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On Fri, 28 Oct 2005 20:12:48 GMT, Owen Duffy wrote:
Didn't Don Stoner describe a synchronous detector way back. I think I remember reading an article in the mid sixties in "The Sideband Handbook" or similar. I was about 15 then, so a detector that had something like 17 bottles in it seemed overkill when I was copying CW and SSB on an AM receiver (ie diode detector) with BFO. The appeal being an all-mode detector (including DSBSC), but synchrounous detectors didn't seem to catch on in comms receivers, well not until DSP detection... well I don't recall coming across them anyway. Hi Owen, 17 bottles indeed. That seems to strike a resonant chord in the ganglia because my construction was on a utility box of about 3" x 9" x 15" (not counting power supply requirements). We were working from a printed article certainly; and to confirm your recollection, there was a list of modes that could be detected that was long. My perception of the resurgence of interest in synchronous detection (it seems to have many names) is that a considerable body of knowledge evaporated in the 70s and 80s to leave only fragments of what this detector was useful at. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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