General/Chapter 5 Study Guide: Difference between revisions
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* the mixing of two signals is called heterodyning | * the mixing of two signals is called heterodyning | ||
* in a VHF/UHF transmitter (FM), the stage that generates a harmonic of a low-frequency signal is the multiplier | * in a VHF/UHF transmitter (FM), the stage that generates a harmonic of a low-frequency signal is the multiplier | ||
==Section 5.3: Transmitter Structure== | |||
transmitters and receivers are assembled from the following building blocks: | |||
am modes | |||
* CW, SSB, and AM are all types of amplitude-modulated signals | |||
* generated by same transmitter structure | |||
* analog transmitters: generate/modify signals with discrete electronic components | |||
* DSP/SDR transmitters perform these operations in software, on a microprocessor | |||
CW transmitters | |||
* oscillator + amplifier | |||
* crystal oscillator restricts operating frequency, but is stable | |||
* variable frequency oscillator VFO controlled transmitter | |||
* oscillator may contain buffer amplifier to protect from chirps - rapid change in frequency (key-down periods due to power supply, or load changes) | |||
* output amplifier: two stages | |||
** driver stage | |||
** power amplifier stage | |||
* VFO transmitter, mixers used to change TX output frequency without changing VFO frequency range | |||
* schematic: VFO has a fixed range, fed into mixer. other feed into mixer is local oscillator - switch between three different crystals. the mixer output is sent to the filter, and combined with the keyer to send out a signal. | |||
SSB transmitter: | |||
* same arrangement, but the VFO is now replaced with a microphone circuit | |||
* input to balanced modulator is carrier signal, plus microphone input | |||
* output is DSB signal, so filter is required to remove the undesired sideband | |||
* USB signals on 20 m, LSB on 80 and 40 m | |||
* mixer then converts signal to correct frequency | |||
* SSB transmitter can unbalance the modulator to generate AM signals | |||
* SSB signals: carrier must be reduced or suppressed to at least 40 dB below signal's peak power output, to prevent interference | |||
* output amplifier must be a linear amplifier, due to rapidly changing speech waveforms | |||
* nonlinear amplifier will distort speech | |||
* CW transmitter turns sine wave on/off, no need to be linear | |||
* SSB/AM stages must all reproduce input signal accurately, via mixing, filtering, amplifying | |||
* distortion in the transmit chain will create suprious signals, harmonics, mixing products, splatter | |||
* SSB bandwidth should be 3 kHz or smaller | |||
* AM bandwidth should be 6 kHz or smaller | |||
* on 60 m, USB signals hsould be 2.8 kHz or narrower | |||
FM transmitters: | |||
* modulation and frequency changes work differently in FM TX than SSB/AM TX | |||
* less expensive implementation of FM: | |||
** generate FM signal at low frequency | |||
** multiply it to reach new band | |||
* for 2 m FM transmitter, modulated oscillator frequency is about 12 MHz, and multiplier selects 12th harmonic for transmission on 2 m (12 x 12 = 144 MHz) | |||
* To transmit a signal at 146.52 MHz, you must use the 12th harmonic, so the oscillator frequency must be adjusted to 146.52/12 = 12.21 MHz | |||
* Deviation from crystal is also multiplied | |||
* to control deviation of 146.52 MHz to within 5 kHz, crystal oscillator deviation should be 5/12 = .416 kHz = 416.7 Hz | |||
* good FCC practice requires bandwidth to be limited | |||
* Carson's Rule: BW = 2 x ( Peak Deviation + Highest Modulating Frequency) | |||
* If FM phone signal peak deviation is 5 kHz, and highest modulating frequency is 3 kHz, bandwidth = 2(5+3) = 16 kHz | |||
* Repeater coordinators use 20 kHz channel, fits 16 kHz wide signal comfortably | |||
* FM and PM phase modulation have constant power, so amplifier does not need to be linear | |||
Signal quality: | |||
* keep signals intelligible and prevent excessive bandwidth | |||
* potential issues: | |||
** overmodulation - AM modes | |||
** Speech processing | |||
** Overdeviation - FM/AM | |||
** key clicks | |||
Overmodulation - AM modes: | |||
* if amplitude of AM or SSB signal is varied excessively in response to modulating signal, result is overmodulation | |||
* overmodulation caused by speaking too loudly or by setting mic or audio gain too high | |||
* overmodulation causes spurious signals in nearby frequencies | |||
* modulation envelope - waveform created by connecting peaks of modulated signal | |||
* cutoff - transmitter is turned off instead of following the modulated signal (floor is too high) | |||
* flag-topping - transmitter reaches max output and cannot increase with signal (ceiling too low) | |||
* transmitted audio is distorted | |||
* spurious signals are created | |||
** distortion products | |||
** splatter | |||
** buckshot | |||
* properly adjust mic gain | |||
* use oscilloscope to check for clean signal at TX output | |||
* note transmitter settings and meter behavior, and oscilloscope images | |||
* flat topping happens when drive level to transmitter output or external amplifiers is beyond the max power level | |||
* carrier cutoff occurs when output signal is totally cut off between peaks | |||
* use normal speech/audio levels | |||
* use monitor function to check own signal | |||
* ALC - automatic level control | |||
* two tone test for transmitter linearity: | |||
** modulate signal with pair of non-harmonic tones | |||
** adjust transmitter and amplifier for output without any distortion | |||
speech processing: | |||
* average power of SSB signal is low compared to CW | |||
* energy spread over wider spectrum | |||
* makes signals harder to understand through noise | |||
* speech processing increases average power of speech signal without distorting signal | |||
* some processors go between mic and radio, some go between radio and amplifier | |||
* compression - increases gain at low input levels, holds gain constant for hi input levels | |||
* amount of compression mesasured in dB | |||
** if low-level input signal is amplified to 10 dB more gain than high-level signal, you have 10 dB of compression | |||
* overprocesssing can also be an issue | |||
* processed signals require adjustment of transmitter modulation to avoid splatter | |||
* speech processing can increase background noise too | |||
* speech processing requires balance between increase in average power versus reduction in intelligibility | |||
overdeviation | |||
* distortion in FM signals happening due to overmodulation | |||
* instead of envelope distortion, you get frequency deviation | |||
