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I've done a fair amount of playing around with PIC16F876's. They
have two built in PWM generators. You set the overall carrier frequency by writing to a register and then control duty cycle as you need it. Turns out to be very low overhead. Hope this helps. Bruce/ND8I "xpyttl" wrote in message ... I'm pretty disappointed at the amount of flame this posting generated. snip Secondly the shape of the waveform is an issue. It's real easy to generate square waves from the PIC, but in most cases, these will generate lots of spurious output. Depending on the application and the sort of encoding you will use, you will need to come up with nice sine waves. There really are 3 ways to do this ... in many applications you can simply get away with a good low pass filter between the PIC and the radio. This will take a bunch of tweaking, though, and you will need a good scope, and preferably a spectrum analyzer to get it right. You can also generate the sine wave by having the PIC output the sine wave using pulse width modulation and a little filtering. In my experience, you can get extremely good sine waves this way, BUT the PIC is 100% dedicated to the task, which means your data rates will need to be low. The third approach is to build an oscillator that you can control with the PIC. Given that you will probably need only two frequencies, this may not be such a bad approach. snip |
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