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How to properly use WNB?

Mike KD2CJJ
Mike KD2CJJ Member ✭✭
I cant seem to get the WNB working at all.  It has made little to no difference meanwhile my FTDX3000 can block this noise out like its not there using the WNB.  I have attached a screen shot.  Can someone tell me what I am doing wrong?

I adjust the AGC to an acceptable level and start at 0 with the WNB and work my way up.. I see NO difference at all.. In fact above 90 its worse. 

I have tried both the NB and WNB - It just doesn't work for any of my noise signals.

thanks..
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Answers

  • Simon Lewis
    Simon Lewis Member ✭✭
    edited July 2017
    Mike

    I think so far, in my findings, is that unless you have wide band correlated noise the WNB does little to attack received noise - it's not that you can't get it to work or does not work ... just you have the 'wrong' type of noise. And looking at the image I don't think you have the type of wide band noise the WNB function deals with well.

    Looking at the videos where it successfully deals with noise, the noise seems to broadband power line noise not individual PSU noise, or plasma TV type noise etc like your screen shot.

    I've only had success so far on my electric fence noise at my /p station and not with the TV type interference my home station

    So it does work but I think if you had 60 Hz power line noise across the whole band it would work really well.

    It's nice but not quite the silver bullet for some types of noise. I tend to use NR vs WNB functions, maybe I am lucky and don't have the interference WNB is meant to deal with

    Anyway that's my 2 cents worth and experience so far :)

    Cheers

    Simon ZL4PLM 
  • Mike KD2CJJ
    Mike KD2CJJ Member ✭✭
    edited February 2017
    I see what your saying... However... My FTDX3k takes out the noise with no issue!  Im shocked that the Flex can not.  

    Im also not happy at all with the NR.  Again, the FTDX3k is far far far far far superior.  Its removes noise but keeps the voice without the synthetic overlay on the voice.

    Im new to flex and right now fairly disappointed in the DSP dealing with noise in general.  I also have yet to find nice pleasant settings on the EQ or maybe I need a better speaker than my PC or headphones that I use for gaming, music, etc.

    I hope more investment is done in the Noise category.  Out of all of the radios I have owned, the FTDX3K has the best NR, NB and WNB I have ever used.  Hopefully they use this as their benchmark.


  • Stefano - W2WTZ
    edited June 2017
    I confirm. FTDX5000 has better NR. Even the little Elad FDM Duo has better NR. It's not a problem of my 6500 but of SSDR. Programmers have to work **** this problem in my opinion urgently. It's the weakest point of Flex SDR radios.
  • Mike KD2CJJ
    Mike KD2CJJ Member ✭✭
    edited February 2017
    It is and why I held off all these years taking the plunge. You cant say your the best when you can't compete in the most basic categories. If you can't hear them you can't work them!
  • Burch - K4QXX
    Burch - K4QXX Member ✭✭
    edited July 2018
    I too have been a little disappointed with the WNB.  The WNB works better for me than the old NB, but the NB on my Flex 5000 is far superior to the WNB on my 6500.  If Flex could somehow port the code from the 5000 NB to the 6000 series, I would be a happy camper.  I know it's not that easy since the architecture is totally different.  I am sure Flex will keep working on the WNB and noise reduction in the future.
  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited February 2018
    I have to disagree, the noise mitigation is not a mistake, poorly tested, or missed the mark.It works just as designed. It removes power line noise perfectly. I have noise here so bad that the 40M band is closed to me with the WNB off, so I know how well it works. But if you have a different type of noise other than what they made it for, It likely will not work for you. This is a wide band NB. Since it works so well I don't think Flex will mess with it much. But Tim has said that they will work on other types of noise another way.
  • Burch - K4QXX
    Burch - K4QXX Member ✭✭
    edited July 2018
    I have power line noise on 160 meters.  The WNB does nothing on 160 for me.  In fact, if I turn up the slider to over about 75, it introduces noise. 

    I also have power line noise on 6 meters.  The WNB works very well on my 6 meter noise and takes out 99% of the noise. 

    If I hook up my Flex 5000, it takes out the power line noise on both 6 meters and most of the noise on 160 meters.  That's just the observation at my location. 

