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Old December 20th 03, 07:42 PM
Avery Fineman
 
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In article , "Richard"
writes:

Dr. A.T. Squeegee wrote:
In article ,
says...

Hi. Anybody developed a nbfm RX project covering the FM band (appx
87.5Mhz-108Mhx).


NBFM? As in narrow band?

What would be the point? Here in the U.S. at least, that entire
band is assigned to FM broadcasting, and it is anything but narrow-band.
Typical deviation from a broadcast station is 75+ kHz.



Maybe I used the wrong term. I think lots of HiFi tuners have very wide
filters much greater than 75 Khz. For DXing it seems then you need no more
than say 75Khz. A tuner with that bandwidth would, in a sense, (Ithink)
compared to a regular HiFi tuneer be a narrow bandwidth tuner.

BTW, what would be the result if you used say a 20Khz filter on a FM signal
with 75 Khz deviation? Would you get distortion or a perfectly copyable
signal. I mean is it the analagous to using a 2Khz filter for an AM signal
transmitted at 6Khz wide?


You need to refresh your personal databanks on basic modulation.

In FM the modulation amplitude "swings the frequency up and down
in frequency." [close and simplistic, there's a bit more to it...]
Limiting the bandwidth of the receiver is the same as clipping the
peaks of an amplitude modulation. You WILL get a LOT of
distortion on high-amplitude modulation input at a station.

In a limited-bandwidth AM receiver there is no limit on the amplitude
of an AM signal, just the frequency range of the modulation signal.

In a limited-bandwidth FM receiver there is both a limit on the
amplitude and frequency range of the modulation signal.

Len Anderson
retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person
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Old December 20th 03, 09:10 PM
Doug Smith W9WI
 
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Richard wrote:
Maybe I used the wrong term. I think lots of HiFi tuners have very wide
filters much greater than 75 Khz. For DXing it seems then you need no more
than say 75Khz. A tuner with that bandwidth would, in a sense, (Ithink)
compared to a regular HiFi tuneer be a narrow bandwidth tuner.


Yes, you used the wrong termgrin.

"NBFM" has a specific technical meaning, IIRC a system where the
modulation index (ratio of peak deviation to maximum modulating
frequency) is less than 1.

For FM broadcast, the peak deviation is 75KHz and the maximum modulating
frequency 15KHz. (OK, I'm ignoring stereo...) So the modulation index
is 5.

For police radio, the peak deviation is roughly 3KHz and so is the
maximum modulating frequency. So the modulation index is 1.

BTW, what would be the result if you used say a 20Khz filter on a FM signal
with 75 Khz deviation? Would you get distortion or a perfectly copyable
signal. I mean is it the analagous to using a 2Khz filter for an AM signal
transmitted at 6Khz wide?


Lots of distortion.

In AM, distance from the center of the channel correlates to modulating
frequency. Restricting the filter bandwidth in the receiver restricts
the frequency response - the high audio frequencies ("treble") are
rolled off. But it has no effect on the range of *amplitudes* that can
be received; a loud sound within the bandpass of the filter will still
be reproduced accurately.

In FM, distance from the center of the channel correlates to modulating
*amplitude*. A loud sound will push the transmitted signal to the outer
edges of the channel. If the receiver's filter is too narrow to pass
that, the signal peaks will be chopped off, resulting in severe
interference.

Remember that the 75KHz peak deviation for FM broadcast is 75KHz *either
side* of center. To get the actual bandwidth required you have to add
the peak modulating frequency to that. 165KHz, not counting stereo.

You can chop some of that off at the expense of some distortion. I've
found in practice, 110KHz filters work fine for DXing though I wouldn't
want to listen to a symphony through them. 75KHz would probably be
reasonably intelligible.
--
Doug Smith W9WI
Pleasant View (Nashville), TN EM66
http://www.w9wi.com

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Old December 20th 03, 09:11 PM
Jim, N2VX
 
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On Fri, 19 Dec 2003 22:11:23 -0000, "Richard"
wrote:

Hi. Anybody developed a nbfm RX project covering the FM band (appx
87.5Mhz-108Mhx).

With digital readout, though I suppose I could just hook up a simple a
frequency counter to read frequency.

TIA. Rich.


If you want to do DX'ing get an existing receiver and put in a
narrower filter. Many of the older tuners are ideal for this. I saw
writeups on this in magazines over 20 years ago and don't remember
what bandwidth filter was recommended.

