Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 14:06:36 -0700, "Joel Kolstad" wrote: I've been toying around with the idea of digitizing the entire AM commercial broadcast band and -- mainly for my own edification -- doing demodulation in a microcontroller or DSP. Although on one hand I'd claim I can then do cool things like AM stereo demodulation, on the other hand I do recognize such coolness is lost in that digitizing the _entire AM band at once_ from 550-1600KHz only allows me to adjust the gain of an RF amplifier to the point where _the sum of the signals from all the stations_ doesn't overload an ADC. In other words, this approach will only work to pick out relatively strong stations if I still want anything resembling a decent SNR, correct? To get around this problem, then, I was thinking of using an NE602 mixer to select just the station I wanted and then following its output with an adjustable RF amp. If I go for the direct conversion approach, then, I can follow it with a variable gain baseband amplifier and still hear the weak stations with relatively good fideilty. Is this a reasonable approach? Is it true that low (...to moderate?) quality receivers can get away with just feeding an antenna's output to a fixed gain broadband amplifier (or even just a matching/bandpass filtering network) followed by a mixer and _then_ an adjustable gain element? (As opposed to high quality receivers that appear to have tuned RF amplifier front ends?) The idea of digitizing an entire band at once seems to look far less promising if your goal is to dig out weak stations... Shouldn't you look at the TenTec RX320? It superhets to 12kHz and then does the final selectivity and detection in DSP. TenTec will modify old RX320s to bring out the 12 kHz IF to allow playing using a sound card (say DRM). Or maybe the Software Defined Radio articles by Youngblood in QEX almost a year ago. He is selling card sets. A lot of his complexity is in a bank of switchable filters to cover the "zero" to 50 MHz range. Or the Motorola "Symphony" chipset for AM/FM broadcast. Or similar software radio chips from Visteon/Ford. Or a paper in the Proceedings of the 1999 Central States VHF Conference* by Bob Stenowski, Director, Advanced Comm Engineering, Rockwell Collins. He pointed out that you would need an AtoD converter with more than 25 bits resolution/linearity to build a "DC to Daylight" receiver without frontend tuning / filters. He shows block diagrams of the Collins 95S-1A which covers 5kHz to 2Ghz, but has 9 bandpass filters to cover the range. The 5kHz to 30MHz range is upconverted with a variable LO to 51.2MHz and then handled like the VHF signals. * available from ARRL You have an interesting project. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
I have a dumb question about antenna building | Antenna | |||
Building a 51 mhz inverted V - feedpoint question....Help! | Antenna | |||
QUALITY SINGLE CLUB! Right place to meet someone special! | Boatanchors | |||
QUALITY SINGLE CLUB! Right place to meet someone special! | Digital | |||
Poor quality low + High TV channels? How much dB in Preamp? | Antenna |