* overdeviation of FM signals will cause interference nearby, just like AM | |||
Key clicks: | |||
* sharp transient clicking sounds heard on frequencies adjacent to CW signals | |||
* caused by transmitter turning on and off | |||
* reduce key clicks by adjusting TX configuration or by modifying keyer's control circuit | |||
* use oscilloscope to monitor CW waveform | |||
* leading adn trailing edges of CW output shoudl be 4-8 ms long, otherwise clicks will be generated from too-rapid on/off | |||
* waveform: key clicks will show up as signals in sidebands | |||
amplifiers: | |||
* hf operators use amps to strength signals | |||
* VHF/UHF amps are solid state bricks | |||
* HF amps use vacuum tube circuits | |||
* SSB modes require linear amplifier, so wave form input not distorted | |||
* amplifier circuit = stage | |||
* four classes of amplifier stages: | |||
** Class A - most linear, least efficient, on all the time, gain is limited | |||
** Class B - push-pull, pair of amplifiers switching on and off with cycle, good efficiency, linearity is possible | |||
** Class AB - midway between A and B, amplifier device is active for more than half of the cycle. Linearity not as good as Class A. | |||
** Class C - active for less than half of cycle, highest efficiecy, only work for CW and FM due to non-linearity | |||
Tuning Linear Amplifier: | |||
* 3 primary operator adjustments | |||
** band | |||
** tune | |||
** load/coupling | |||
* band - configures input and output impedance matching or filter circuits | |||
* tune/load adjust components in output matching circuit (pi network) | |||
* start by setting the band switch properly | |||
* apply drive power to amplifier, wtch current meter | |||
* adjust tune control for a minimum setting, which indicates output matching circuit is resonant with input signal | |||
* adjust load to maximize output power, then adjust tune to plate-current minimum | |||
* this will enable max output power without max plate current being exceeded | |||
* drive power important, esp. for grid-driven amplifier circuits | |||
* too much drive causes excessive grid current | |||
* modern amplifiers have circuitry to protect circuits against excessive grid drive | |||
* operate amp according to mfg specs! | |||
* excessive drive power can also destroy solid state amplifiers with power transistors | |||
neutralization: | |||
* for oscillations, positive feedback must lead to a gain > 1 | |||
* HF amplifiers using triode tubes can become self-oscillating at VHF frequencies | |||
* main path for positive feedback in a grid-driven amplifier is inter-electrode capacitance (voltage difference between plate and control grid) | |||
* self-oscillation geneates spurious signals, can damage circuit components | |||
* neutalization: creates negative feedback at VHF - connect an out-of-phase signal with input signal to cancel unwanted positive feedback | |||
* neutralization is performed by connecting small variable apacitor between amplifier's output and input | |||
===Section 5.3 Summary=== | |||
* Transceiver operated in "split mode" means it transmits/receives on different frequencies | |||
* on a vacuum tube RF power amp, the plate current meter indicates correct plate tuning control when there is a dip or minimum | |||
* use ALC auto level control with RF power amp to reduce distortion due to excessive drive | |||
* in a solid state RF amplifier, excessive drive power can cause damage | |||
* the correct adjustment for the load/coupling control of a vacuum tube RF power amplifier is maximum power output - while not exceeding maximum plate current | |||
* transmitter keying circuits include time delay so that transmit-receive changeover operations can complete properly before RF output is allowed | |||
* common use for a dual VFO feature on transceiver is to allow monitoring of 2 different frequencies | |||
* to conduct a two-tone test, use two non-harmonically related signals | |||
* the two-tone test analyzes transmitter linearity | |||
* on modern transciever, speech processor is used to increase intelligibility of voice signals | |||
* for ssb phone signal, speech processor will increase average power | |||
* incorrectly adjusted speech processor will result in all of these: | |||
** distorted speech | |||
** splatter | |||
** excessive bkgd noise | |||
* efficiency of RF power amplifier is obtained by: Efficiency = (RF output power)/(DC input power) | |||
* Class A linear amplifier has the following characteristic: low distortion (but inefficient) | |||
* Class C power stage is used to amplify CW signals (not SSB, not AM, because nonlinear and distorts speech waveform) | |||
* Amplifier with highest efficiency is Class C, the most non-linear. The least efficient is Class A, the most linear. | |||
* The final amplifier stage of a transmitter is neutralized to eliminate self-oscillations | |||
* a linear amplifier is an amplifier that preserves the output wave form | |||
* in some ssb transmitters, a filter sits between the balanced modulator and the mixer | |||
* in some ssb transmitters, a balanced modulator combines the carrier oscillator and speech amp signals and sends the results to a filter | |||
* an effect of overmodulation is excessive bandwidth | |||
* to adjust proper ALC settings, on ssb, adjust transmit audio or mic gain | |||
* flat topping means signal distorition caused by excessive drive | |||
* an AM signal's modulation envelope is the waveform created by connecting peak values of modulated signal | |||
==Section 5.4: Receiver Structure== | |||
* Receivers have many more adjustments than transmitters | |||
Superheterodyne receivers: | |||
* mixing of signals is called heterodyning, leads to f1 +/- f2 | |||
* superheterodyne receivers are sensitive to very weak signals | |||
* basic circuit: | |||
** RF signals are amplified and sent to mixer. | |||
** LO also sends signal to mixer. | |||
** signal at intermediate frequency IF is produced, filtered and demodulated. | |||
* iF filter removes nearby signals selectively | |||
* IF used because easier to tune filters/hi gain amps for single frequency | |||
* to convert signal at 14.250 to an IF of 455 kHz, local oscillator should be at 14.250 +/- .455 (13.795 or 14.705 MHz) | |||
* to cover entire 20 m band, 14.0 - 14.35, need local oscillator to tune from 13.545 MHz to 13.895 MHz | |||
* Demodulation of amplified IF signal is done by the product detector, a type of mixer | |||
* If AM being used, envelope detector is used for demodulation | |||
* Output of product or envelope detector is used to recover modulating signal | |||
* Product/envelope detector outputs audio signal | |||
* Front end of superheterodyne: antenna feeds into Rf amp. Mixer mixes signal from RF amp and from local oscillator. That is front end. | |||
