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Tuners UKP150 and less
Nicolas Hodges wrote:
I need to replace my analogue tuner (Denon TU260 Mk1) which has died following damage while in storage. I was going to simply go for a MkII, but noticed that there are a lot of Arcam tuners around second-hand (mostly T61). I found four around £150 and would stretch to that if it represented a major step up. Does it? I'm very happy with my Mk2. On a recent trip to Richer Sounds I noticed it was available for around £90. -- Now Playing: something else |
Tuners UKP150 and less
"tony sayer" wrote Christ!, Who's that who's got the KT917?, is he interested in selling it?. Answered direct, but it's the geezer whose DM2As I'm auditioning and I bet he ain't selling it....!! ;-) BTW what did you do for a signal Keith;?...... Just the same yard of wet string you've seen, which gives me this sort of thing: http://www.apah69.dsl.pipex.com/keit.../radioclip.mp3 Not a particularly impressive piece of recording (much chopped up to keep the filesize down) but gives you an idea of what my £20 Lux sounds like and reminds me that I've heard a lot of poor voiceovers and interviews lately - with a very 'boggy' sound (as in recorded in a public bog) that I get with my own efforts at open mic recordings..... .......and also raises the issue that I *really* will have to something about a proper aerial before it's too damn late - when either FM or I will get switched off!! When FM radio (2 in the evenings often and 3 most of the time) hits the spot, which it frequently does, it really is the best 'audio' you can get and is altogether better than any TV or digital sound! (The pictures are better as well......) |
Tuners UKP150 and less
Nicolas Hodges wrote:
Keith G writes "Nicolas Hodges" wrote in message ... I need to replace my analogue tuner (Denon TU260 Mk1) which has died following damage while in storage. I was going to simply go for a MkII, but noticed that there are a lot of Arcam tuners around second-hand (mostly T61). I found four around £150 and would stretch to that if it represented a major step up. Does it? Not in my book. Thanks. I have yet to hear a tuner that is better than my £20 Luxman. Not wanting to be facetious, but what else have you heard? (I was just offered a mid-range Magnum Dynalab for £450 for example...) re aerial: I am getting someone round to do sort it out. Are all FM aerials the same? (I am 20 miles from a big transmitter.) re Ebay: I'd prefer something new, so the Denon mkII at Richer (£85) sounds good to me. If you can get a Magnum for £450 buy it, ok there not cheep but I wish I had bought one years ago. I have the "Etude" now replaced by the MD-100 never heard anything better in 25 years plus. I listen to enough radio, that if FM switch off gets put back, 10 years I would upgrade to the MD-108 :-) -- Dave xxxx www.davewhitter.myby.co.uk Music is Art - Audio is Engineering Steam is Fun |
Tuners UKP150 and less
In article , Keith G wrote:
When FM radio (2 in the evenings often and 3 most of the time) hits the spot, which it frequently does, it really is the best 'audio' you can get and is altogether better than any TV or digital sound! I agree entirely on the superb quality of analogue FM broadcasts when they do hit the spot. However, on the subject of "better than any ... digital sound" sorry to quibble but I believe the UK national "analogue FM" transmtter network is fed with digital NICAM-encoded content. Assuming I'm right, even though the transmission is analogue FM the source is still digital. And what's more it's just 14-bit digital at 32 ksamples/sec before we even get to the issue of 10-bit NICAM transcoding. Back to BBC Radio 3 FM, I think the signal is compressed to prevent over-deviation and keep low-level detail above the transmission system's noise floor. It certainly sounds "warm" to me compared to DAB (yes I know about the arguments but at least R3 gets some bandwidth). This does not detract from my keen enjoyment of the best of R3 on FM, BTW. -- John Phillips |
Tuners UKP150 and less
In article , Fleetie wrote:
"John Phillips" wrote In article , Keith G wrote: When FM radio (2 in the evenings often and 3 most of the time) hits the spot, which it frequently does, it really is the best 'audio' you can get and is altogether better than any TV or digital sound! I agree entirely on the superb quality of analogue FM broadcasts when they do hit the spot. However, on the subject of "better than any ... digital sound" sorry to quibble but I believe the UK national "analogue FM" transmtter network is fed with digital NICAM-encoded content. Assuming I'm right, even though the transmission is analogue FM the source is still digital. And what's more it's just 14-bit digital at 32 ksamples/sec before we even get to the issue of 10-bit NICAM transcoding. 32ks/s (==16kHz bandwidth)? Isn't FM capable of up to 19kHz? ISTR hearing that, or at least, that the difference signal (?) is stuck up 19kHz above the main signal. You are right about there being a pilot tone at 19 kHz and the stereo difference signal above this centred on 38 kHz but the audio bandwidth of FM is only 15 kHz (you need margin for anti-alias filtering relative to the 16 kHz max for 32 ksample/s). See for example http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu.../radio.html#c2 -- John Phillips |
Tuners UKP150 and less
"John Phillips" wrote
