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On 11/5/2015 8:27 PM, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 02:44:24 -0500, rickman wrote: How do you control the coupling in the real circuit? I was planning to use a current transformer which I assume would be strongly coupled. Of course, I was minimizing C2 which resulted in a high frequency second peak far above the 60 kHz peak. I don't recall seeing a poor Q in the circuit. Q is useful to minimize any nearby interference, but otherwise my concern is max signal strength to get enough signal to be detected by the crude FPGA comparator input. The Q is approximately set by the ratio of: tuning_capacitor / coupling_capacitor Not sure where you get this. Q is a measure of the energy stored compared to the energy lost. If the coupling capacitor were the only path of lost energy that might work, but I've yet seen a situation where that is the case. However, that doesn't work with inductive coupling where the Q is controlled by the inductors individual Q. I guess Q is the wrong term. When you critically couple a collection of LC circuits, as in a multi-section bandpass filter, the curve goes directly through the 3dB bandwidth points, no matter how many stages are coupled. In other words, the Q is set by the Q of one section. What does change is the filter shape factor, which is the ratio of: 30_dB_bandwidth / 3_dB_bandwidth or ocassionally: 6_dB_bandwidth / 6_db_bandwidth ???? depending on which reference book you're following. The first is more common. Adding additional criticially coupled filter stages doesn't change the Q, but really changes the shape factor. I can fire up a filter design program to illustrate how it works, but not now. You are assuming the two filters are coupled in a useful way. If the frequency of the parasitic filter is far above 60 kHz it can be ignored other than the possibility that it picks up a radio station which clobbers the WWVB signal. I'm also a bit worried about the way you're feeding your FPGA directly from mag loop. The problem is that WWVB uses both an amplitude modulated time code, as well as the new phase modulated time code. Decoding the former is going to require some AGC (automatic gain control) to insure that the FPGA A/D converter is not going to get clipped, go non-linear, or offer too low a signal level to get a decent SNR. The phase modulated signal doesn't have this problem, but has patent issues if you're going to try an sell chips or devices. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWVB#Phase_modulation I didn't see anything about patents. You worry far too much about "overloading" the FPGA input (single comparator). My concern is being able to detect a signal at all. Gone for a hot chocolate break... -- Rick |
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