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On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 10:18:17 GMT, Jan Panteltje
wrote: +++On a sunny day (Mon, 12 Jun 2006 23:34:57 GMT) it happened Bob Dobbs EC42 wrote in pan.2006.06.12.23.34.54.717000@Quetzalcoatl: +++ +++On Mon, 12 Jun 2006 18:34:51 +0000, Jan Panteltje wrote: +++ +++ There is in fact no need for the 'other' sideband in DSB-SC, no problem +++ if the receiver filters it out, that is why you can receive DSB-SC both +++ with USB and LSB! +++ +++Without both sidebands, it would no longer be DSB, and the reason stations +++use DSB instead of SSB is for the use of ordinary receivers that lack a +++BFO. +++ +++How about providing a source of those 'undetectable" DSBSC signals that +++one might encounter within or nearby to the CB band, instead of some +++technobabble with irrelevant circuitry illustrations? +++ +++OK for the last time before you enter my killfile: +++DSB is not AM. AM is AM, and AM has both sidebands, but when we say 'DSB we mean DSB-SC. +++idiot +++ +++ +++ +++ ************************** We seem to be hung up on abbreviations and their applications to analog communications. A list of Abbreviation in analog Modulation from Introduction to Communications System Third Edition by Ferrel G. Stremler. This is taken from my Communications Textbook from college. 1)AM AMplitude Modulation: A CW modulation using amplitude variation in proportion to the amplitude of the modulating signal. Usually taken as DSB-LC for commercial broadcast transmission and DSB-SC for multiplexed systemes. 2) CW COntinuous Wave: A carrier signal (usually sinusoidal) used for modulation or keying. 3) DSB Double Sideband(LC or SC): a signal having two spectral sidebands symetrically balanced with respect tothe carrier frequency. 4) LC Large Carrier: a signal in which a relatively large proprotion of the spectrum is concentrated at the carrier frequency ( used with DSB, SSB, and VSB). 5) SC Supressed Carrier: a signal in which a relatively small proportion (ideally zero) of the spectrum is is concentrated at the carier frequency ( used with DSB, SSB, VSB). Now translating into CB lingo AM and DSB-LC are synonymous. That is what nearly all off the shelf AM CB radios produce. Modulation takes place in the final stage before the antenna. There are some that use low level modulation that follow the modulated stage with further amplification afterwards to raise the power density to a level to effect the desired communication range with the intended antenna system. Please note that the difference between Large Carrier and Suppressed carrier can be used with DSB, SSB and VSB amplitude systems. The difference is the role the carrier itself plays in demodulaztion ONLY! In DSB it is generally accepted that both sidebands carry the same information during modualation. SSB is defined as a spectrum in which only one sideband is trransmitted with or without the carrier. Vestigial Sideband is where one full sideband is and a partial of the other sideband is not fully transmitted. TV signals are VSB signals. hope this helps james |
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