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![]() "Netgeek" wrote in message ... This is what I'm discovering. Not only are the people involved few and far between but so is much of the documented background material anyone new to the scene might rely on for help....8-( I hope some of the old-timers will scribble some of this stuff down while they're still around! As for the "simplicity" theory - you've hit it spot on with your following comments. For example, roll-your-own VCOs are only a few bucks and pretty easy. Off-the-shelf Minicircuits types (e.g. POS-200) are only a few bucks more. But it sure is interesting to note that Minicircuits has a new line of VCOs *specifically* for "aircraft communications" with an asking price of nearly $50 (yipes!)... The difference - VERY low phase noise. Apparently there are quite a few variables in implementation of these "simple" designs - and what you can hear out there on the band is all over the map. The difference in perceived quality between the "good" radios and the really "rat-s**t" radios is amazing - and that's listening to aircraft under identical conditions (for example over the same VOR checkpoint). Sure leads me to believe that there isn't a set "formula" for this stuff.......8-) Bill Bill, You won't find much of this information without buying the tech manuals on these aviation band radios and reading about them. You'll find that the better sounding VHF-AM transceivers do not use simple open loop modulation as has been described ("just hook up a modulation transformer"). That's 1970s technology. We use control loops to linearize the transmitters and reduce distortion. That's one part of the "how do you AM modulate a synthesizer without FM'ing even more" question - the other part is good layout/bypassing practices as someone pointed out. We modulate at low level (pre-driver - milliwatt levels) with either simple mixers or complex I/Q modulators. The feedback is either envelope ALC, polar or Cartesian. 73, Bob W4ATM |
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