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#1
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I recently built two Vectronics direct-conversion HF receivers that
experience some really bad frequency shifts and microphonics when you tune or handle the radio. Now I understand that direct conversion receivers have that flaw by nature, but is there any way to reduce it without changing the entire receiver circuit? Will the matching metal cabinets help much? Mark W4UDX |
#2
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If you're starting with a poor design and want to "fix it but don't
change anything", I think you're out of luck. Reincarnation is probably the only solution. The one thing you might be able to do without major surgery is to improve the mixer grounding. The problem is due to LO radiation or other coupling to the front end or the mixer signal port. You've got volts of LO energy on essentially the same frequency as nanovolts of signal, and you need to restrict the mixing of the two to the mixer. It's essential to use a very well balanced mixer, like a diode ring. Pay careful attention to grounding -- all input and output signals to the mixer should be grounded at a single point. Shielding of the LO might be necessary. If it's poorly laid out, the very large circulating currents in the oscillator tank circuit can flow through the ground system in such a way as to couple back into the front end. Those problems can be minimized by grounding the bulk of the oscillator's tank L and C at a single point. Competent layout is the best solution, but you can sometimes minimize the damage by careful controlling of the mixer grounds. LO energy escaping out the antenna connector can cause problems also. This can be minimized by using a well balanced mixer, properly laid out, and a properly laid out and possibly shielded LO. An RF stage will help unless the layout is so poor as to let the signal escape around it, but it's not really necessary. Direct conversion receivers don't have that flaw by nature. Only poorly designed or laid out ones do. A well-designed direct conversion rig isn't any more complicated than a poor one, but the difference in performance can be remarkable. Roy Lewallen, W7EL W4UDX wrote: I recently built two Vectronics direct-conversion HF receivers that experience some really bad frequency shifts and microphonics when you tune or handle the radio. Now I understand that direct conversion receivers have that flaw by nature, but is there any way to reduce it without changing the entire receiver circuit? Will the matching metal cabinets help much? Mark W4UDX |
#3
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|||
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![]()
If you're starting with a poor design and want to "fix it but don't
change anything", I think you're out of luck. Reincarnation is probably the only solution. The one thing you might be able to do without major surgery is to improve the mixer grounding. The problem is due to LO radiation or other coupling to the front end or the mixer signal port. You've got volts of LO energy on essentially the same frequency as nanovolts of signal, and you need to restrict the mixing of the two to the mixer. It's essential to use a very well balanced mixer, like a diode ring. Pay careful attention to grounding -- all input and output signals to the mixer should be grounded at a single point. Shielding of the LO might be necessary. If it's poorly laid out, the very large circulating currents in the oscillator tank circuit can flow through the ground system in such a way as to couple back into the front end. Those problems can be minimized by grounding the bulk of the oscillator's tank L and C at a single point. Competent layout is the best solution, but you can sometimes minimize the damage by careful controlling of the mixer grounds. LO energy escaping out the antenna connector can cause problems also. This can be minimized by using a well balanced mixer, properly laid out, and a properly laid out and possibly shielded LO. An RF stage will help unless the layout is so poor as to let the signal escape around it, but it's not really necessary. Direct conversion receivers don't have that flaw by nature. Only poorly designed or laid out ones do. A well-designed direct conversion rig isn't any more complicated than a poor one, but the difference in performance can be remarkable. Roy Lewallen, W7EL W4UDX wrote: I recently built two Vectronics direct-conversion HF receivers that experience some really bad frequency shifts and microphonics when you tune or handle the radio. Now I understand that direct conversion receivers have that flaw by nature, but is there any way to reduce it without changing the entire receiver circuit? Will the matching metal cabinets help much? Mark W4UDX |
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