Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#33
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mar 2, 12:15 pm, Richard Clark wrote:
If you are interested in a design for yourself, and maybe a production run of a few hundred, then look to the HF/10M/6M/2M surplus repeater market from Motorola and RCA designs of the 70s and 80s. Dirt cheap decks with enough elbow room to make mods. Or, perhaps the HF Superpacker Pro.. 100+Watts..20dB or so gain. Fortunately, the problems are solvable, at least in a theoretical sense. One doesn't usually see fortunately paired with theoretical. ironically this is how this thread started - was with a pig in the poke explanation passing for science A heck of a lot better than "theoretically there is NO solution..." girn All you need is a few kHz, so a single L and C might do it, "good enough". So, this daydream is on one band only? 1 adjustable L, 1 adjustable C.. covers all bands. For ham applications, you only need to have the match and phase adjust at one frequency at a time, and over a fairly small bandwidth, so the Q of the matching circuit can be high. Not like a generic wideband phased array where you need to have a wideband match, and do something like true-time-delay processing. OK, Analog Devices is a star performer. I built a tube version of this DDS back in '68 when it was called a coherent detector (could have been called many names depending on where you developed the audio output). However, this is NOT what I was referring to, as that is distinctly different. This is a software controlled oscillator whose frequency and phase is immediately settable (within on clock, this is in the nanosecondS range). That is precisly what a DDS does.. It has a phase accumulator where you can adjust the phase increment per clock. The output of the phase accumulator goes to a sine lookup table and then to a DAC. A typical part might have a 48 bit phase accumulator and a 12 bit DAC. Check out, for instance, the AD9858.. You might not be able to update the phase increment or absolute phase in a nanosecond, but it's pretty fast (there's some pipeline delay too.).. I'd say you could clock in a new configuration and have the new RF appear no more than 100ns later. If you need to phase each array element independently to phase steer the combined system (also to take care of phase matching through mutual coupling), the software solution spring immediately to the front for a solution. Well, software for the calculations, but perhaps not for all the RF processing. You still need to adjust Ls and Cs for the match, unless you're willing to design a fairly unusual amplifier: ideally, it would act like a current source with a lot of voltage compliance that can tolerate a very reactive load.. so you're essentially synthesizing the L and/or C with an active device.. doable, but not too hot on power efficiency these days. Interestingly, in a very much higher budget arena (deep space comms and ranging), they're also doing this. Until recently, you had to special order the crystal for your spacecraft radio (with 18+ month lead time!!), so if you had a channel reassignment, it was a real problem. (One of the Mars Rovers and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter are on the same channel.. wasn't supposed to be a problem because the rover was not planned to survive long enough) The software oscillator I described in the previous post would solve that for the same cost as the custom XTAL. Well.. not the same cost as a custom rock. The rock may have a long delivery time, but it's not particularly more expensive than a standard frequency. The DDS doesn't come for zero power, either, so you have a tradeoff of more DC power for flexibility (power consumption is a very big deal in deep space exploration). And, then, there's also the whole radiation tolerance issue. If you are looking for a design and a market, I cannot think for the life of me why that hasn't happened yet. Systems like this exist, but not in the ham market. Oddly, it seems that hams balk at forking out more than $100K for a system that does all this. The challenge is in getting it in a ham friendly format. The hardware's not expensive, it's all that software and system integration. But, 10 years from now, when the early adopters have cobbled together their systems from bits and pieces, and some of the concepts become more familiar, I think you'll see someone make the investment to do the development to create an off the shelf product. Clearly, there is SOME market for $10K ham widgets or things like IC7800s and big towers with arrays of SteppIRs wouldn't exist. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Dipole Antenna {Doublet Aerial} make from Power "Zip Cord" or Speaker Wire and . . . More 'About' the Doublet Antenna | Shortwave | |||
The "Green" Antenna for AM/MW Radio Reception plus Shortwave Too ! | Shortwave | |||
Why Tilt ? - The Terminated Tilted Folded Dipole (TTFD / T2FD) Antenna | Shortwave | |||
Passive Repeater | Antenna | |||
Grounding | Shortwave |