If a signal is transmitted at 5w, narrow band (12.5khz bandwidth), and another signal is transmitted at 5w wide band (20khz bandwidth), we would expect the quality of the transmission to be better in wideband, all other things being equal. We would also expect that a wideband receiver would hear a narrowband tranmission as being a little quieter, though I wonder if that's an accurate description; perhaps thinner sounding. I don't know. And a narrowband receiver receiving a wideband signal would sound a bit distorted as a portion of the signal would fall outside of the receiver's RF hearing. I think I'm understanding that. More bandwidth provides more capability for information-carrying signal to be transmitted and received.
My question is about signal path loss. Does a narrow-band 5w signal have a longer signal path since that energy is focused into a narrower frequency range? One of the reasons that SSB is effective is a narrower / more efficient use of energy due to narrower RF bandwidth. Is that correct?
This is just a question to satisfy my own curiosity. I realize that it probably has very little bearing on UHF/FM communications, but also... why?
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If a signal is transmitted at 5w, narrow band (12.5khz bandwidth), and another signal is transmitted at 5w wide band (20khz bandwidth), we would expect the quality of the transmission to be better in wideband, all other things being equal. We would also expect that a wideband receiver would hear a narrowband tranmission as being a little quieter, though I wonder if that's an accurate description; perhaps thinner sounding. I don't know. And a narrowband receiver receiving a wideband signal would sound a bit distorted as a portion of the signal would fall outside of the receiver's RF hearing. I think I'm understanding that. More bandwidth provides more capability for information-carrying signal to be transmitted and received.
My question is about signal path loss. Does a narrow-band 5w signal have a longer signal path since that energy is focused into a narrower frequency range? One of the reasons that SSB is effective is a narrower / more efficient use of energy due to narrower RF bandwidth. Is that correct?
This is just a question to satisfy my own curiosity. I realize that it probably has very little bearing on UHF/FM communications, but also... why?
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