Noisy bands like 40,60,80 meters etc are just that. It's still better with this speaker than 3 others I tried. Higher bands tend to have less noise and when signals are strong, this speakers punches through.
Headphones sounds way better plugging into the this speaker than radio direct.
Not sure what you're asking, I don't combine my audio gear with my HF. Just share a mic is all.
I’ve wondered about headphones. What brand/type do you prefer once stationary and you’ve run up the Big Wire?
Not everyone pays attention to sound
quality.
Words matter, yes, but so do clues available about
delivery. The silences between words.
When folks strive for AM radio announcer as a model of the way their rig sounds to others, it’s in the surrounding quiet that words are presented and vocal emphasis achieved.
I was wondering how you looked at it. (Voices cover a dynamic range in conversation). Compression in music reproduction or voice transmission “can” lead to ambiguity, is an unintended irony.
I “get” the use of PUNCH to describe the tools’ (WM SPKR) capability.
I wasn’t
quite intending to have us stray into discussion about abstractions on human voice & frequency range,
but engineering of a speaker for transceiver use DOES have to accommodate more than just “sound”. It has to be tailored.
And there’s nothing tougher than a mobile environment (my opinion).
One is underway, and — with CB — there’s no sense of cooperation between those reporting a problem (at times).
We wind up having to make guesses about some of what we hear (information being imparted by the knowledgeable; the experienced driver at the other end making description of a problem is ONE example) and the guesses we make become reliant not always on words heard, but HOW they are spoken.
“Trained operators” isn’t an assumption. The military trains such that field reports follow a pattern. Not in CB-land.
Thus, HOW WELL those words are heard becomes crucial. Others can screw up the integrity of a report.
It’s all happening at high speed.
The WM SPKR is simply
great in
necessary audio quality. Not just noise reduction.
I’ve likened its abilities to allow one
to hear AROUND the noise ever present.
That’s a COMBINATION of factors.
We’ve more happening than just the radio built-in speaker
made louder with a Noise Blank button applied.
I don’t wish to carry this too far, but comparison to a standard CB external speaker in an A-B Test is more than just “cut the noise”.
It’s also improve the quality of what we’re hearing.
Our adjustments to RF Gain & Squelch on a CB/Export
then the filtration dialed in on speaker is finally enough to re-set Volume (both devices).
This feels revelatory. (“Wow,
there it is!”)
Thx
.