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Tio Pedro wrote:
wrote in message ... I recently refurbished a Hallicrafters 5R105 and, while performing a re-alignment, discovered that on the Band 4 (14 to 31 MHz) the local oscillator (LO) is below the station frequency, whereas on the three lower bands, the LO is above. So my question is this: Why engineer a tuning system for the high end of the shortwave spectrum to place the LO below the station frequency? -Dave Drumheller, K3WQ It would be unusual. A quick check is to see if the LO is above or below the signal at the LOW end of the tuning range. I've quite a few shortwave sets that were properly aligned for high side injection at the low end, and improperly set for low side injection at the upper end of the band. Needless to say the midrange sensitivity was practically nil. It's pretty easy to set the high end of dial for the wrong side LO injection because of the wide authority range of the LO trimmer. I can't think of any advantage--usually high side inj. is beneficial on the lower ranges to keep LO harmonics from falling the tuning range or the RX. Pete Its a real gripe of mine! The image rejection is so poor on the top band of many consumer grade radios that its really a moot point and the only way to guess which side the injection goes is by evaluating which side suffers the worse dial tracking...and often thats so close a call its difficult to say which was intended. -Bill |
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