    If I use the regular NB that was put back in on 1.5.1, I have to click on it several times (on and off) to make it work.  When it does work, it doesn't adjust the noise level on the panadatper so weak signals can not be seen.  It also seems to gradually turn itself back off and has no affect after a couple of minutes.  I have to turn it off and on again a couple of times to get it to engage.

    I guess I am just spoiled because the Flex 5000 works so well on MY type of power line noise, especially on 160 meters.  The 6500 is unusable on 160 at my location so that's why I keep the 5000.  I understand that it is difficult to stop all the different types of pulse noise at different locations but at my station the 5000 is much much better. 
  • pa0bie
    pa0bie Member
    edited October 2015

    I have exactly the same with the NB and WNB.  Also the NR is sometimes not working since 1.5.1 update.  My Flex 5000 was working much better. Even my IC7800 is working better.

  • Mike KD2CJJ
    Mike KD2CJJ Member ✭✭
    edited February 2017
    Bill.. I agree if you set the bar fairly low.  I doubt Flex guys want to say they set the bar low.  Frankly, I have compared to every radio I have and right now the Flex is the worst of them all when it comes to NB and NR.  Keeping all other things aside this is my ONLY complaint as the radio excels in every other area.  However basic these are critical function of  a radio for those of us who dont live in the middle of no where.  Come to Long Island NY and you will see how much noise there is.

    I compared that noise in the graph with my FTDX3k and it dropped 3S points using the Yaesu WNB! There was a station that without the WNB on the FTDX3k I could not hear at all.  On the flex, I could not copy the station.  I tried various methods of NR, WNB, NB - nothing helped.  In fact the NR made things worse as the little bit of voice I could hear was wiped out.  On the Yaesu the NR is fantastic.  On the Flex the NR pretty much is useless on SSB with less than a S6 or better.  On the Yaesu that same signal literally is pulled out when NR is turned on and properly configured.

    Bill, a well designed NB, WNB and NR should be able to handle all known and unknown possible noise sources.  We should not have to choose which noise sources work or not.  So with this radio I guess dont buy it if you have abnormal noise sources?  Is that what your saying?  That makes no sense to me.  The noise  your seeing is from a switching power source.   I dont think that would constitute some rare alien noise sources.

    We have these features to combat the unknown.  If it was known I would have a button that says **** powerline noise, **** walwart noise, **** electric fense noise, **** babymonitor noise, etc. etc.  Unknown is why we have these features on the radio.  They have been around longer than I am alive probably.  And all other radios, even my IC7000 does a better job - and I put that radio at the bottom of my list when it comes to all around performance.

    With this little rant - I do believe the Flex guys have it in them.. They just havent invested enough time in getting to truely a world class NR, NB, and WNB. 

    It would a shame for something like a basic function such as NR, NB and WNB to hold their sales back - it did for me for almost 2 years.  Unfortunately I was not seeing honest opinions on how well these functions worked and took the plunge.   Im now invested in them so I do expect improvements made.  All I ask to be no better than their next best competitor.


  • Lawrence Gray
    Lawrence Gray Member ✭✭
    edited January 2016
    I agree with the complaints.  I find that the NB and WNB basically do nothing at all, regardless of settings.  The NR does function reasonably well for me, although it has a negative effect on audio quality.  Both the IC-9100 and K3 at our local club station do a better job handling noise.

    Larry
    KC1DAD

  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited February 2018
    You must have miss read my post. I said I have bad power noise here that blocks 40M out. I hear nothing with the WNB off. So yes it works wonderfully. When they made this noise mitigation they were targeting power line noise or power grid noise as that is what most people have around them. I think you don't really understand the technology used here, it is much different than any other kind of radio, it is not a hard filter, it re create's it self every few seconds as conditions change. for the type of noise it is made for it is the best I have seen.

    Also from reading all the post on this I find for the most part people just can't get their heads around how to properly set up WNB and wonder why it is not working for them. It is not something that you turn on and it just works,,you must set it up first correctly. I have some radios here to that do a better job on some noise than the flex. One filter for everything, but they can't hear as well as the Flex because of that. For other types of noise I think Tim said they are working on NR for them.
  • Mike KD2CJJ
    Mike KD2CJJ Member ✭✭
    edited October 2015
    Bill, please teach us then how to properly use it.

