which is also merged with the test equipment I have at work in my day job...as a radio technician. Big surprise there, huh?

My latest acquisition, and the one that would be most valuable in checking out a radio's receiver, is a Rohde & Schwarz SMY 02 signal
generator, which generates a very pure output with essentially no detectable unwanted harmonics, from 9 KHz to 2.08 GHz,
and able to generate signals as low as -140 dBM and as high as +19 dBM. Its output is VERY uniform and it is in calibration, and
has been cross-checked against my other recently NIST-traceable calibrated equipment, so I know it's dead on. What it says it
delivers is what it's delivering.
I had to program and check out a pile of new Icom F-3GS VHF portable radios today, and by chance one channel that was being
programmed in is also one I have programmed into my VHF Astro Saber III.
Part of my program and checkout procedure always includes a receiver sensitivity test.
I got curious and decided to do a comparison of the two radio types.
To keep it short, the results are pretty interesting.
The Icom radios have analog chassis under digital control. All Astros are fully digital radio chassis.
With the Icoms, I was always able to hear the 1 KHz modulated test tone faintly in the squech noise of
the audio output with the generator at -130 dBM. ONE of the radios was able to manage
this trick at -135 dBM. That's pretty impressive raw sensitivity.
A few points of reference:
2.24 microvolts is -100 dBM.
0.709 microvolts is -110 dBM.
0.224 microvolts is -120 dBM.
0.1 microvolt is -127 dBM.
0.0709 microvolts is -130 dBM.
0.0399 microvolts is -135 dBM.
I found that the Astro Saber got comparable detection of the audio right at -120 dBM, and the changeover was very
abrupt, due to the digital nature of the receiver. But the amount of detected audio was higher at the threshold
than the detected audio at the SAME signal strength level with the Icom radios.
Next, I did the full quieting test. It took -100 dBM for the Icom radios to hit full quieting, but
it took only -106 dBM for the Astro Saber to hit full quieting. Just a quarter the power to hit full quieting.
The Icoms may be more sensitive at the ragged edge of signal detection, but the Astro Saber gets to full quieting
on a smaller signal, and at the edge of detection, the signal to noise ratio is already better on the Astro Saber.
I didn't make a SINAD measurement as I don't have the appropriate adapter cable to interface to test equipment
for the Icom radios.
Next chapter: Adjacent channel selectivity tests on these same radios.
Elroy