations for a better tuner. I received many responses, almost all suggesting that it was unlikely a new tuner would help since most were no better, and that my best bet would be to get a better antenna. (I live in a building where it is not possible to install an outside antenna). I have since tried the Terk Tower amplified antenna and another indoor antenna (donąt know the name) which were no better than a folded dipole made of 300 ohm twin lead I had been using. I intend to try the Terk FM-50 next. If find it interesting that a Bose wave radio I had been using in another room was placed next to the Onkyo, using its own antenna built into the the line cord, received FM better than the Onkyo. I have been following this newsgroup for years and am aware of the constant bashing of Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? Bose is a big enough operation that they may have accidentally hired a competent RF engineer? Accidents happen. I'm sure it was inadvertent and that they will correct that anomoly with their next model or revision. The bean-counters will see to it. Why would they do that if they have already paid for a superior design? I think a better answer might be that poor reception might be less noticeable on a small sound system with lower fidelity, poorer stereo separation, and so on (over-hyped claims for WaveRadio fidelity notwithstanding). Maybe he should try a DIY CP antenna: http://users.tns.net/~bb/attic.htm or this: http://users.tns.net/~bb/rabbit.htm |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Norman" wrote in message ... A while back I posted a message complaining of poor reception of some distant FM stations on my Onkyo TX-8011. I asked for recommendations for a better tuner. I received many responses, almost all suggesting that it was unlikely a new tuner would help since most were no better, and that my best bet would be to get a better antenna. (I live in a building where it is not possible to install an outside antenna). I have since tried the Terk Tower amplified antenna and another indoor antenna (donąt know the name) which were no better than a folded dipole made of 300 ohm twin lead I had been using. I intend to try the Terk FM-50 next. PSST: outside antenna is needed If find it interesting that a Bose wave radio I had been using in another room was placed next to the Onkyo, using its own antenna built into the the line cord, received FM better than the Onkyo. take receiver to friendly radio repair shop that has a calibrated RF signal generator. check receiver sensitivity. I have been following this newsgroup for years and am aware of the constant bashing of Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? key factors: sensitivity, selectivity, image rejection. add bandwidth, stability, overload immunity. |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Concerning antennas, can you put your antenna on or very near a window?
Amplified antennas don't help much; you can't amplify what's not there in the first place. Remember, an excessively weak FM signal is mixed with noise at about the same level, and the amplifier will amplify both. What you need is an antenna that picks up more of the desired signal. |
#6
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Receiver sensitivity does vary a good bit from unit to unit because it
depends on the beta of particular transistors. It's also very sensitive to alignment. |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Karl Uppiano" wrote in message news:f90Tf.2513$vy.2123@trnddc01... "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Norman" wrote ... A while back I posted a message complaining of poor reception of some distant FM stations on my Onkyo TX-8011. I asked for recommendations for a better tuner. I received many responses, almost all suggesting that it was unlikely a new tuner would help since most were no better, and that my best bet would be to get a better antenna. (I live in a building where it is not possible to install an outside antenna). I have since tried the Terk Tower amplified antenna and another indoor antenna (donąt know the name) which were no better than a folded dipole made of 300 ohm twin lead I had been using. I intend to try the Terk FM-50 next. If find it interesting that a Bose wave radio I had been using in another room was placed next to the Onkyo, using its own antenna built into the the line cord, received FM better than the Onkyo. I have been following this newsgroup for years and am aware of the constant bashing of Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? Bose is a big enough operation that they may have accidentally hired a competent RF engineer? Accidents happen. I'm sure it was inadvertent and that they will correct that anomoly with their next model or revision. The bean-counters will see to it. Why would they do that if they have already paid for a superior design? Because they are Bose. |
#8
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In , on 03/18/06
at 05:11 PM, Norman said: [ ... ] Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? Tuner performance does vary, even from sample to sample of the same model. How far away is that "weak" station? I'm beginning to feel that you have a multipath problem. Lower bandwidth, higher distortion tuners aren't as disrupted by multipath. I know that it does not seem fair that a higher class tuner might perform worse than a low class unit under some conditions, but it is all part of the physics. If you switch your Onkyo to MONO, does the situation improve? ----------------------------------------------------------- spam: wordgame:123(abc):14 9 20 5 2 9 18 4 at 22 15 9 3 5 14 5 20 dot 3 15 13 (Barry Mann) [sorry about the puzzle, spammers are ruining my mailbox] ----------------------------------------------------------- |
#9
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
From following your question, and from having worked in bench servicing of
tuners, and etc, I would think that your receiver most likely has a fault in the front end. It is very possible that the first RF amp stage is not working properly. You may be best off to take the receiver to a competent shop to have it tested. Find out who is servicing Onkyo in your area. You need to take it to a place that can do proper RF work. Not many of the techs are able to do this type of work. You can ask them them to verify the front end of your receiver to make sure that it is in specs. If it is defective, they can service it for you. In the past, I have seen the RF input transistor fail in receivers. In many of these receivers, the RF input transistor is a FET or CMOS device. These are extremely sensitive. These devices can be damaged from static electricity coming in on the antenna, usually from the user touching the antenna terminals when there are conditions for static discharge. The receiver can be powered off, and disconnected from the AC, and it can still be susceptible to be damaged. Also, if the set is on an outdoor antenna, a lightning strike in the near by area can do damage to the front end, just from the electrical pickup coming down the antenna leads. Most all of the consumer FM receivers, and sound systems are very close in specs for their front end. The variations in the sensitivity and selectivity from one receiver to the other is not drastic. In the same model of receiver, there will be some some characteristics change from one unit to the other, due to their particular tollerance in the calibration and assembly. -- JANA _____ "Norman" wrote in message ... A while back I posted a message complaining of poor reception of some distant FM stations on my Onkyo TX-8011. I asked for recommendations for a better tuner. I received many responses, almost all suggesting that it was unlikely a new tuner would help since most were no better, and that my best bet would be to get a better antenna. (I live in a building where it is not possible to install an outside antenna). I have since tried the Terk Tower amplified antenna and another indoor antenna (donąt know the name) which were no better than a folded dipole made of 300 ohm twin lead I had been using. I intend to try the Terk FM-50 next. If find it interesting that a Bose wave radio I had been using in another room was placed next to the Onkyo, using its own antenna built into the the line cord, received FM better than the Onkyo. I have been following this newsgroup for years and am aware of the constant bashing of Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? |
#10
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"JANA" wrote ...