    For general power noise on 18 meters and 6 meters, :

    my ftdx3k... I hit the NB button twice to WNB and turn the knob until the noise it gone. I see the S Meter drop about 2 to 4s points and the noise turns to a nice clean white noise - stations now heard.  I turn on NR and now stations pop with a nice clean voice.

    On the flex I hit the WNB button once and slide the slider.  It makes no difference until I hit 100 and then the radio is useless as it adds noise and distortion.  All stations the same below 99.  Turn the NR on and now stations cant be heard at all as between the electrical noise and now the poor NR the signals cant be heard.

    I maybe hitting the button wrong or sliding the slider wrong.  If its my mistake I will accept it.  

    If you have found the magic technique please share with us how to make the flex work as well as its nearest competitor.  I am not asking for much.. I just want it to perform as well as my lowest performing radio and would love for it to perform as my best performing radio.  I prefer the flex being my most expensive radio (right now) being the best.



  • Burch - K4QXX
    Burch - K4QXX Member ✭✭
    edited December 2018
    Bill

    In my case, it's not about properly setting up the WNB.  I have been a flex owner since the beginning (Flex 1000 with a Edirol FA-66 sound device) and know how to properly set the AGC-T.  Been doing it for many many years now.  I use Flex radios exclusively for ham bands from 160M through 1296Mhz.  I am glad the the WNB is working for you.  I works great for me on 6 meters and also on my occasional noise on 40 meters.  The point is, it does not work as well (in my case) as the Flex 5000.  I used my 5000 for many years and got spoiled due to the fantastic NB.  The Flex 5000 does a great job on noise and CAN hear very well.  I am 100% flex supporter and will continue to by flex radios in the future but the NB on the 6000 series is not as effective (for my noise) as the older 5000.  It has nothing to do with properly setting up the WNB in my case.
  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    I have to go read some, there are some post on this setting up. The first thing you do is find the knee or sweet spot on the AGC-T. Back off the AGC-T to the left till noise begins to drop, then turn on WNB and slowly move the slider till the noise goes away. It works with the AGC-T funtion, they work together. I will try and find the post on this for you.
  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited February 2018

     Tim - W4TME, Customer Experience Manager

    • 3603 Posts
    •  
    •  1064 Reply Likes


    this may help

    For those who are going to try out the new WNB and for that matter, NR too, it is very important that you have your AGC-T set to an optimal setting before enabling the noise mitigation features.  Finding the AGC 'knee" is the first thing you should always do, regardless if you have offending noise or not.  The AGC is complimentary to both WNB and NR.  But it can be detrimental too if the threshold is set to high or too low.  There is a good explaination of how to adjust the AGC-T in the SmartSDR Software User's Guide.  I recommend giving it a read.

  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    Yes that is true, it does not work on all types of noise, it is not meant to. All my point was is many long time flexers have there AGC-T set wrong and expect it to work.
  • Lawrence Gray
    Lawrence Gray Member ✭✭
    edited June 2020
    If I turn my WNB above 90, the filtering software appears to generate a significant noise level, as others have noted.  I do understand DSP and general filter design concepts and do understand that this filter is meant for wide band noise such a power grid noise.  However, it is not clear to me why a properly designed filtering algorithm would make the noise level worse?

    If there is some specific technique for the use of this filter selection, I would love to hear it.

    Larry
    KC1DAD
  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited June 2020
    Most interesting why it works so well for some and not for others. For me I hope they change nothing. I think Steve can explain your question better.
  • Ken - NM9P
    Ken - NM9P Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    On 40 meters, when radio Havana is 60+ just above the band, I get trash if the WNB is turned up too high.  But that happened with normal NB's, too. 

