You may get intermodulation,if someone in on an adjacent channel and is very local to you,and your radio is one of the older types.Any of the later models,should have good enough IF filters to filter just about all but the strongest or dirtiest signals.And you won't notice any clipping of the audio.I have been using adjacent frequency operation on different bands for nearly 40 years,and at 5 watts output,you won't have a problem,unless someone has been fiddling inside the radio.
Wayne
Hi Wayne,
Narrow Band radios (12k5 step) employ smaller FM deviation than the Wide Band (25k step) radios. A 12k5 transmission, when received with a 25k radio, is heard with a lower audio than a genuine 25k transmission due to its smaller spectrum occupancy. On the other hand, a 25k transmission, when received with a 12k5 radio, is heard with excessive audio level, up to the point that audio peaks used to be clipped.
There are some amateur radios in the market where you can select NB or WB FM in UHF (nothing to do with the WB filter for FM broadcast) so both RX and TX bandwidh are tuned to match the kind of service that you want to exploit.
Yes,
in the first line I named the NB radios as the UHF-CB having 12k5 step, and WB radios as the UHF-CB having 25k step. You'll agree with me that actual spectrum occupancy figures exceeds the scope of this forum.
On the other hand, in order to make my kenwood inter-operable between the old and new standards, I plan to reprogram it like:
1 WB (old)
1 NB (new)
2 WB (old)
2 NB (new)
.
.
.
41 NB (new)
42 NB (new)
43 NB (new)
.
.
.
80 NB (new)
... although it will take some time until I have the opportunity to test it...
Do you know if there is some amateur on-line receiver at Sydney area to experiment with?
Cheers,
Carlos
Ahhhh I see what you are talking about now.You are talking about intermodulation.Where the signal transmitted on channel 1 (476.425) and recieved on the to be new channel 2 (476.4375) will be attenuated.I was talking about 2 radios of different types old (25KHz) and new (12.5KHz) transmitting and receiving on the same frequency,will not be attenuated.
I already have my Alinco handheld programmed,as I don't have it set as channels as such.Just set up to transmit and receive in 12.5KHz steps between 476.425 and 477.400.
And yes,this is probably not the forum to go into the technicalities,rather just the usability of the products.
Wayne
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