From following your question, and from having worked in bench servicing of tuners, and etc, I would think that your receiver most likely has a fault in the front end. Not necessarily. It sounds like he is trying to DX without an external antenna (or even an internal antenna in a window.) |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Richard Crowley" wrote in message
... "JANA" wrote ... From following your question, and from having worked in bench servicing of tuners, and etc, I would think that your receiver most likely has a fault in the front end. Not necessarily. It sounds like he is trying to DX without an external antenna (or even an internal antenna in a window.) That could be. A FAQ where I live (a college town 75 miles from Atlanta) is "Why can't I get all the Atlanta stations any more?" The answer: "You're not in Atlanta any more." The powerful ones that beam eastward come in just fine, but you don't get the full set, simply because of the distance. |
#12
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"mc" wrote ...
That could be. A FAQ where I live (a college town 75 miles from Atlanta) is "Why can't I get all the Atlanta stations any more?" The answer: "You're not in Atlanta any more." LOL! :-)) |
#13
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() On 3/19/06 12:14 AM, in article , "Barry Mann" wrote: In , on 03/18/06 at 05:11 PM, Norman said: [ ... ] Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? Tuner performance does vary, even from sample to sample of the same model. How far away is that "weak" station? I'm beginning to feel that you have a multipath problem. Lower bandwidth, higher distortion tuners aren't as disrupted by multipath. I know that it does not seem fair that a higher class tuner might perform worse than a low class unit under some conditions, but it is all part of the physics. If you switch your Onkyo to MONO, does the situation improve? No. ----------------------------------------------------------- spam: wordgame:123(abc):14 9 20 5 2 9 18 4 at 22 15 9 3 5 14 5 20 dot 3 15 13 (Barry Mann) [sorry about the puzzle, spammers are ruining my mailbox] ----------------------------------------------------------- |
#14
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Norman wrote:
A while back I posted a message complaining of poor reception of some distant FM stations on my Onkyo TX-8011. I asked for recommendations for a better tuner. I received many responses, almost all suggesting that it was unlikely a new tuner would help since most were no better, and that my best bet would be to get a better antenna. (I live in a building where it is not possible to install an outside antenna). I have since tried the Terk Tower amplified antenna and another indoor antenna (donąt know the name) which were no better than a folded dipole made of 300 ohm twin lead I had been using. I intend to try the Terk FM-50 next. If find it interesting that a Bose wave radio I had been using in another room was placed next to the Onkyo, using its own antenna built into the the line cord, received FM better than the Onkyo. I have been following this newsgroup for years and am aware of the constant bashing of Bose by most people. In this area at least it seems better than the Onkyo. I don't understand why a small table model radio picks up weak FM signals better than the Onkyo. Why? There is a relatively new antenna on the market. It has directivity and front to back ratio. Its a little big for indoors, but I would consider it the ultimate compared to other indoor types..... http://www.solidsignal.com/prod_disp...oom=zoom#xview greg ] |
#15
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
oups.com... Unless the preamplifier has a lower noise figure than the front end of the receiver, it has no usefull effect. The noise figure is unlikely to be better as that would add as much as a cent to the manufacturing cost. Even if the preamps noise figure is lower the improvment is a couple of db at most. If the receiver would benifit from more RF amplification the manufacturer would have designed the reciever to have more gain. Well said. I think the real usefulness of amplified antennas comes with (1) very old tuners that were not designed to have adequate gain (e.g. 1960s antiques), and (2) tuners that might have lost a front-end transistor or something, and it might be easier for the owner to put on an amplified antenna than to fix the tuner. |