    Like anything DSP, the key is learning how to adjust the parameters, and learning what feature to use on different noise sources.  I usually start wtih WNB OFF. THen adjust the AGC-T from right to left until the background noise just starts to drop.  (The "Knee" or "Sweet Spot")  Then I turn WNB ON and begin slowly raising the level from left to right, pausing to let it "catch up,"  until I see the noise floor drop.  NOTE:  There is often a few second's delay between activating WNB, or changing its level, and the WNB becoming "active."  You can tell if it is "on" when the WNB indicator on top of the panadapter window bar goes from grey to white (I wish it went from red to green, or from grey to green or bright blue, it would be easier to detect the status change.)  When it starts working, the noise level will drop, requiring readjusting the AGC-T to take advantage of the new, lower noise floor.  Depending upon the band conditions and noise source, I have sometimes needed to have the WNB control as high as 98 in order to see results. (6 meters, for example) On other bands, 65 or 70 will do.  On bands with extremely strong and sharply modulated (i.e. overmodulated and flat-topping or "spikey" signals) I need to reduce the WNB level because it is being affected by the other in-band or out-of-band signals.  A good indicator of the need for this is when your noise floor starts jumping around in unexpected ways.  To test this, turn off WNB and see if the jumping around stops.  Sometime finding the right adjustment point requires a compromise between interference reduction and avoiding the effects of really strong signals on the band.  (nothing new for users of legacy NB's.

    WNB has been effective on a lot of my powerline and other impulse noise, such as the electric fence down the way.  I especially like that I can see the noise floor drop 3-15 dB, depending upon band conditions and noise source, when I get it set right. 

    But the WNB doesn't remove general "random"  hash, and junk generated by Variable speed motors on my HVAC, wideband router noise, Wall Wart noise, etc. 

    For general random hash, I use NR.  Carefully adjusted, it can make it easier to live with.  The version released in 1.5 & 1.51 seems to be pretty good at reducing noise without coloring the received audio excessively.  Again, if turned up too high, the received audio will be affected adversely. 

     There there is some other noise that I can't blank or reduce, I either must live with it or fix it at the source.  DSP isn't a magic pill that will cure everything.

    I am sure that there are additional improvements and tweaks that they can and will make.  But so far it seems a pretty good effort.
    The advantage of the DSP in PowerSDR is that one can tweak different parameters repeatedly in order to fine tune rejection of one particular type of noise in the receiver passband.  The disadvantage is that once tweaked, it may not reject other types of noise as well.  And the great danger is that one can get things so far out of adjustment that nothing works, unless you remember the default settings!

    Good luck.

    Ken - NM9P
  • Mike KD2CJJ
    Mike KD2CJJ Member ✭✭
    edited October 2015
    Larry.. Unfortunately some of us are blinded by the love of a vendor more than reality of a sub performing function.  I am not bashing Flex.  I am a customer and expect for a premium price a premium product.  I have a premium product with some poorly performing functions.  Unfortunately some which are very important to many not to a few who dont have noise issues.

    There is no special technique.  There is no black magic, there is no use of the force, there is no special training needed.   You press a button, you slide a slider.  If there is something special that comes out of that I would be surprised.  But if there is some black magic or dance I have to do, I will do it.

    I have read the manuals, I have adjusted the AGC-T as per the hundreds of different ways stated and all results in the end are the same.  These functions do not function as well as its next lowest performing competitor.  

    The net net is, its a poorly implemented WNB and NR and which can be improved.  Poorly is subjective i recognized... But again, I hold Flex to a high standard the same standard I hold Icom and Yaesu to.  Right now their radios perform circles around the Flex when it comes to noise mitigation. 
  • DrTeeth
    DrTeeth Member ✭✭
    edited August 2016
    The common denominator is that those with a Flex 5000 say that their noise filters still outshine those in the Flex6xxx with SDR 1.5.x.
  • SteveM
    SteveM Member
    edited December 2015

    Bill,

    Your a nice, helpful guy and I mean no disrespect. But, were you the Beta tester for the WNB feature, or what? It seems you have some personal stake in the matter. There have been multiple threads regarding problems users are experiencing with WNB, and your diagnosis boils down to "many long time flexers have there AGC-T set wrong and expect it to work". How can you make such wild claims?!? Then Mike KD2CJJ asks you how to properly setup WNB and you reply along the line, "I'm not sure, I have to go read some". WTH!

    I have tried WNB several times. For me, it always adds noise and removes none. Yes, I have AGC-T adjusted to the "sweet spot". Yes, I start with the WNB slider low and slowly adjust it up. By the time the slider hits 5, I can see that the WNB filter has gone into noise injection mode. I don't doubt my WNB issues stem from the 43' vertical attached to my 6500 (they tend to pick up more noise across the spectrum than other types). My guess is that too much noise/signal across the spectrum can overload the WNB algorithm.

