On May 14, 8:24*pm, (Dave Platt) wrote:
In article ,
Bill M wrote:
Also, if I remember correctly, aircraft use AM in the 108-136 MHz range. *
So modifying the 88-108 MHz FM portion of the receiver wouldn't work. *
Doesn't really matter much since you can slope tune it.
IIRC, slope tuning can be used to allow an AM receiver to demodulate
FM (albeit somewhat crudely).
Does it work in reverse? *Can you offset-tune an FM receiver, and get
its discriminator to demodulate an AM carrier-and-sidebands?
Seems to me that this wouldn't necessarily work... the
huge-amounts-of-gain-and-then-clip-the-result architecture of an FM's
IF strip is going to equalize out the amplitude variations in the AM
signal pretty effectively, won't it?
--
Dave Platt * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * AE6EO
Friends of Jade Warrior home page: *http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
* I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
* * *boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!
If an FM radio has a decent amount of limiting forget about receiving
FM but if the limiting can be removed or it doesnt have too much you
can receive AM on an FM receiver thought it may be fairly distored but
it most likely will be copyable. For example I have an ICOM two meter
FM transceiver that will tune the VHF aircraft frequencies. Sorry
but I forget the model # at present I bought it about 15 years ago and
havent tused it in 10 years.
Jimmie