The GE super base was a am/SSB base station made back in the 80s if I remember correctly, I have never used one personally, but I have supposedly heard they were solid radios, the speech compression mode,is that like DSP?? Just curious..........Neat you made that contact on AM!!!!Last night my base stations were really hopping on every channel on both AM and SSB. I even talked to SC barefoot on channel 15 AM with my GE Super Base,which amazed me. That Speech Compression mode really impressed me. I will be exploring that radio more. Happy DXing
I don't even know what DSP is about. Maybe someone will chime in and explain to both of us. Wish I didn't have so much to do so I could explore radio more. Happy DXing PS. Do you know a Operator # 629 named dave in PA that fixes radios?The GE super base was a am/SSB base station made back in the 80s if I remember correctly, I have never used one personally, but I have supposedly heard they were solid radios, the speech compression mode,is that like DSP?? Just curious..........Neat you made that contact on AM!!!!
Thanks..good hearing you again!Had a good QSO withe Codeman in his pickup truck Sunday afternoon. He was doing a fine job here in Ky.
Speech compression evens out the peaks on your transmitted audio. DSP removes noise from your received audio. Both can help with signal readability, but they're not the same thing.the speech compression mode,is that like DSP??
Thanks for the come back and knowledge. All I witnessed was when I turned speech compression on my Dosy meter showed a dramatic increase in the swing of watts going out. Kind of like turning a amp on.Speech compression evens out the peaks on your transmitted audio. DSP removes noise from your received audio. Both can help with signal readability, but they're not the same thing.
It says right on the radio and in the manual Speech Compressor.Lou Franklin called his compressor that he sold a DSP (Dynamic Speech Compressor) which always got confused with Digital Signal Processors.