An interesting project would be mods to the GE SuperRadio II or III.
They are cheap, available and have a tuned RF stage.

73,
Jim


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Old December 20th 03, 09:35 PM
Michael Black
 
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"Jim, N2VX" ) writes:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2003 22:11:23 -0000, "Richard"
wrote:

Hi. Anybody developed a nbfm RX project covering the FM band (appx
87.5Mhz-108Mhx).

With digital readout, though I suppose I could just hook up a simple a
frequency counter to read frequency.

TIA. Rich.


If you want to do DX'ing get an existing receiver and put in a
narrower filter. Many of the older tuners are ideal for this. I saw
writeups on this in magazines over 20 years ago and don't remember
what bandwidth filter was recommended.

An interesting project would be mods to the GE SuperRadio II or III.
They are cheap, available and have a tuned RF stage.

73,
Jim


That's a bit misleading. Most FM BCB receivers, now and in the past,
have an RF stage ahead of the mixer, and it is tuned. I once had
a nice Sony stereo receiver that worked well on FM, and it's lack of
an amplifer ahead of the mixer was pretty uncommon (and likely accounted
for it's good overload resistance).

The "TRF" stage in a Superradio is in reference to the AM band,
where in non-car radios, an RF stage is an exception.

Also, while it does seem a bit of work has been done in the design
for better AM reception, that RF stage and the better than average
loopstick, it does not seem like the FM section is anything to write
home about. I gather it's a fairly generic design.

This is part of the mythology of the Superradio. It's not all that
great, just maybe a little bit better than the average portable or
table radio, but people point to it when the concept of "a better
radio" comes up. Once you start spending the money, better to spend it
on a better design. Or better, buy a car radio that will have good
reception, or some used stereo that did have a bit of extra care in it's
design, so it actually won't overload in an urban environment.

Michael VE2BVW

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Old December 21st 03, 01:20 AM
R J Carpenter
 
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"Jim, N2VX" wrote in message
news

An interesting project would be mods to the GE SuperRadio II or III.
They are cheap, available and have a tuned RF stage.


And an essentially uncalibrated frequency dial. Pretty bad for DXing IMO.

Almost any digitally-tuned car radio would be better for DXing. Remember
that cars drive through all the worst reception areas and their radios have
to at least try to work there.


  #8   Report Post  
Old December 20th 03, 09:35 PM
Michael Black
 
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"Jim, N2VX" ) writes:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2003 22:11:23 -0000, "Richard"
wrote:

Hi. Anybody developed a nbfm RX project covering the FM band (appx
87.5Mhz-108Mhx).

With digital readout, though I suppose I could just hook up a simple a
frequency counter to read frequency.

TIA. Rich.


If you want to do DX'ing get an existing receiver and put in a
narrower filter. Many of the older tuners are ideal for this. I saw
writeups on this in magazines over 20 years ago and don't remember
what bandwidth filter was recommended.

An interesting project would be mods to the GE SuperRadio II or III.
They are cheap, available and have a tuned RF stage.

73,
Jim


That's a bit misleading. Most FM BCB receivers, now and in the past,
have an RF stage ahead of the mixer, and it is tuned. I once had
a nice Sony stereo receiver that worked well on FM, and it's lack of
an amplifer ahead of the mixer was pretty uncommon (and likely accounted
for it's good overload resistance).

The "TRF" stage in a Superradio is in reference to the AM band,
where in non-car radios, an RF stage is an exception.

Also, while it does seem a bit of work has been done in the design
for better AM reception, that RF stage and the better than average
loopstick, it does not seem like the FM section is anything to write
home about. I gather it's a fairly generic design.

This is part of the mythology of the Superradio. It's not all that
great, just maybe a little bit better than the average portable or
table radio, but people point to it when the concept of "a better
radio" comes up. Once you start spending the money, better to spend it
on a better design. Or better, buy a car radio that will have good
reception, or some used stereo that did have a bit of extra care in it's
design, so it actually won't overload in an urban environment.

Michael VE2BVW

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Old December 21st 03, 01:20 AM
R J Carpenter
 
Posts: n/a
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"Jim, N2VX" wrote in message
news

An interesting project would be mods to the GE SuperRadio II or III.
They are cheap, available and have a tuned RF stage.


And an essentially uncalibrated frequency dial. Pretty bad for DXing IMO.

Almost any digitally-tuned car radio would be better for DXing. Remember
that cars drive through all the worst reception areas and their radios have
to at least try to work there.


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