    In any case, there are widespread reports of problems with WNB and I don't think you should so easily discount them as 'operator error'. If Flex corrects these issues, it can only benefit you and everyone else.

  • Ken - NM9P
    Ken - NM9P Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    Guy, my review is still "Mixed."

    I have both 6500 & 1500.  There are some of my noise sources for which the 6500's WNB outshines the 1500's NB hands down.  And there are others where the NB on my 1500 is better, if I work at it with its many parameters. 

    I am glad that they added the narrow NB back into 1.5.1.  There have been a few cases where that made a good difference. Sometimes it took using both of them at the same time.  Perhaps they could add a subscreen where the user can make adjustments to various parameters for the slice NB it as you can in PowerSDR?  They would need a "Reset to default" button, though, for when we really foul it up!

    For the first Major SDR Wide band noise blanker it is a pretty good effort.  (We must remember that FRS is plowing new ground here) But it still should be possible to improve it.   

    And there may be some other sources of noise - perhaps impulse noise that is NOT wideband, but well correlated over a more narrow frequency range, (If that is not an oxymoron?) for which the narrow blanker can be modified to be more effective. 

    Perhaps they need yet a third type of noise reduction, if there is any such possibility, to deal with noise sources untouched by either WNB, NB, or NR?

    Ken - NM9P
  • Burt Fisher
    Burt Fisher Member ✭✭
    edited August 2016
    Do other radios require 3 turns to the left, 6 jumping jacks and 12 ballet move as per the following quote of just part of what you need to do (" it is very important that you have your AGC-T set to an optimal setting before enabling the noise mitigation features).?
    Look at NM9P's answer to find out how simple it is not.
  • DrTeeth
    DrTeeth Member ✭✭
    edited August 2016
    Burt, your post has saved me having to post the same thing.
  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    Interesting, if the noise mitigation does not work for some with the noise they have they say it is sub performance? What about others where the noise reduction is astounding?
  • Mike KD2CJJ
    Mike KD2CJJ Member ✭✭
    edited April 2019
    Bill we are not trying to over complicate things here.  I think your misunderstanding the whole thread.   No one is trying to compare noise sources.  I agree.  Your noise source maybe tame or wild.  Mine maybe generated by some alien source or some type of noise source never heard by man or ever record by any device.  Put the types of noise source aside.

    The entire discussion resolves around the comparison between the flex radios and other radios (ie Yaesu and Icoms, Kenwoods, even the Flex 5k, etc.) against the SAME noise source.

    If the others rigs using a WNB mechanism can eliminate the noise source one can deduce that it is a well correlated noise source as per the definition of a NB.    And if that is the case then in theory any rig that implements a WNB or NB should be able to remove the same noise source - with varying degrees of success of course but in general work.  This hypothesis becomes further re-enforced when you are now using 2 alternate radios that can perform this function with equal success.

    Now, performing the same test with the Flex,  If the flex can not remove this same noise source that the other radios could, wouldn't you deduce that the flex implementation is not as well engineered?

    Astounding means it works under most situations...  Poorly implemented means it works under a few situations.  Clearly I am seeing more people say it doesn't work than it does.
    
  • Tim - W4TME
    Tim - W4TME Administrator, FlexRadio Employee admin
    edited December 2016
    Larry - the WNB adjusts the threshold scale so there is additional headroom if the adjacent signal levels are low.  This provides you greater range for  adjustment, but it also allows for you to add too much blanking in certain circumstances.  This is like mic gain, if you turn it up too high, it overdrives your audio into distortion, so you back off the gain.  The same is true with the WNB.
  • Walt - KZ1F
    Walt - KZ1F Member ✭✭
    edited November 2016
    There is,actually, a very good write up in the 1.5.x user guide on both the agc-t and the wnb. Turns out, I'd been adjusting the AGC wrong since I got the Flex...silly me. Engineers rarely read doc.
  • Bill -VA3WTB
    Bill -VA3WTB Member ✭✭✭
    edited December 2016
    Did it make any difference as to how things work for you?

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