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On Sun, 10 Mar 2013 17:09:45 -0400, rickman wrote:
On 3/10/2013 1:32 AM, Jeff Liebermann wrote: Holy crap! That's a lot of trouble to see a signal. By "see" I assume you mean on the scope. How large was the signal? Turning off the house was easier than finding the multiple sources of noise at 60KHz. What drove me nuts for about an hour was that much of the noise was coming from my bench oscilloscope. Argh. This is typical. WWVH through an active preamp showing the effect of power line noise (probably from attached switching power supplies). http://www.prc68.com/I/Images/AMRAD110.GIF and after adding some better line filtering: http://www.prc68.com/I/Images/AMRAD_BT.GIF Main page: http://www.prc68.com/I/LF-Ant.shtml I didn't log the setup or take pictures. So, let's do the math and guesswork. http://vk1od.net/calc/FS2RPCalc.htm I plugged in some guesses and recollections as to what the antenna (Q=30) and amp (+20dB gain) were doing and got: http://802.11junk.com/jeffl/crud/WWVH-rx-signal-estimate.jpg -15.8dBm or about 36mv into 50 ohms. I amplified this about 20dB with two or three U310 JFET's (I forgot what I did) to about 3V rms on the scope. I didn't bother with the 50 ohm to scope input Z conversion. Most of what I saw was noise, noise, and more noise. However, if I was patient, I could see the data fade in an out. As I vaguely recall, it was less than 1 division or about 0.1v change. The place where I am working currently is not very close to much and there isn't much in the house. I'm told the fridge is the biggest source of noise. We'll see how the CFL lamps do. Sigh. Most of what I found at 60KHz was coming from lightning storms over Florida. The local sources were all switching power supplies, including those in my test equipment. I didn't have an CFL or LED room lights at the time. I've recently found them to be a rather nasty noise source. Also, the switching power supply wall warts were rather awful. My standard test is to fire up my antique IC-735 HF xceiver, attach a long length of RG-58c/u to the antenna with a resonant loop at the end, tune it to 100KHz (as low as it will go), and sniff around the house. What you'll see on a spectrum analyzer. http://www.prc68.com/I/Spec_0002.shtml If you're thinking of removing all that junk with a 5Hz wide digital filter in software, please note that you'll need to have the input A/D handle the total power of almost all that junk. Also, the amplifier that you're trying to avoid between the antenna and A/D will also need to be rather linear, and therefore rather high power, in order to avoid producing more spurious junk via intermodulation products. Funny, last night my two RCC's both updated like they should. One is an analog clock and runs at 8x speed to get the hour ahead. In the fall it does this to go 11 hours ahead. Quite a sight! They both did the job, but my PC didn't update until it had been on for awhile, without being connected to the I'net. So that's how they change daylight savings time. If I had known, I would have stayed and watched. Thanks for the tip. On the east coast, besides a weak signal, you also have the potential for 60KHz interference from the UK: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MSF_time_signal Loop antennas have a null that can be steered toward the source of interference. I expect that will solve that problem... The depth of the notch seems to be less as the antenna shrinks in size. I'm not sure about this as I haven't attempted to recently model a 60KHz magnetic loop with 4NEC2, but that's what my tinkering shows. If there were a deep notch, most of the home "atomic clock" receivers would be orientation sensitive and I would expect warnings in the docs. The BPSK signal is much better at rejecting interference and digging the signal out of the noise. I don't know exactly how much, but I'm sure it's in a NIST publication somewhere. That's for an ideal receiver. I have my limitations and I have no idea how that will impact the reception. Well, you have to start somewhere, and an ideal receiver is a good place to start. The advantage is that reality only makes everything worse, never better. You should be able to build the BPSK demodulator, and then use a PC to decode the data. I've seen several such programs that do not require I/Q outputs. Here's one based on FreeBSD intended to sync the system clock to WWV/WWVH: http://docs.freebsd.org/doc/4.0-RELEASE/usr/share/doc/ntp/driver36.htm I'm sure there are others. In my case I am not worried that the SNR isn't better, I just need a strong enough signal to drive the LVDS input. Gain at 60KHz is very cheap. Watch out for overload issues. If you design it to work at full scale with whatever you get at 50uV/m, and the signal climbs to 100uV/m, your input A/D isn't going to be very happy. AGC will help, but I don't think it will be needed if you calculate your signal levels so that the A/D input amp isn't clipping. Out of service for a day. It seems that about 30 years of chemistry experiments has finally destroyed much of the kitchen sink plumbing. I hate plumbing. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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