HFU HF Underground
Technical Topics => SDR - Software Defined Radio => Topic started by: NJQA on September 07, 2023, 1240 UTC
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http://ka7oei.blogspot.com/2023/09/
KA7OEI’s conclusions:
“….The best HF weak-signal performance for the RX-888 (Mk2) will occur with the receiver configured for "High" gain mode, 0 dB attenuation and a gain setting of about 20dB. Having said this, you should always to the "antenna versus no antenna" test: If you see more than 6-10dB increase in the noise level at the quietest frequency, you probably have too much gain. Conversely, if you don't see/hear a difference, you probably need more gain - taking care in doing so.
For best HF performance of this - or any other wideband, direct-sampling HF SDR (RX-888, KiwiSDR, Red Pitaya, etc.) additional filtering is suggested - particularly the "shelving" filter described above.
In situations where the noise floor is very low (e.g. a nice, receive quiet location) many direct-sampling SDRs (RX-888, KiwiSDR, Red Pitaya) will likely need additional gain to "hear" the weaker signals - particularly on the higher HF bands. While some of these receivers offer onboard gain adjustment, the use of external high-performance amplification (along with filtering and careful adjustment of the devices' gain adjustments) will give improved absolute sensitivity while helping to preserve large-signal handling capability.
Because the RX-888 is a computer-connected device, there will be ingress of undesired signals from the computer and the '888's built-in circuitry. The use of external amplification - along with appropriate decoupling (e.g. common-mode chokes on the USB cable and connecting coaxial cables) can minimize the appearance of these signals…….”