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Bill Meara wrote:
This gets to the question of whether DC receivers can be used to copy DSB and SSB: By Goodman, W1DX, explained the problem in the 1965 edition of "Single Sideband for the Radio Amateur" (page 11): "Unfortunately, if both sidebands are received at the detector where the carrier is introduced, the carrier has to have exactly the correct phase relationship with the sidebands if distortion is to be avoided. Since exact phase relationship precludes even the slightest frequency error, such a system is workable only with very complicated receiving techniques. In 1965 I can imagine that a Costas loop, two mixers, etc. was considered 'very complicated.' It doesn't seem all that horribly fancy by today's standards, however. But of course it's not like I've actually _built_ such a thing yet! :-) However, if only one sideband is present at the detector, there is no need for an exact phase relationship and there can be some frequency error without destroying intelligibility. " Modern SSB transcievers send only one of the sidebands to the detector, so this distortion problem only occurs when receiving a DSB signal on a receiver that sends both sidebands to the detector. It's ironic that DSB, which came about due to the ease of detection with diode (envelope detectors) turns out to be somewhat challenging to recover with a more sophisticated synchronous detection scheme. Experimental Methods in RF Design points out that direct conversion receivers have become highly popular in the past couple of decades... this seems somewhat surprising; I would have guessed people back in the, e.g., '60s, would have gone to great lengths to avoid image reject filters and long IF chains. ---Joel Kolstad |
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