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Old February 21st 05, 03:57 PM
Michael Black
 
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"John Walton" ) writes:
A Square Wave is all the harmonics of the fundamental, so a 1.9kHz square
wave will have all the harmonics which will complicate the measurement --

If you take a square wave and filter it you can get a relatively low
distortion fundamental -- it's much easier than you might think -- use an
NE556 dual timer to generate 1.9kHz and 1.3kHz square waves, combine with
10k resistors into an opamp buffer, filter with an MF-10 (now upgraded to
LMF100) switched capacitor low pass filter -- voila.

And why not start with a sinewave oscillator in the first place? That's
the way it used to be done, two transistors each making up phase shift
oscillators.

A sqarewave won't complicate measurements, it will downright give
different results. The whole point of two-tone testing is that the
first tone causes a "carrier" out of the SSB transmitter (the single
tone translates to an RF frequency), and the second tone adds modulation.
If the tones aren't pure sinewave, the output of the transmitter will
be radically different.

Michael VE2BVW


"Dave Platt" wrote in message
...
The transmitter alignment instructions for my Icom 751A tranceiver
calls for a 2 tone input during the alignment process....

"Insert 2 audio signals into the MIC Connector
1.9kHz at 3mV
1.3kHz at 3mV

Are there AF generators out ther that will generate more than one
tone?


They do exist - I'm in the process of doing some restoration on an old
Singer tone generator which does arbitrary pairs of frequencies.

These days, the easiest way to create a tone combination is usually to
use PC software. Generate two sinewave tones at the two frequencies
you want, with 50% amplitude or less, then mix 'em with the
appropriate relative amplitudes. There's lotsa free software which
will do this - e.g. Audacity on Linux and no doubt many others.

You can then play the mixed file out through your PC sound card, or
burn it to a CD-R and use a portable CD player to reproduce the
sound... whichever is most convenient. In either case, feed the
line-level output signal to a fixed or variable attenuator to get the
voltage level you need.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
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