* Front end processes weak signals at original frequency, so must owrk for wide frequency range and weak/strong signals | |||
* preselector sometimes used between antenna and RF amp to reject strong, out of band signals | |||
* these can fry a receiver if too strong, overwhelming circuitry | |||
* if additional sensitivity needed, preamplifier can be used | |||
* FM receivers: similar to superheterodyne, but key differences | |||
* FM only frequency matters | |||
* special non-linear amplifier called limiter replaces the linear IF amplifier | |||
* limiter: amplifies received signal until all amplitude modulation information (e.g., noise) is removed and only square wave remains, square wave of varying frequency | |||
* audio information: recovered by discriminator or quadrature detector (in place of the product detector in the AM/SSB/CW circuit) | |||
Weaknesses of superheterodyne: | |||
* sum/diff operation means, two signals can generate the same mixing product f1 +/- f2 | |||
* two input signal frequencies f1 will add and subtract from f2 to equal a given mixing product | |||
* image - undesired input signal frequency generating an internal frequency signal | |||
DSP - digital signal processing | |||
* alternative to superheterodyne | |||
* converts signals from analog to digital and performs filtering/other functions mathematically in software | |||
* signal that has been operated on is co nverted back into analog for humans or characters for digital modes | |||
* DSP advantages: performance and flexibility | |||
** performance: complicated stuff, just as good as analog | |||
** flexibility: program anything you want | |||
* can react automatically to changes in circuitry based on signal | |||
* common DSP functions: | |||
** signal filtering | |||
** noise reduction | |||
** notch filtering | |||
** audio frequency equalizaiton | |||
Removing interference: | |||
* notch filters - remove signals from very narrow frequency range (e.g., interfering carrier tone) | |||
* passband/IF shift filter - adjusts passband above/below carrier frequency to avoid interfering signals | |||
* reverse sideband - receive CW signals above/below displayed carrier frequency; signals below/above carrier will be filtered | |||
Receiver Gain: | |||
* receivers use gain to make signals audible | |||
* too little/too much gain causes problems | |||
* RF gain control used to tune into signals | |||
* automatic gain control: vary gain to maintain constant signal volume | |||
* fast AGC for CW, slow AGC for voice | |||
* S-meter: signal gain, indicates voltage papplied to an amplifier | |||
* S-meter measured in S-units, 1 S-unit = 6 dB (4x increase in power) | |||
* S-meter midpoint of S-9: "S-9 +20 dB" = signal 20 dB (100 x) stronger than S-9 signal | |||
Receiver linearity: | |||
* need linear receivers, or receiver will generate spurious signals | |||
* common form of non-linearity is overload or compression (a.k.a. front-end overload) | |||
* if signal is too strong for receiver to handle, distortion results | |||
* solution to overload: | |||
** filter out strong signals | |||
** reduce receiver gain with attenuator circuit | |||
* linearity also affected by preamp: preamp increases sensitivity to overload | |||
* noise blankers can confuse noise pulses with strong signals | |||
===Section 5.4 Summary=== | |||
* a notch filter is added to HF transceivers to reduce interference from carriers in receiver passband | |||
* when receiving CW signals, using reverse sideband reduces/eliminates interference from other signals | |||
* on a receiver, the IF shift control helps avoid interference from stations close to receive frequency | |||
* on an HF transciever, the attenuator function will reduce signal overload due to strong signals | |||
* a digital signal processor can be used to rpocess signals 9e.g., remove noise) | |||
* on a receiver, a DSP IF filter has advantage over analog filter in the design and bandwidth of filters | |||
* to perform automatic notching of interfering carriers, use a DSP filter | |||
* an S-meter measures voltage supplied to RF gain to maintain a certain signal strength level (S-meter measures signal strength) | |||
* a signal that reads "S-9 +20dB" or "20 dB over S9" will be +20 dB (or 100x) more powerful | |||
* an S-meter is found in a receiver | |||
* a single S-unit represents a 4x change in signal strength | |||
* transmitter power output must be increased x4 to raise S-meter from S8 to S9 | |||
* Circuit that processes signals from the RF amp and the LO and then sends it on to the IF filter in a superheterodyne receiver is the mixer | |||
* the circuit that combines signals from IF amp and BFO (beat freq. osc.) and sends results on to AF amp is the product detector | |||
* the simplest superheterodyne receiver consists of: | |||
** HF oscillator | |||
** Mixer | |||
** Detector | |||
* The circuit in an FM receiver that convets signals from IF amp to audio is the disfriminator | |||
* For a digital signal processor IF filter, you need all of the following: | |||
** Analog to Digital | |||
** Digital to Analog | |||
** DSP chip | |||
* DSP filtering is accomplished by converting signal from analog to digital, and using digital processing | |||
* The term SDR refers to a radio in which most processing is done in software | |||
* If a receiver mixes a 13.800 MHz VFO with a 14.255 MHz received signal, and produces a 455 kHz intermediate frequency signal, the type of interference that a signal at 13.345 MHz will produce will be image interference/image response | |||
** f1 - LO = IF | |||
** LO - f2 = IF | |||
** This is imaging | |||
* it is important to match receiver bandwidth with operating mode because it gives the best signal to noise ratio | |||
==Section 5.5: HF Station Installation== | |||
Mobile: | |||
* 00s and 10s: mobile HF radios, all-band, led to growth of mobile HF | |||
* Power connection must provide 20 A or more with minimal voltage drop (assuming 100 W) | |||
* best power connection is directly to battery, heavy-gauge wire, fuse in + and - leads both | |||
* Metal chassis of vehicle not suitable ground | |||
* Radio power ground connects to battery ground or battery ground strip | |||
* Antenna systems are limited in space, but can use entire vehicle as antenna (attention to detail) | |||
** Use an efficient antenna | |||
** Use solid RF ground connections to vehicle | |||
** Mount antenna clear of metal surfaces | |||
* HF mobile noise sources: spark plugs, car accessories, alternators can cause noise, (windows, battery charging systems) | |||
** Use solid power connections | |||
** Use battery ground as noise filter | |||
* RF grounding: | |||
