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"Netgeek" writes:
Len, Thanks for the input and observations! Comments follow: Agreed - not that interesting to listen to, but the NAV channels are exactly what I'm interested in - (both VOR and LOC). The "experiment" I have in mind is a processor controlled scanner of sorts that tracks multiple VORs and performs as a backup to GPS. Hence the need for fast/agile tuning (either PLL or DDS). As you may have gathered - I'm not an "RF guy" by any stretch - but I'm attempting to learn (out of sheer necessity 8-)..... HAH! I did **EXACTLY** that project back in 1996 or so. Used the 145151 PLL that someone else reccomended. The RX was the ... crud .. can't remember the part number ... That motorola 3300 part that was so popular. 3356 maybe? Used a cheap 567 to track the FM part of the signal, and a simple envelope detector for the AM part. It was barely adequate for close-in stuff, and for long range stations, the noise performance was terrible. The outputs of the two detectors went into a two-channel 8-bit ADC and were read by the CPU. Used a 68HC000 for the CPU, and had a database of VOR stations burned into the ROM. The cleverest piece of code was the CW decoder that was used to ID the stations. It would tune around, listening to IDs and take a best-guess at where it was, then build a list of stations to scan, stopping on each one for a second to get a RMI fix. (There was a little crude LPF to help with the noise performance. Not that it did much good... ) I found some nice 4-line x 20 char LCD displays at a local junque shop, with ENORMOUS characters. 0.6" I Think .. Just HUGE for LCDs .... It would do a scrolling display of the form SJC 025 nm @ 036 OAK 044 nm @ xxx etc. All in all it was a fun project -- with lots of cool learning experiences. In terms of practicality, the performance was never spectacular, RF noise from the CPU section would get into the IF (21.4 MHz)... it made a neat cockpit toy, but I would **NEVER** have considered it even a backup aid to navigation. Just writing about this is making lots of little details come back to me. Feel free to e-mail and I'll bend your ear. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- Lawrence Statton - m s/aba/c/g Computer software consists of only two components: ones and zeros, in roughly equal proportions. All that is required is to sort them into the correct order. |
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