In article , Keith G wrote: When FM radio (2 in the evenings often and 3 most of the time) hits the spot, which it frequently does, it really is the best 'audio' you can get and is altogether better than any TV or digital sound! I agree entirely on the superb quality of analogue FM broadcasts when they do hit the spot. However, on the subject of "better than any ... digital sound" sorry to quibble but I believe the UK national "analogue FM" transmtter network is fed with digital NICAM-encoded content. Assuming I'm right, even though the transmission is analogue FM the source is still digital. And what's more it's just 14-bit digital at 32 ksamples/sec before we even get to the issue of 10-bit NICAM transcoding. 32ks/s (==16kHz bandwidth)? Isn't FM capable of up to 19kHz? ISTR hearing that, or at least, that the difference signal (?) is stuck up 19kHz above the main signal. Martin -- M.A.Poyser Tel.: 07967 110890 Manchester, U.K. http://www.fleetie.demon.co.uk |
Tuners UKP150 and less
On Sun, 25 Jul 2004 17:13:33 GMT, "Fleetie"
wrote: "John Phillips" wrote In article , Keith G wrote: When FM radio (2 in the evenings often and 3 most of the time) hits the spot, which it frequently does, it really is the best 'audio' you can get and is altogether better than any TV or digital sound! I agree entirely on the superb quality of analogue FM broadcasts when they do hit the spot. However, on the subject of "better than any ... digital sound" sorry to quibble but I believe the UK national "analogue FM" transmtter network is fed with digital NICAM-encoded content. Assuming I'm right, even though the transmission is analogue FM the source is still digital. And what's more it's just 14-bit digital at 32 ksamples/sec before we even get to the issue of 10-bit NICAM transcoding. 32ks/s (==16kHz bandwidth)? Isn't FM capable of up to 19kHz? ISTR hearing that, or at least, that the difference signal (?) is stuck up 19kHz above the main signal. Yes, it is, which means a 'brick-wall' filter from 15kHz to suppress the pilot tone, since brick walls weren't so high back in the '50s! -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
Tuners UKP150 and less
In article , John Phillips
writes In article , Keith G wrote: When FM radio (2 in the evenings often and 3 most of the time) hits the spot, which it frequently does, it really is the best 'audio' you can get and is altogether better than any TV or digital sound! I agree entirely on the superb quality of analogue FM broadcasts when they do hit the spot. However, on the subject of "better than any ... digital sound" sorry to quibble but I believe the UK national "analogue FM" transmtter network is fed with digital NICAM-encoded content. Assuming I'm right, even though the transmission is analogue FM the source is still digital. And what's more it's just 14-bit digital at 32 ksamples/sec before we even get to the issue of 10-bit NICAM transcoding. Which is quite OK for the 15 K that is required for the FM system. In fact its referred to as NICAM "728" which is give or take the odd bit the bitrate in use. Most all modern FM modulators are very high spec'ed units these days, so not too surprising that the FM signal is as good as it is:) Course it can suffer from distortions added in via multipath etc so that's why you still need a good aerial system to get the best from it. If the BBC saw digital transmission as a real high quality format they'd declare DAB to be a low quality "quantity over quality" system and make digital satellite really motor. They could transmit linear PCM over that and hardly notice it, they could have even used 256 K/bits like some German broadcasters do, but we're stuck with 192 so digital quality has a wholly different meaning when applied to broadcast:( Back to BBC Radio 3 FM, I think the signal is compressed to prevent over-deviation and keep low-level detail above the transmission system's noise floor. It certainly sounds "warm" to me compared to DAB (yes I know about the arguments but at least R3 gets some bandwidth). This does not detract from my keen enjoyment of the best of R3 on FM, BTW. Sometimes the processor settings do alter as the day wears on..... -- Tony Sayer |
Tuners UKP150 and less
In article , Fleetie
writes "John Phillips" wrote In article , Keith G wrote: When FM radio (2 in the evenings often and 3 most of the time) hits the spot, which it frequently does, it really is the best 'audio' you can get and is altogether better than any TV or digital sound! I agree entirely on the superb quality of analogue FM broadcasts when they do hit the spot. However, on the subject of "better than any ... digital sound" sorry to quibble but I believe the UK national "analogue FM" transmtter network is fed with digital NICAM-encoded content. Assuming I'm right, even though the transmission is analogue FM the source is still digital. And what's more it's just 14-bit digital at 32 ksamples/sec before we even get to the issue of 10-bit NICAM transcoding. 32ks/s (==16kHz bandwidth)? Isn't FM capable of up to 19kHz? ISTR hearing that, or at least, that the difference signal (?) is stuck up 19kHz above the main signal. Martin No its rolled off very sharply at just over 15 kHz as the stereo pilot tone sits on 19 kHz which is doubled and forms the 38 kHz basis for the "stereo difference" signal..... -- Tony Sayer |
Tuners UKP150 and less
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
writes In article , Nicolas Hodges wrote: re aerial: I am getting someone round to do sort it out. Are all FM aerials the same? (I am 20 miles from a big transmitter.) No. And the round omni types that are so popular with riggers are about the worst possible choice. In fact the losses on these are around 15 odd dB's!!, much better is the vertical single dipole, but sod all aerial riggers know that much about FM these days:( In a lot of instances you'd be better off doing the job yourself:) -- Tony Sayer |
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