** Good station ground important to reduce electrical shock | |||
** At HF frequencies, AC ground conn. can act as antenna! | |||
** Need to manage RF separately from AC safety ground | |||
* RF bonding keeps everything at same voltage | |||
** Reduces current flow | |||
** Reduces distortion/improper operation | |||
* Common voltage minimizes voltage hot spots, reduces RF current | |||
* RF currents can distort audio and lead to incomprehensible digital transmissions | |||
* Basics: | |||
** Common bonding to bus bar | |||
** Short-as-possible straps, wires, etc | |||
** Big heavy gauge wire | |||
* Connections to grounding rods short as possible | |||
** If grounding rod connections are 1/4 wavelength long, will present high impedance and enable high voltages to exist | |||
** Avoiding high-impedance ground connection difficult for large buildings - in this case keep all equipment at same RF voltage | |||
* Ground loops - continuous current path (loop) exists around series of equipment enclosures | |||
** Loop acts as single-turn inductor | |||
** Voltage picked up from any magnetic fields in loop from low-frequency urrents (AC wiring, power transformers, etc.) | |||
** Hum or buzz in audio signal results | |||
** Avoid ground loops with RF bonding bus | |||
RF interference: | |||
* Sec ARRL RFI handbook | |||
* Common causes and solutions to RF interference with consumer electronics | |||
* RF Interference: | |||
** Fundamental overload - unable to reject strong signals, internal circuits are overloaded; solution added to filters in the path of the signal | |||
** Common mode/direct pickup - local strong signals are picked up by internal electronics, as common-mode currents for unshielded connections, and conducted into device; solution: add RF chokes or bypass capacitors on the cables/connections picking up the RF current (direct pickup - signal received directly by internal wiring, only solution is shielding) | |||
** Harmonics - spurious emissions received by TV/electronics; solution: use low-pass filter to remove the spurious emissions (match low-pass filter impedance with feed line impedance) | |||
** Rectification - poor contacts between two conductors sending RF signals can cause mixer and mixing products from signals, and potentially create interference; solution: find and repair the broken/poor contact | |||
** Arcing - spark/sustained arc creates radio noise over wide range of frequencies; solution: isolate to single station, request repairs with power company | |||
* Arcing is caused by poor contacts between any two conductors | |||
* RF Interference Suppression: | |||
** Best solution to interference: keep RF signals out of other equipment | |||
** Next best solution: filter out the RF signals | |||
** Filters are generally most effective approach | |||
** Prevent RF current flow by placing inductance/resistance in the path | |||
** Do this by forming the conductor carrying RF current into an inductor choke (wind it around a ferrite core) | |||
** Ferrite beads or cores on cables can also prevent RF common mode current from flowing through the outside of cable braid or shields | |||
** This also works preventing computer signal interference | |||
** Audio equipment/appliance switch interference can sometimes be eliminated by placing small capacitor (100 pF - 1 nF) bypass capacitor across balanced connections, or from each connection to chassis ground | |||
* RFI symptoms: | |||
** CW/FM/data - buzzes, humming, clicks, thumps | |||
** AM phone - emitting replica of speaker's voice | |||
** SSB - replica of voice, but with distortion/garbling | |||
===Section 5.5 Summary=== | |||
* A symptom of transmitted RF being picked up by audio cable carrying AFSK data is: any of the below | |||
** VOX circuit doesn't un-key transmitter | |||
** Transmitter signal distorted | |||
** Frequent connection timeouts | |||
* To reduce RF interference in audio frequency devices, use a bypass capacitor | |||
* A cause of interference covering a wide range of frequencies is arcing at a poor electrical connection | |||
* In audio/telephone circuit, SSB interference sounds like distorted/garbled speech | |||
* In audio/telephone circuit, CW interference sounds like an on-off humming or clicking | |||
* If you receive an RF burn when you touch equipment during transmission on HF, assuming equipment connected to grounding rod, then the problem is that the ground wire has high impedance | |||
* A resonant ground connection can cause high RF voltages on equipment (due to high impedance) | |||
* To avoid unwanted stray RF, connect all equipment together | |||
* To reduce RF interference from common-mode current on an audio cable, place ferrite choke on cable | |||
* To avoid a ground loop, connect all ground conductors to a single point | |||
* A symptom of a ground loop could be a hum sound on station's transmitted signal | |||
* For a 100 W HF transceiver on a mobile rig, the best direct, fused power connection is tto the battery using a heavy-gauge wire | |||
* It is best not to draw 100 W DC from vehicle's aux power socket, because socket wiring not rated to handle high current (20 A) | |||
* The greatest limitation on an HF mobile transceiver is the antenna system | |||
* Interference in an HF receiver in a recent-model vehicle may be caused by any of the following: | |||
** Battery charging system | |||
** Fuel delivery system | |||
** Vehicle control computer | |||
* The impedance of a low-pass filter, as compared to impedance of transmission line, should be about the same | |||
** "Remember to match the low-pass filter's impedance with the characteristic impedance of the feed line iti s inserted into") | |||
** Impedance! Not inductance! | |||
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Latest revision as of 08:28, 15 June 2016
Chapter 5: Radio Signals and Equipment
Section 5.1: Signal Review
- a radio signal at one frequency, at constant power, is CW - continuous wave
- adding information to a signal (via changes in frequency, phase angle, or amplitude) is modulation
- the method of modulation is asignal's mode
- an unmodulated signal carries no information
- to recover information from a signal is demodulation
- voice mode/phone mode - voice/speech is information
- data mode/digital mode - data is information
- analog - information can be understood by human
- digital - information can be understood by computer
AM
- amplitude modulation
- information contained int he signal's envelope, or maximum instantaneous power for each cycle
- AM signals have a carrier and 2 sidebands
- AM signals with the carrier removed are double sideband DSB
- AM signals with one sideband and the carrier removed are single sideband SSB
angle modulation
