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In Reply to: RE: Does the Md108 have tahe capability to tell you the actual signal strength you are getting? posted by Dimitry on December 20, 2015 at 19:43:51
And, most needle type SS meters are optimistic - providing little real discrimination between station's actual signal strength - being designed to make most stations look strong.So, you are using two antennas and swapping leads into the MD or does it have two antenna inputs?
If you could obtain a diplexer it might be worth trying the two Godars aimed - at each of the two stations - and see if the sound improves.
You might find that the needle barely moves from 9 when it ought to show a significant difference.
Should you buy the M4FM? Reviews
https://www.google.com.au/search?q=DaySequerra+M4FM+&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&gws_rd=cr&ei=IId3VuzuCIbMmAWO67SACQ
And, you couldn't find any reviews?
The M4FM by DS is a broadcast monitor for stations using Hybrid Digital side-bands to generate more income. It's a tool for such station's engineers to monitor if the HD signals are working. In short you would be paying for a lot of features you just do not need.
Even IF you were vitally interested in the HD output of the two broadcasters you aim at there would be decent HD capable tuners for far less money.
IMExperience the only way to get very good sound from analogue FM is to spend a fair bit of effort and thought on maximising the gain from a directional antenna aimed at the station's transmitter
None of the Godar indoor antenna range have particularly high gain - because they can't - being too small compared to FM wavelengths of 3 metres.
There is just one kind of indoor directional and high-gain antenna which you can DIY and will perform as well or better than many outdoor FM Yagis. It can also go in a loft space, the bigger the better.
You might be able to build two of them and hide them under a big rug / even tack one each on the ceiling of two adjacent rooms aimed at your two stations.
Click below.
Warmest
Tim Bailey
Skeptical Measurer & Audio Scrounger
Edits: 12/20/15 12/20/15Follow Ups:
I am certain I get strong signals on my main stations.
108 has two antenna inputs.
M4FM is not HD. I own M4.0X which is HD and like it. M4FM is strictly analogue FM, all done in a fast DSP. The cheap Sony that made a splash a few years ago used a similar technology.
Like I said before, I like the sound of the 108t. However, the rest of my system has gone solid state, so I am trying to find an interesting tuner to try with it.
It is a broadcast monitor.
Warmest
Tim Bailey
Skeptical Measurer & Audio Scrounger
FM ANALOGUE broadcast monitor. You stated it is an FM HD monitor. This is not the case.
But, even with the M4M, do you really need all those extra features, like SCA levels, and the slot for the IBOC-HD module?
Warmest
Tim Bailey
Skeptical Measurer & Audio Scrounger
No, but it is the only DSP based tuner in current production.
I don't need web-based data output and control, either. I could use a remote control and a power switch on the front, though...
I am not sure what there is to gain with a DSP ready tuner-
Most of the stations that are broadcasting a good to great signal are on the left end of the dial (Non-profit) and have not yet jumped the broom stick for Digital-
the analogue signal is great - and with the right antenna you can have amazing sound quality.
I see that you are in MA- irrespective of which part of the state - barring some remote valleys - there is great FM in them thar air...
try the Godars in a twin configuration - or as Tim suggests - a Rhombic-
Happy Listening
Thank you, I am getting some really great signal. I now have three Godars each pointing to a favorite station for best reception.
However, an all DSP analogue tuner has some potential advantages. Note, that this is not an HD tuner, but rather the entire RF processing is done in the digital domain - all the IF, sideband rejection, bandwidth choice, etc. There are solutions to common FM problems that can be implemented in the digital domain that simply can't practically be done in the traditional analogue design.
Certainly, the only tuner that has implemented this - a cheap Sony box has a dedicated cult following and NOS units sell at many times the original price.
M4FM promises an audiophile implementation and maybe sounds great, or not.
I still think that driving your MD108 really hard offers the best ROI in sound quality terms.
Warmest
Tim Bailey
Skeptical Measurer & Audio Scrounger
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