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On Sat, 6 Feb 2016, gareth wrote:
"Brian Howie" wrote in message ... In message , gareth writes Presumably those SDR rigs which do not work on the IF but directly from antennae must have, separately from the DSP processor, some semblance of a DDS generator (but without the final DAC) to act as the equivalent of the VFO, for I cannot perceive that a fractional-Hz tuning rate could be achieved with machine code running in the DSP processor? I'm not an expert ,but I think what you're asking is " how is the local oscillator generated" in a direct conversion SDR and "what determines its resolution" There is an example here, :- http://www.radioelementi.it/public/saqrx.pdf The "c" source code is here,which I can just about understand ( My software background is FORTRAN and Matlab) :- https://sites.google.com/site/sm6lkm/saqrx/ Softies shouldn't have a problem with it although I was able to mess about with it and recompile it successfully In this case the spectrum is dc to 22050Hz in 512 steps. It's not the LO precision ( it's floating point in this one) that limits it but the size of the FFT , the sample rate and thus the record length, that sets the minimum FFT bin width . This one tunes in lumps of about 43Hz Thank-you Brian, but what you have URLed is already at baseband, being VLF. I thought that was the norm, not much doing A/D at signal frequency. Initially, it was too fast for the hardware to handle, but there are probably some good reasons still to downconvert. Michael When moving from FORTRAN to C, the major difference (apart from the nitty-gritty of statement syntax) is that in FORTRAN, variables are always passed by reference (at least in FORTRAN '66 which I did 47 years ago) and in C you have the choice of passing by value or by reference. |
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