- varying freq to add info is frequency modulation FM
- amt that signal frequency varies is called deviation
- phase angle can be varied with respect to reference phase, this is phase modulation
- FM/PM can be decoded with same circuits
- FM: changes amount of time signal takes to make a 360 degree cycle
PM - changes relative phase difference between signal and reference phase
- FM and PM signals have one carrier, multiple sidebands
- FM/PM are constant power (modulated or not)
bandwidth
- definition of bandwidth - width outside of which the average power of the signal is attenuated by 26 dB below the mean power
- typical bandwidth values:
- TV - 6 MHz
- AM - 6 kHz
- FM - 5-16 kHz
- SSB - 2-3 kHz
- Digital - 50-300 Hz
- CW - 100-300 Hz
Section 5.1 Summary
- The process that changes the phase angle of an RF wave to convey information is phase modulation
- the process that changes instantaneous frequency of RF wave to convey information is frequency modulation
- Instantaneous power level of RF signal used to convey information in amplitude modulation AM
- The phone emission with the narrowest bandwidth is SSB single sideband
Section 5.2: Radio's Building Bloccks
Oscillators, mixers, multipliers, modulators
Oscillators:
- produce a pure sine wave, as close to 1 frequency as possible
- oscillator has two parts:
- amplifier to increase gain
- feedback circuit to route some output back into input
- if product of amplifier gain and amt of feedback are > 1, circuit's output will be self-sustaining - this is called oscillation
- oscillator output frequency can be fixed or varied
fixed frequency oscillators FFOs: 3 types
- RC (resistors/capacitors)
- LC (inductors/capacitors)
- crystal (acts like LC, orders of magnitude more precise)
variable frequency oscillators VFOs: 3 types
- LC circuit with variable capacitor
- PLL phase locked loop
- DDS direct digital synthesizer (software-controlled, has stability of crystal oscillator)
Mixers:
- changing frequency of signal is key function in RX/TX
- this is what mixer does
- in: f1, f2
- out: f1 +/- f2
- mixers combine 2 frequencies f1 and f2
- combine to form f1 + f2 and f1 - f2
- heterodyning - the mixing of 2 frequencies (f1 +/- f2)
- input f1 is called RF input (transmitted signal)
- input f2 is called local oscillator LO (locally-generated reference signal)
- outputs from mixer are called mixing products
Multipliers:
- this unit creates a harmonic of the input frequency (multiplies by an integer)
- low-frequency oscillators are easier/smaller to build, so run low-frequency oscillator signal through a multiplier to make a VHF/UHF signal
Modulators:
- modulators add information to a carrier signal
- information added to a signal as amplitude, frequency, or phase variations
- input 1 is carrier input f1
- input 2 is modulating input f2
- output is f1 modulated by f2
Amplitude Modulators:
- first created by varying the power supply voltage of a CW signal
- as voltage changes, amplituded of output signal's envelope follows along
- also called plate modulation, or drain modulation, or collector modulation
- plate modulation: voltage being varied connects to a vacuum tube
- drain modulation - voltage being varied connect to transistor's drain
- collector modulation - voltage being varied connects to a transistor's collector
- modulation transformer then adds/subtracts amplified voice signal to power supply voltage
- AM circuits cannot generate SSB signals
- AM, double sideband can be generated by balanced modulator
- balanced modulator:
- input 1: carrier signal f1
- input 2: modulating signal f2
- output signal: double sideband f1 +/- f2
- the pairs of sidebands, above and below, are due to heterodyning, f1 +/- f2
- DSB - double sideband requires a balanced modulator, so the carrier frequency will cancel out
- AM - requires an unbalanced modulator, so the carrier frequency will survive heterodyning
Frequency and Phase Modulators:
- FM - frequency of modulated signal changes with modulating signal's amplitude
- PM - frequency of modulated signal (deviation of signal) is proportional to modulating signal's amplitude and frequency
- FM/PM sound the same, demodulated with same circuit
- angle modulation performed with a reactance modulator
- two types of reactance modulators:
- FM reactance modulators
- PM reactance modulators
- FM reactance modulator: amp feeds into reactance modulator, output is frequency modulated output
- PM reactance modulator: amp and fixed-frequency oscillator feed into reactance modulator, output is phase modulated output
Section 5.2 Summary
- if a 3 kHz LSB signal has a carrier frequency of 7.178 MHz, it occupies 7.175-7.178 MHz
- if using 3 kHz USB signal on 20 m, how close to edge of band should carrier signal be? 3 kHz below edge of band
- basic components of a sine wave oscillator are an amplifier and a feedback circuit with a filter
- frequency of LC oscillator can vary depending on component ratings - individual inductances and capacitances
- a transceiver controlled by a direct digital synthesizer is that you have stability of a crystal, with variable frequency
- a reactance modulator connected to RF amplifier stage generates phase modulation or frequency modulation
- carrier suppression in SSB phone - the advantage over AM is that transmitter power can be used more efficiently (narrower bandwidth)
- the receiver stage that combines a 14.250 MHz signal with a 13.795 MHz oscillator to produce a 455 kHz intermediate frequency is a mixer (heterodyning)
- the mixing of two signals is called heterodyning
- in a VHF/UHF transmitter (FM), the stage that generates a harmonic of a low-frequency signal is the multiplier
Section 5.3: Transmitter Structure
transmitters and receivers are assembled from the following building blocks:
am modes
- CW, SSB, and AM are all types of amplitude-modulated signals
- generated by same transmitter structure
- analog transmitters: generate/modify signals with discrete electronic components
- DSP/SDR transmitters perform these operations in software, on a microprocessor
CW transmitters
- oscillator + amplifier
- crystal oscillator restricts operating frequency, but is stable
- variable frequency oscillator VFO controlled transmitter
- oscillator may contain buffer amplifier to protect from chirps - rapid change in frequency (key-down periods due to power supply, or load changes)
- output amplifier: two stages
- driver stage
- power amplifier stage
- VFO transmitter, mixers used to change TX output frequency without changing VFO frequency range
- schematic: VFO has a fixed range, fed into mixer. other feed into mixer is local oscillator - switch between three different crystals. the mixer output is sent to the filter, and combined with the keyer to send out a signal.
