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S-meter and signal strength

For frequencies below 30 MHz, S9 is defined as a voltage of 50 μV over 50 Ω at the receiver antenna connector; for frequencies above 30 MHz, S9 is defined as a voltage of 5 μV over 50 Ω at the receiver antenna connector. This refers to an unmodulated carrier signal (N0N) that uses almost no bandwidth; in case of real signals using a given bandwidth, this definition may not be enough since a smaller receiver bandwidth allows a weaker minimum detectable signal, but S-points are still a good tool for comparing received signals.


S-points for frequencies below 30 MHz:

Signal
strength
Relative
intensity
Received
voltage
Received power
(Zc = 50 Ω)
S1–48 dB0.20 μV–14 dBμV790 aW–121 dBm
S2–42 dB0.40 μV–8 dBμV3.2 fW–115 dBm
S3–36 dB0.79 μV–2 dBμV13 fW–109 dBm
S4–30 dB1.6 μV4 dBμV50 fW–103 dBm
S5–24 dB3.2 μV10 dBμV200 fW–97 dBm
S6–18 dB6.3 μV16 dBμV790 fW–91 dBm
S7–12 dB13 μV22 dBμV3.2 pW–85 dBm
S8–6 dB25 μV28 dBμV13 pW–79 dBm
S90 dB50 μV34 dBμV50 pW–73 dBm
S9+1010 dB160 μV44 dBμV500 pW–63 dBm
S9+2020 dB500 μV54 dBμV5.0 nW–53 dBm
S9+3030 dB1.6 mV64 dBμV50 nW–43 dBm
S9+4040 dB5.0 mV74 dBμV500 nW–33 dBm
S9+5050 dB16 mV84 dBμV5.0 μW–23 dBm
S9+6060 dB50 mV94 dBμV50 μW–13 dBm

S-points for frequencies above 30 MHz:

Signal
strength
Relative
intensity
Received
voltage
Received power
(Zc = 50 Ω)
S1–48 dB20 nV–34 dBμV7.9 aW–141 dBm
S2–42 dB40 nV–28 dBμV32 aW–135 dBm
S3–36 dB79 nV–22 dBμV130 aW–129 dBm
S4–30 dB160 nV–16 dBμV500 aW–123 dBm
S5–24 dB320 nV–10 dBμV2.0 fW–117 dBm
S6–18 dB630 nV–4 dBμV7.9 fW–111 dBm
S7–12 dB1.3 μV2 dBμV32 fW–105 dBm
S8–6 dB2.5 μV8 dBμV130 fW–99 dBm
S90 dB5.0 μV14 dBμV500 fW–93 dBm
S9+1010 dB16 μV24 dBμV5.0 pW–83 dBm
S9+2020 dB50 μV34 dBμV50 pW–73 dBm
S9+3030 dB160 μV44 dBμV500 pW–63 dBm
S9+4040 dB500 μV54 dBμV5.0 nW–53 dBm
S9+5050 dB1.6 mV64 dBμV50 nW–43 dBm
S9+6060 dB5.0 mV74 dBμV500 nW–33 dBm

Older receivers were calibrated using the old standard that defined S9 as a voltage of 100 μV instead of 50 μV over 50 Ω at the receiver antenna connector.

Usually S-meters in amateur radio equipment are not calibrated and are not very precise. S-meter readings may also vary from one band to another and it’s always interesting to check an S-meter with a precise generator and a step by step attenuator.

Wolfgang Link, DL8FI. Metodi di misura per radioamatori. Franco Muzzio & C. editore, 1978, sezione 3.9.

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