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) writes:
I don't much like the receivers I've used in contemporary tranceivers -- the general coverage synthisized open front end ones. (I hasten to add I haven't used any of the $4000 rigs; can't afford them). But the ones I have used seem plagued with near-signal desensitization, front end overload, etc., and I suppose all that comes from putting the selectivity so far downstream. I'm almost tempted to get an old 75s4 and shut up, but I really don't need another room heater, so, instead, I'm thinking of building my own receiver along the lines laid down by the late Doug DeMaw in his _QRP Notebook_. Single conversion 160m superhet with Collins mechanical filters in the IF and a series of down-converters for the other bands. Anybody got any experience with the DeMaw Design? Jim, K5YUT But then you're just recreating something that is open to problems. That sort of scheme was used to get a constant tuning range over each band, and because synthesis wasn't easily applied. But on anything other than the core band, you've got double conversion that moves the selectiving past two mixers. And unlike current up-conversion schemes, there is not even a crystal filter of some sort at the output of the first mixer. Switch to an IF in the HF range, and you immediately eliminate most image problems. No fussing over the front end about that, and of course, you won't have to have the front end tracking the tuning oscillator. Remember, a whole wave of amateur transceivers and receivers went to that sort of scheme. And unlike general coverage receivers, you don't have to worry about any problems due to the IF being in the tuning range, and you can think up various schemes to do the tuning since you don't have to cover the 30MHz. YOu can stick with the modular theme, and thus build only for the bands you want or even build a band at a time. But instead of a whole converter, you'd have the preselector circuitry (and maybe an RF stage) and the variable oscillator for each band. Or build a good receiver up till the input of the mixer, and then figure out what comes next. IN the sixties, that wave of single conversion to IFs in the MHz range used various schemes to deal with the local oscillator. Obviously some bands needed a frequency range that could easily be supplied by a variable oscillator without drift (and some of the rigs took that to the extreme and used the variable oscillator directly on 10metres). The problem with bandswitching the oscillator would of course be the issue of getting it to tune only 500KHz or so on each band (and any stability issues caused by the switching of the LC circuits). Other rigs used pre-mixing, so the variable oscillator would always tune a fixed range, but it would be converted to the needed frequency with a mixer and crystal oscillator. One does have to watch out for spurs on the output, but it gets the extra mixer out of the signal path, and given a relative handful of 500KHz ham bands in the shortwave region, the cost of the crystals wasn't out of range (though maybe today..). Then later, some rigs used PLLs. I can't remember if the Signal One used one, but certainly in the seventies they came along. Same basic idea as the premixer, but the PLL was the filter so the VCO directly fed the receiver's first mixer. Rigs like the TS830S used a PLL for that same purpose, though they came up with a pretty fancy scheme to limit the number of crystals needed. One of the things about receiver design is that the trends have often reflected limitations of the times. There may be a good reasons for doing things a certain way (such as adding a third conversion to a receiver so the BFO is on a different frequency from the one where the main gain is), but it may also mean they couldn't do anything better at the time. Michael VE2BVW |
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