SSB transmitter:
- same arrangement, but the VFO is now replaced with a microphone circuit
- input to balanced modulator is carrier signal, plus microphone input
- output is DSB signal, so filter is required to remove the undesired sideband
- USB signals on 20 m, LSB on 80 and 40 m
- mixer then converts signal to correct frequency
- SSB transmitter can unbalance the modulator to generate AM signals
- SSB signals: carrier must be reduced or suppressed to at least 40 dB below signal's peak power output, to prevent interference
- output amplifier must be a linear amplifier, due to rapidly changing speech waveforms
- nonlinear amplifier will distort speech
- CW transmitter turns sine wave on/off, no need to be linear
- SSB/AM stages must all reproduce input signal accurately, via mixing, filtering, amplifying
- distortion in the transmit chain will create suprious signals, harmonics, mixing products, splatter
- SSB bandwidth should be 3 kHz or smaller
- AM bandwidth should be 6 kHz or smaller
- on 60 m, USB signals hsould be 2.8 kHz or narrower
FM transmitters:
- modulation and frequency changes work differently in FM TX than SSB/AM TX
- less expensive implementation of FM:
- generate FM signal at low frequency
- multiply it to reach new band
- for 2 m FM transmitter, modulated oscillator frequency is about 12 MHz, and multiplier selects 12th harmonic for transmission on 2 m (12 x 12 = 144 MHz)
- To transmit a signal at 146.52 MHz, you must use the 12th harmonic, so the oscillator frequency must be adjusted to 146.52/12 = 12.21 MHz
- Deviation from crystal is also multiplied
- to control deviation of 146.52 MHz to within 5 kHz, crystal oscillator deviation should be 5/12 = .416 kHz = 416.7 Hz
- good FCC practice requires bandwidth to be limited
- Carson's Rule: BW = 2 x ( Peak Deviation + Highest Modulating Frequency)
- If FM phone signal peak deviation is 5 kHz, and highest modulating frequency is 3 kHz, bandwidth = 2(5+3) = 16 kHz
- Repeater coordinators use 20 kHz channel, fits 16 kHz wide signal comfortably
- FM and PM phase modulation have constant power, so amplifier does not need to be linear
Signal quality:
- keep signals intelligible and prevent excessive bandwidth
- potential issues:
- overmodulation - AM modes
- Speech processing
- Overdeviation - FM/AM
- key clicks
Overmodulation - AM modes:
- if amplitude of AM or SSB signal is varied excessively in response to modulating signal, result is overmodulation
- overmodulation caused by speaking too loudly or by setting mic or audio gain too high
- overmodulation causes spurious signals in nearby frequencies
- modulation envelope - waveform created by connecting peaks of modulated signal
- cutoff - transmitter is turned off instead of following the modulated signal (floor is too high)
- flag-topping - transmitter reaches max output and cannot increase with signal (ceiling too low)
- transmitted audio is distorted
- spurious signals are created
- distortion products
- splatter
- buckshot
- properly adjust mic gain
- use oscilloscope to check for clean signal at TX output
- note transmitter settings and meter behavior, and oscilloscope images
- flat topping happens when drive level to transmitter output or external amplifiers is beyond the max power level
- carrier cutoff occurs when output signal is totally cut off between peaks
- use normal speech/audio levels
- use monitor function to check own signal
- ALC - automatic level control
- two tone test for transmitter linearity:
- modulate signal with pair of non-harmonic tones
- adjust transmitter and amplifier for output without any distortion
speech processing:
- average power of SSB signal is low compared to CW
- energy spread over wider spectrum
- makes signals harder to understand through noise
- speech processing increases average power of speech signal without distorting signal
- some processors go between mic and radio, some go between radio and amplifier
- compression - increases gain at low input levels, holds gain constant for hi input levels
- amount of compression mesasured in dB
- if low-level input signal is amplified to 10 dB more gain than high-level signal, you have 10 dB of compression
- overprocesssing can also be an issue
- processed signals require adjustment of transmitter modulation to avoid splatter
- speech processing can increase background noise too
- speech processing requires balance between increase in average power versus reduction in intelligibility
overdeviation
- distortion in FM signals happening due to overmodulation
- instead of envelope distortion, you get frequency deviation
- overdeviation of FM signals will cause interference nearby, just like AM
Key clicks:
- sharp transient clicking sounds heard on frequencies adjacent to CW signals
- caused by transmitter turning on and off
- reduce key clicks by adjusting TX configuration or by modifying keyer's control circuit
- use oscilloscope to monitor CW waveform
- leading adn trailing edges of CW output shoudl be 4-8 ms long, otherwise clicks will be generated from too-rapid on/off
- waveform: key clicks will show up as signals in sidebands
amplifiers:
- hf operators use amps to strength signals
- VHF/UHF amps are solid state bricks
- HF amps use vacuum tube circuits
- SSB modes require linear amplifier, so wave form input not distorted
- amplifier circuit = stage
- four classes of amplifier stages:
- Class A - most linear, least efficient, on all the time, gain is limited
- Class B - push-pull, pair of amplifiers switching on and off with cycle, good efficiency, linearity is possible
- Class AB - midway between A and B, amplifier device is active for more than half of the cycle. Linearity not as good as Class A.
- Class C - active for less than half of cycle, highest efficiecy, only work for CW and FM due to non-linearity
Tuning Linear Amplifier:
- 3 primary operator adjustments
- band
- tune
- load/coupling
- band - configures input and output impedance matching or filter circuits
- tune/load adjust components in output matching circuit (pi network)
- start by setting the band switch properly
- apply drive power to amplifier, wtch current meter
- adjust tune control for a minimum setting, which indicates output matching circuit is resonant with input signal
- adjust load to maximize output power, then adjust tune to plate-current minimum
- this will enable max output power without max plate current being exceeded
- drive power important, esp. for grid-driven amplifier circuits
- too much drive causes excessive grid current
- modern amplifiers have circuitry to protect circuits against excessive grid drive
- operate amp according to mfg specs!
- excessive drive power can also destroy solid state amplifiers with power transistors
neutralization:
- for oscillations, positive feedback must lead to a gain > 1
- HF amplifiers using triode tubes can become self-oscillating at VHF frequencies
- main path for positive feedback in a grid-driven amplifier is inter-electrode capacitance (voltage difference between plate and control grid)
- self-oscillation geneates spurious signals, can damage circuit components
- neutalization: creates negative feedback at VHF - connect an out-of-phase signal with input signal to cancel unwanted positive feedback
- neutralization is performed by connecting small variable apacitor between amplifier's output and input
Section 5.3 Summary
- Transceiver operated in "split mode" means it transmits/receives on different frequencies
- on a vacuum tube RF power amp, the plate current meter indicates correct plate tuning control when there is a dip or minimum
- use ALC auto level control with RF power amp to reduce distortion due to excessive drive
- in a solid state RF amplifier, excessive drive power can cause damage
- the correct adjustment for the load/coupling control of a vacuum tube RF power amplifier is maximum power output - while not exceeding maximum plate current
- transmitter keying circuits include time delay so that transmit-receive changeover operations can complete properly before RF output is allowed
- common use for a dual VFO feature on transceiver is to allow monitoring of 2 different frequencies
- to conduct a two-tone test, use two non-harmonically related signals
- the two-tone test analyzes transmitter linearity
- on modern transciever, speech processor is used to increase intelligibility of voice signals
- for ssb phone signal, speech processor will increase average power
- incorrectly adjusted speech processor will result in all of these:
- distorted speech
- splatter
- excessive bkgd noise
- efficiency of RF power amplifier is obtained by: Efficiency = (RF output power)/(DC input power)
- Class A linear amplifier has the following characteristic: low distortion (but inefficient)
- Class C power stage is used to amplify CW signals (not SSB, not AM, because nonlinear and distorts speech waveform)
- Amplifier with highest efficiency is Class C, the most non-linear. The least efficient is Class A, the most linear.
