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![]() xpyttl wrote: Hi Jason Nice questions, let me try to answer a few .. wrote in message ups.com... 1. i've seen transmitter schematics that were simple, and others that were complex. as a general rule of thumb, are the more complex ones trying to compensate for frequency drift, or maybe eliminate higher harmonics? how efficient and/or stable are the simple transmitter schematics? One obvious thing is that CW transmitters tend to be simple, SSB transmitters complex. But there are a thousand design variables. One big one is the complexity of the ICs employed. Today you can have a very stable VFO with just a few parts. You tend to pay a little bit of a price in phase noise, but frequency drift is not an issue. With an analog VFO, you can add a lot of complexity trying to get around frequency drift, but phase noise is never an issue. Years ago, all you had was analog. A few years ago, DDS (direct digital synthesis) was complex and expensive. Today, analog VFOs tend on the expensive side! It is similar with amplifiers. In many radios, all, or most, of the PA is in a single brick, instead of a fistfull of parts. Ditto with almost everything up and down the chain. Frequency is also an issue and again that is changing with technology. A few years ago, it was hard to get directly to VHF. You typically had several oscillators getting mixed up, frequency multiplied, etc. This was especially true if you had an analog VFO because it is very hard to get stability at VHF, and multiplying the frequency also multiplies the drift in an analog VFO. There are still reasons you might want to do some mixing up to get to VHF with a DDS VFO, but DDS parts up into the gigahertz range are now cheap parts. It was only a few years ago that a DDS VFO cost hundreds of dollars. Today you can buy a chip with a VHF synthesizer and amplifier and modulator for Good info to know. I was kinda looking around to make a (mostly) IC transmitter like that... (anything 70cm and under). Are you aware of any chip PN's or schematics I could dive into to learn? Thanks, Dave |
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