Problem with that is, when you turn up ANY gain control all of the way up, it will add a lot of harmonic distortion to the output.personally, I run my mic gains on all my radios 100% and the microphone as low as I can.
my batteries last for years.
Problem with that is, when you turn up ANY gain control all of the way up, it will add a lot of harmonic distortion to the output.
About as welcome as sharks at a shipwreck . . need balance between the two to make it right . . .
The mic circuit designed in a CB radio isn't exactly audiophile quality. Distortion appears at different points in any radio as well.so when you align a radio for no distortion with the mic gain wide open it's still distorting at an audible level?
then why does anyone bother with an oscilloscope if it's going to show a clean signal when there's distortion?
Yup; with a stock mic . . . thought we were talking about a D-104 in the OP?The cb tuned to factory spec can be ran with the mic gain wide open. Once it's modified or a non linear amp is put in line who knows. The problem is the radio already has a mic preamp and when you crank up an amplified mic it's like driving a 2 pill amplifier with another 2 pill.....of course an audio amp and RF amp have their differences but you get the idea.
The guys that I'm talking about will clip the limiter and keep turning up a d104 until they get every last watt out. They sound like shit, you hear every fan in the room and you might even hear their neighbors dog barking in the background. They call it the old school sound.![]()
we were, but no one said anything about a heavily modded radio and you started talking about twisting the 54mhz trap coils despite my first post saying if properly set up and the second mentioning that the microphone is set as low as possible....Yup; with a stock mic . . . thought we were talking about a D-104 in the OP?
Many hack tune-up shops do the AM Limiter removal as well as 54mhz trap twisting as the standard procedure. I don't think I would call them 'heavily modified' - as compared to other methods of modding radios that aren't like the common hacks. More the norm - than the exception. In truth, many of the used radios I have gotten had these mods done to them. Coincidence? I think not. Most of the better shops refuse to do these hack mods and often restore the radio before they do a proper peak and tune.we were, but no one said anything about a heavily modded radio and you started talking about twisting the 54mhz trap coils despite my first post saying if properly set up and the second mentioning that the microphone is set as low as possible....
Yup; with a stock mic . . . thought we were talking about a D-104 in the OP?