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Tuning Info

Here is what I've learned about tuning SDR receivers, I am using RTLSDR Blog V4 receivers.

My Defaults

  • LNA 165 (turn back towards 143 if crunchy
  • Mixer 10
  • VGA → 82

Gain Values

LNA (Low-Noise Amplifier) – “Mic Preamp”
  • First active stage right after the antenna.

  • Best place to get real SNR because it boosts the signal before most noise gets added.

  • Too high → overload/intermod: noise floor jumps, strong stations smear all over, voice gets gritty.

  • Tuning rule: this is your main knob. Raise until signals pop and the floor rises ~5–10 dB, then back off one notch.

Mixer Gain – “Conversion Make-Up”
  • Small gain inside the frequency-converter that shifts RF down to IF.

  • Useful for a little extra oomph after you’ve set LNA.

  • Too high → subtle distortion/poorer decode without obvious overload symptoms.

  • Tuning rule: 0–2 clicks after LNA is usually enough; it’s a finesse knob.

VGA (IF Gain) – “Line Fader”
  • Variable gain after the mixer, before the ADC.

  • Mostly raises everything, including noise; doesn’t improve true SNR much.

  • Too high → looks louder, sounds hissier, decodes no better (often worse).

  • Tuning rule: keep low; only bump if the ADC is starving (very low dBFS).

Master Gain
  • A meta control that drives the three gains together using a heuristic.

  • When you set Master = Manual, you’re taking direct control of LNA/Mixer/VGA (good for digital voice).

AGC Switches
  • Tuner AGC: lets the R820T auto-ride the LNA.

  • RTL AGC: rides the IF/digital level in the RTL2832U.

  • For DMR/P25, leave both OFF while you dial things in; AGC “pumping” confuses decoders.

Sample Rate
  • How wide a chunk you’re grabbing. Higher rate = wider slice, a tad less forgiving, more USB/CPU load.

  • 1.92–2.048 MS/s is a sweet spot for RTLs.

How to use them together (practical)

  1. AGCs OFF.

  2. Set LNA first. Raise until the wanted signal is strong and the floor lifts a bit; if spurs/raspiness show up, back off.

  3. Add 1 click of Mixer if needed.

  4. Only then nudge VGA if the level meter is still very low.

  5. Watch dBFS: during voice bursts you want peaks roughly –25 to –15 dBFS. Constant –5..0 dBFS means clipping.

Symptoms Cheat-Sheet

  • Under-gain: Rest/voice barely visible; missed decodes. Fix: more LNA, maybe +1 Mixer.

  • Overload (too much LNA): Flat-topped peaks, birdies, gritty audio; BER worsens when you add gain. Fix: less LNA, or add attenuator/FM-notch.

  • Too much VGA: Looks louder, sounds hissier, no BER improvement. Fix: lower VGA.

  • AGC on: Waterfall/levels “breathe,” calls get chopped. Fix: AGCs off.

For Cap+ DMR specifically: prioritize LNA, keep VGA modest, use a click or two of Mixer, and aim for that –25..–15 dBFS window during voice. Once you get levels right, the hopping rest channel and LCN map do the rest.