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Old November 14th 03, 10:24 PM
Jack Smith
 
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On Thu, 13 Nov 2003 17:33:19 -0800, Roy Lewallen
wrote:

As I recall, Armstrong invented and patented the FM radio before WWII.
If I'm correct, his patent should show a schematic of the circuit he
used. It's probably still available from the patent office.

Roy Lewallen, W7EL


Roy-

Armstrong's classic paper "A Method of Reducing Disturbances in Radio
Signaling by a System of Frequency Modulation" was published in 1936
in the November Proc. IRE. (The paper was presented in a demonstration
at the Nov 1935 IRE New York meeting.)

His field work started 1934, at 44 MHz, with a 2KW 44 MHz transmitter
on the Empire State Building shortly thereafter (the article is a bit
vague on the timing of this part of his operation). (Also, the
frequency was changed to 41 MHz at some point during the trials.)

Armstrong also notes the problem with receiver RF amplifiers at this
frequency and thanks RCA for its provision of experimental VHF
receiving tubes.

His detector circuit looks like a conventional discriminator to me;
two detectors each coupled to a tuned circuit with the outputs summed.
One detector gives + and the other a - output. One tuned circuit
resonates on the high side of the IF passband the the other on the low
side. Each detector fed by an independent buffer amplifier. The
receiver was a double conversion, with the first IF at 6 MHz and the
second IF (and detection) at 400 KHz and a passband of 150 KHz.


Jack K8ZOA
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