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On Mar 10, 9:18 am, wrote:
Hi chaps, I suspect a neighbour of a friend of mine is using an ultrasonic bird- scarer to frighten off his pets. The man concerned won´t admit to it, but there are times when his dog and two cats just seem to get suddenly very distressed and hypermanic for no apparent reason. I`d like to at least eliminate this possibility before considering any others. So the question is, what´s the simplest way to detect ultrasound? My web research leads me to believe the area of interest is between 20 and 30khz. Most common bird scarers warble between these two limits which are of course above the range of human hearing. I´ve acquired an ultrasonic transducer that transmits on 41khz. If I couple this up to a wien-bridge oscillator trimmed to the same frequency, I figure I ought to be able to hear a warble if indeed this guy is using a birdscarer, because the difference between 41khz and 20khz-30khz will be audible to me. Is this feasible to "air mix" the two frequencies in this simple way and hear a result, or is something more complicated required? Thanks! If you want to compress the range of 0-30 kHz to something like 0-12 kHz you can do that with a switched capacitor delay chip like the Panasonic MN3007. It will work like the bat detector, except it won't need to clip and threshold the audio. You will need to use a slow ramped VCO (continually ramping the sampling frequency down) in order to do this. There are some projects at: http://www.geofex.com/ You may be able to adapt a flanger, for instance, to suit your purpose. The control voltage to the sampling VCO will be a sawtooth wave. Unfortunately, you will hear the sawtooth period as an artifact in the output. Maybe you can filter it out. I guess an all-digital solution is better ;-) Frank Raffaeli |
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