- The final amplifier stage of a transmitter is neutralized to eliminate self-oscillations
- a linear amplifier is an amplifier that preserves the output wave form
- in some ssb transmitters, a filter sits between the balanced modulator and the mixer
- in some ssb transmitters, a balanced modulator combines the carrier oscillator and speech amp signals and sends the results to a filter
- an effect of overmodulation is excessive bandwidth
- to adjust proper ALC settings, on ssb, adjust transmit audio or mic gain
- flat topping means signal distorition caused by excessive drive
- an AM signal's modulation envelope is the waveform created by connecting peak values of modulated signal
Section 5.4: Receiver Structure
- Receivers have many more adjustments than transmitters
Superheterodyne receivers:
- mixing of signals is called heterodyning, leads to f1 +/- f2
- superheterodyne receivers are sensitive to very weak signals
- basic circuit:
- RF signals are amplified and sent to mixer.
- LO also sends signal to mixer.
- signal at intermediate frequency IF is produced, filtered and demodulated.
- iF filter removes nearby signals selectively
- IF used because easier to tune filters/hi gain amps for single frequency
- to convert signal at 14.250 to an IF of 455 kHz, local oscillator should be at 14.250 +/- .455 (13.795 or 14.705 MHz)
- to cover entire 20 m band, 14.0 - 14.35, need local oscillator to tune from 13.545 MHz to 13.895 MHz
- Demodulation of amplified IF signal is done by the product detector, a type of mixer
- If AM being used, envelope detector is used for demodulation
- Output of product or envelope detector is used to recover modulating signal
- Product/envelope detector outputs audio signal
- Front end of superheterodyne: antenna feeds into Rf amp. Mixer mixes signal from RF amp and from local oscillator. That is front end.
- Front end processes weak signals at original frequency, so must owrk for wide frequency range and weak/strong signals
- preselector sometimes used between antenna and RF amp to reject strong, out of band signals
- these can fry a receiver if too strong, overwhelming circuitry
- if additional sensitivity needed, preamplifier can be used
- FM receivers: similar to superheterodyne, but key differences
- FM only frequency matters
- special non-linear amplifier called limiter replaces the linear IF amplifier
- limiter: amplifies received signal until all amplitude modulation information (e.g., noise) is removed and only square wave remains, square wave of varying frequency
- audio information: recovered by discriminator or quadrature detector (in place of the product detector in the AM/SSB/CW circuit)
Weaknesses of superheterodyne:
- sum/diff operation means, two signals can generate the same mixing product f1 +/- f2
- two input signal frequencies f1 will add and subtract from f2 to equal a given mixing product
- image - undesired input signal frequency generating an internal frequency signal
DSP - digital signal processing
- alternative to superheterodyne
- converts signals from analog to digital and performs filtering/other functions mathematically in software
- signal that has been operated on is co nverted back into analog for humans or characters for digital modes
- DSP advantages: performance and flexibility
- performance: complicated stuff, just as good as analog
- flexibility: program anything you want
- can react automatically to changes in circuitry based on signal
- common DSP functions:
- signal filtering
- noise reduction
- notch filtering
- audio frequency equalizaiton
Removing interference:
- notch filters - remove signals from very narrow frequency range (e.g., interfering carrier tone)
- passband/IF shift filter - adjusts passband above/below carrier frequency to avoid interfering signals
- reverse sideband - receive CW signals above/below displayed carrier frequency; signals below/above carrier will be filtered
Receiver Gain:
- receivers use gain to make signals audible
- too little/too much gain causes problems
- RF gain control used to tune into signals
- automatic gain control: vary gain to maintain constant signal volume
- fast AGC for CW, slow AGC for voice
- S-meter: signal gain, indicates voltage papplied to an amplifier
- S-meter measured in S-units, 1 S-unit = 6 dB (4x increase in power)
- S-meter midpoint of S-9: "S-9 +20 dB" = signal 20 dB (100 x) stronger than S-9 signal
Receiver linearity:
- need linear receivers, or receiver will generate spurious signals
- common form of non-linearity is overload or compression (a.k.a. front-end overload)
- if signal is too strong for receiver to handle, distortion results
- solution to overload:
- filter out strong signals
- reduce receiver gain with attenuator circuit
- linearity also affected by preamp: preamp increases sensitivity to overload
- noise blankers can confuse noise pulses with strong signals
Section 5.4 Summary
- a notch filter is added to HF transceivers to reduce interference from carriers in receiver passband
- when receiving CW signals, using reverse sideband reduces/eliminates interference from other signals
- on a receiver, the IF shift control helps avoid interference from stations close to receive frequency
- on an HF transciever, the attenuator function will reduce signal overload due to strong signals
- a digital signal processor can be used to rpocess signals 9e.g., remove noise)
- on a receiver, a DSP IF filter has advantage over analog filter in the design and bandwidth of filters
- to perform automatic notching of interfering carriers, use a DSP filter
- an S-meter measures voltage supplied to RF gain to maintain a certain signal strength level (S-meter measures signal strength)
- a signal that reads "S-9 +20dB" or "20 dB over S9" will be +20 dB (or 100x) more powerful
- an S-meter is found in a receiver
- a single S-unit represents a 4x change in signal strength
- transmitter power output must be increased x4 to raise S-meter from S8 to S9
- Circuit that processes signals from the RF amp and the LO and then sends it on to the IF filter in a superheterodyne receiver is the mixer
- the circuit that combines signals from IF amp and BFO (beat freq. osc.) and sends results on to AF amp is the product detector
- the simplest superheterodyne receiver consists of:
- HF oscillator
- Mixer
- Detector
- The circuit in an FM receiver that convets signals from IF amp to audio is the disfriminator
- For a digital signal processor IF filter, you need all of the following:
- Analog to Digital
- Digital to Analog
- DSP chip
- DSP filtering is accomplished by converting signal from analog to digital, and using digital processing
- The term SDR refers to a radio in which most processing is done in software
- If a receiver mixes a 13.800 MHz VFO with a 14.255 MHz received signal, and produces a 455 kHz intermediate frequency signal, the type of interference that a signal at 13.345 MHz will produce will be image interference/image response
- f1 - LO = IF
- LO - f2 = IF
- This is imaging
- it is important to match receiver bandwidth with operating mode because it gives the best signal to noise ratio
Section 5.5: HF Station Installation
Mobile:
- 00s and 10s: mobile HF radios, all-band, led to growth of mobile HF
- Power connection must provide 20 A or more with minimal voltage drop (assuming 100 W)
- best power connection is directly to battery, heavy-gauge wire, fuse in + and - leads both
- Metal chassis of vehicle not suitable ground
- Radio power ground connects to battery ground or battery ground strip
- Antenna systems are limited in space, but can use entire vehicle as antenna (attention to detail)
- Use an efficient antenna
- Use solid RF ground connections to vehicle
- Mount antenna clear of metal surfaces
- HF mobile noise sources: spark plugs, car accessories, alternators can cause noise, (windows, battery charging systems)
- Use solid power connections
- Use battery ground as noise filter
- RF grounding:
- Good station ground important to reduce electrical shock
- At HF frequencies, AC ground conn. can act as antenna!
