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I read your original message with great interest, I'm working on a
modified WWVB clock myself, although it will be used for a 20 Khz receiver for a different purpose. I do not know which chip is inside yours, but they are pretty similar. They all have 3 wires needed to control the receiver. These are dc input (switched on and off when the receiver isn't needed), a ground, a signal output wire. The signal output wire is fed to the microprocessor, which does the actual decoding. If you are having interference, this signal output will look very bad. Rather than look at it with a scope, you can learn more about it by probing it with a software spectrum analyzer. The Radio Shack unit I have runs the receiver part time, so as to minimize battery drain. But, you can force it to attempt to receive WWVB just by taking the battery out and putting it back in. To look for interference, download spectrum lab and install it in your computer. Set the bandwidth to display DC to 1 Khz. Connect the soundcard input to the output of your receiver chip. You should see clean signals from DC to 5 Hz, these are the normal output frequencies from the receiver. If this waveform looks clean, search for hash in the 5 to 1 Khz range using spectrum lab. Use an attenuator as the software will display alot of garbage if it is overloaded. I use a 3 meg series resistor for small signals (input to the mic level) or a 10 meg ohm series resistor to look at logic level signals. If there is no interference, you will see an empty spectrum except for the dc to 5 HZ range. The wwvb chips use crystal filters for selectivity, so the spectral output will be very narrow. There is no need to look for frequencies higher than 1 Khz at the output of the chip. emmail me directly if you like. K Y 1 K att pivot ddott nnett GL A PS: If you do find interference, it will probably be wideband and easy to track. Put a short antenna on a laptop running spectrum lab and use it to trace the noise. Select one of spectrum labs vlf receiver macros and have fun. Find some way to listen to 60 kHz. I'll bet your problem is not lack of signal, but excess of noise. Computers, any device with a switching regulator or power supply can wipe out LF. |
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