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Say I've calculated that my feedline losses are 3dB, or I'm considering an antenna with 10dB gain, or trying to decide between a transmitter with 10dBm output power versus 16dBm (6dB difference).

I understand a decibel is a degree of change in signal quality, similar to a degree of temperature. But how much change? For example, if I increase my antenna gain by 3dB, how much better will that make my signal?

Phil Frost - W8II
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3 Answers3

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Here are some visual examples, corresponding to what you'd see receiving an analog TV transmission. I've picked an image with features of varying detail. Look for:

  • the letters "IPI"
  • individual jelly beans
  • contrast between the beans, especially the darker ones that are very close in brightness
  • reflections on the beans

Here are sets of three images side-by-side, each adjacent image some number of decibels apart in signal to noise ratio. Our eyes are good at picking out fine detail in noise, about as good as a well-designed digital mode. So this should give you an intuitive sense of the difference a decibel makes for digital modes, and also slow-scan TV.

Audio samples are past the images, if SSB is more your concern.

1dB:

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1dB:

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3dB:

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3dB:

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10dB:

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10dB:

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Ears don't work like eyes, so I've also generated some audio samples such as you'd hear for SSB. Again they are normalized to a constant volume like AGC would do. The numbers refer to the noise power, so -48 dB is the highest quality (lowest noise power), and -06 dB is the worst quality (highest noise power)

-06 dB
-12 dB
-18 dB
-24 dB
-30 dB
-36 dB
-42 dB
-48 dB

Phil Frost - W8II
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If your transceiver has an S-meter, one "S" has 6dB.

Is decibel small? In my sense, yes, dB is quite small: it is difficult to hear a change of 1-5dB in voice quality.

A 5-10dB change is significant, 15dB or 18dB totally changes conditions.

Few devices in the amateur market can measure a 1dB difference.

But precise "bookkeeping" of the antenna system is important: the sum contains many small numbers: +7dB antenna gain, -0.5dB lost in UC-1 connector (other name for PL-259) , 20 meters of feedline with -35dB per 100m gives a 7dB loss, another UC-1 connector: In total, this system has an effective -1dB.

Connector power loss like UC-1 (PL-259) are not measurable at home, so take it from literature (most sources give 0.5dB). Loss in longer cable can be measured in a good quality amateur testing set, or more simply read it from the manufacturer's data sheet.

In reality small changes can add up: increase antenna gain 1.5dB, install a better feedline for 0.3dB/1m, better connectors etc .... and you've made a 6dB improvement. This is a good result.

FM has a different behavior from SSB: quality is 'good' in a broad central part of scale (hard to distinguish for an untrained ear), a small drop in quality (voice+noise) near the low range, and drastic loss of quality when signal drops more and suddenly voice is totally unreadable under noise.

Phil Frost - W8II
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Jacek Cz
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A decibel is a mathematical measurement of the change in the magnitude of a quantity. It uses a logarithmic scale so that a change of 10 db is an increase of 10 times, while a change of 20 db is an increase of 100 times.

The formula for computing the change in decibels between the original power $P_0$ and the new power $P$ is

$$10 \log\left(\dfrac{P}{P_0}\right)$$

where the logarithm uses base 10. There are some useful relations with decibels that are easy to remember

3 dB = 2x
6 dB = 4x
7 dB = 5x
10 dB = 10x

and because it is a logarithmic scale, you can use these together so 13 dB = 10 dB + 3 dB = 10x * 2x = 20x.

Because decibels measure change relative to some baseline value, to use them to specify absolute values, like a power of 1W, we sometimes use the unit dBm which means "decibels relative to 1 milliwatt". So $1\ W = 1000\ mW = 30\ dBm$ because 30 dB = 10 dB + 10 dB + 10 dB = 10 x 10 x 10 = 1000x.

A transmitter with 10 dBm power output puts out 10 dB more than one millwatt, or $10\ mW$. A transmitter with 6 dB more power or 16 dBm puts out 4x as much power or $40\ mW$.

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