- Need to manage RF separately from AC safety ground
- RF bonding keeps everything at same voltage
- Reduces current flow
- Reduces distortion/improper operation
- Common voltage minimizes voltage hot spots, reduces RF current
- RF currents can distort audio and lead to incomprehensible digital transmissions
- Basics:
- Common bonding to bus bar
- Short-as-possible straps, wires, etc
- Big heavy gauge wire
- Connections to grounding rods short as possible
- If grounding rod connections are 1/4 wavelength long, will present high impedance and enable high voltages to exist
- Avoiding high-impedance ground connection difficult for large buildings - in this case keep all equipment at same RF voltage
- Ground loops - continuous current path (loop) exists around series of equipment enclosures
- Loop acts as single-turn inductor
- Voltage picked up from any magnetic fields in loop from low-frequency urrents (AC wiring, power transformers, etc.)
- Hum or buzz in audio signal results
- Avoid ground loops with RF bonding bus
RF interference:
- Sec ARRL RFI handbook
- Common causes and solutions to RF interference with consumer electronics
- RF Interference:
- Fundamental overload - unable to reject strong signals, internal circuits are overloaded; solution added to filters in the path of the signal
- Common mode/direct pickup - local strong signals are picked up by internal electronics, as common-mode currents for unshielded connections, and conducted into device; solution: add RF chokes or bypass capacitors on the cables/connections picking up the RF current (direct pickup - signal received directly by internal wiring, only solution is shielding)
- Harmonics - spurious emissions received by TV/electronics; solution: use low-pass filter to remove the spurious emissions (match low-pass filter impedance with feed line impedance)
- Rectification - poor contacts between two conductors sending RF signals can cause mixer and mixing products from signals, and potentially create interference; solution: find and repair the broken/poor contact
- Arcing - spark/sustained arc creates radio noise over wide range of frequencies; solution: isolate to single station, request repairs with power company
- Arcing is caused by poor contacts between any two conductors
- RF Interference Suppression:
- Best solution to interference: keep RF signals out of other equipment
- Next best solution: filter out the RF signals
- Filters are generally most effective approach
- Prevent RF current flow by placing inductance/resistance in the path
- Do this by forming the conductor carrying RF current into an inductor choke (wind it around a ferrite core)
- Ferrite beads or cores on cables can also prevent RF common mode current from flowing through the outside of cable braid or shields
- This also works preventing computer signal interference
- Audio equipment/appliance switch interference can sometimes be eliminated by placing small capacitor (100 pF - 1 nF) bypass capacitor across balanced connections, or from each connection to chassis ground
- RFI symptoms:
- CW/FM/data - buzzes, humming, clicks, thumps
- AM phone - emitting replica of speaker's voice
- SSB - replica of voice, but with distortion/garbling
Section 5.5 Summary
- A symptom of transmitted RF being picked up by audio cable carrying AFSK data is: any of the below
- VOX circuit doesn't un-key transmitter
- Transmitter signal distorted
- Frequent connection timeouts
- To reduce RF interference in audio frequency devices, use a bypass capacitor
- A cause of interference covering a wide range of frequencies is arcing at a poor electrical connection
- In audio/telephone circuit, SSB interference sounds like distorted/garbled speech
- In audio/telephone circuit, CW interference sounds like an on-off humming or clicking
- If you receive an RF burn when you touch equipment during transmission on HF, assuming equipment connected to grounding rod, then the problem is that the ground wire has high impedance
- A resonant ground connection can cause high RF voltages on equipment (due to high impedance)
- To avoid unwanted stray RF, connect all equipment together
- To reduce RF interference from common-mode current on an audio cable, place ferrite choke on cable
- To avoid a ground loop, connect all ground conductors to a single point
- A symptom of a ground loop could be a hum sound on station's transmitted signal
- For a 100 W HF transceiver on a mobile rig, the best direct, fused power connection is tto the battery using a heavy-gauge wire
- It is best not to draw 100 W DC from vehicle's aux power socket, because socket wiring not rated to handle high current (20 A)
- The greatest limitation on an HF mobile transceiver is the antenna system
- Interference in an HF receiver in a recent-model vehicle may be caused by any of the following:
- Battery charging system
- Fuel delivery system
- Vehicle control computer
- The impedance of a low-pass filter, as compared to impedance of transmission line, should be about the same
- "Remember to match the low-pass filter's impedance with the characteristic impedance of the feed line iti s inserted into")
- Impedance! Not inductance!
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Chapter 2: Procedures and Practices: General/Chapter 2 Study Guide Chapter 3: Rules and Regulations: General/Chapter 3 Study Guide Chapter 4: Components and Circuits: General/Chapter 4 Study Guide Chapter 5: Radio Signals and Equipment: General/Chapter 5 Study Guide Chapter 6: Digital Modes: General/Chapter 6 Study Guide Chapter 7: Antennas: General/Chapter 7 Study Guide Chapter 8: Propagation: General/Chapter 8 Study Guide Chapter 9: Electrical and RF Safety: General/Chapter 9 Study Guide Flags · Template:GeneralFlag · e |