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#1
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Quote: "VCO" is an acronym for Voltage Controlled Oscillator.
Well, yeah I gathered that, after more reading. I see that people have used them in music synthesizer modules. I'm sorry for being a bit elementary and maybe long winded here, I'm still trying to learn as much as I can while I am doing and reading, etc. The VCO in the transceiver project in the book used some sort of motor control and shaft encoding. I did a google type search for HF DDS Generator using WebFerret. Came up with over 175 results. Seems people are using 16F chips and AD98xx chips. Well, anyhow thanks for all your replies. Greg Seattle, WA |
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#2
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On Mar 30, 4:47�pm, "gbowne1" wrote:
Quote: "VCO" is an acronym for Voltage Controlled Oscillator. Well, yeah I gathered that, after more reading. *I see that people have used them in music synthesizer modules. I'm sorry for being a bit elementary and maybe long winded here, I'm still trying to learn as much as I can while I am doing and reading, etc. Keep that up, by all means. Amateur radio is about radio- electronics technology applied to communications. The VCO in the transceiver project in the book used some sort of motor control and shaft encoding. That's the common method of manual control now...but in- between the rotary shaft encoder (attached to the manual knob) and the VCO itself is a large collection of digital circuits. Be prepared to learn more about digital circuits, gates, flip-flops, etc. Not difficult, just strange if your background is only analog circuits. I did a google type search for HF DDS Generator using WebFerret. *Came up with over 175 results. *Seems people are using 16F chips and AD98xx chips. Analog Devices is the most-often used supplier of the basic DDS IC. Microcircuits' PIC series (the '16F' family) of microcontrollers is used to do the "translation" between manual frequency data input and the data needed to set the DDS to the correct frequency. Now that translation IS more difficult for many, experienced in electronics or not. If you are intending to go into frequency synthesizers for your own projects, I'd suggest you concentrate on PLLs first. Getting to know those and WHY they work will lead into the various DDS methods of frequency generation. The general digital circuits of both PLLs and DDSs are related. Well, anyhow thanks for all your replies. Greg Seattle, WA I try to give "Sound" advice...my wife and I have a house in Kitsap County west of Tacoma, SE of Bremerton. :-) [as in "Puget Sound" folks...bad pun but the Sound is very very long...and lovely territory] 73, Len AF6AY |
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#3
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I'm understanding this more and more as I go along. Thanks to the
first two replies on this thread. I'm still learning more about electronics in general. But learning about RF and HF electronics really has been interesting.. and may prove hefpful. I'd at least like to start learning more about the project in that book though. I know that it's primarily a building block learning process. To Len, I know exactly where that is.. :-) Greg |
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