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On 13 Sep 2005 14:21:59 -0700, "K7ITM" wrote:
Hi T, I think you missed the point. With a tuned antenna, what comes out of the antenna+tuning is NOT broadband! Frequencies not so very far from the one you are tuned to will be greatly attenuated. With that sort of input, you should be able to get by with even a 16-bit converter, if it's linear (such as a decent delta-sigma is). For example, a square loop antenna one meter on a side, at 150kHz, tuned to resonance with a capacitor, should have a Q around 300. That means it's about 0.5kHz wide at the 3dB points, and will be down about 20dB at 2.5kHz away from center, and 40dB down at 25kHz away. -- I just read your other reply to my other posting in this thread, where you worried about broadcast band overload. I suspect that if you have that, it's because, as someone else said, the antenna is acting as something other than a loop for that frequency. It's important to keep the loop balanced with respect to ground. I'd strongly recommend against a "shielded" loop unless you understand just why you are doing that. The shield becomes the antenna, and as such, it must be symmetrical... Also, for the antenna you described, about 3 meters on a side and large wire, expect the Q to be even higher and the bandwidth narrower. I think you'll find the resonated impedance to be more like a few kohms for a single such turn. Then, use a good balanced FET amplifier to get to a low impedance to drive your transmission line. By the way, I would note that the switching detector/mixer/converter in the schematic you showed is not as good as the usual current implementation of the H-mode mixer, because the channels of the FETs doing the switching in the one you gave a link to operate at a voltage which depends on the instantaneous signal amplitude, if I read the schematic right, and since the channel resistance is a non-linear function of that voltage, the detector will not be strictly linear. The H-mode mixers operate one end of the switches at a constant voltage, and of course the other end when the switch is on must be very close to the same voltage. I expect (and I think the practical experience is) that the H-mode mixer will be more linear. Do you know what the third order intercept for your mixer is supposed to be? I'd be pretty surprised if it was better than about +45dBm. But even so, even if you DID have a broadband antenna, you can find op amps, and you can make amplifiers with discrete parts, that have distortion products more than 120dB below the level of signals in excess of a volt at the amplifier output, in the LF frequency range. In other words, the distortion products will be less than a microvolt, with one volt output signals. You don't need to run that preamp with any appreciable voltage gain, so you're handling some pretty big input signals. And the best of the 24-bit delta-sigma ADCs shouldn't be far behind that. (I wish I could do that well at 50MHz!--we do make a 23-bit ADC that samples at up to 20MHz, but it's a bit pricey for what you're trying to do.) As others have pointed out in this thread, the atmospheric noise is so bad at LF that the antenna doesn't have to be very efficient to capture enough signal to be useful for receiving. Unless you are practically next door to a transmitter operating on a frequency near the ones you care about listening to, dynamic range isn't likely to be a big issue at LF. [Your other posting suggests that folk DO have troubles with other signals. I'd go looking for answers about WHY before jumping to conclusions about what to do about them.] That's a far cry from the case at HF. Hi Tom, I read your message above about 3 times now AND read all the other posts in this thread over again. After all of this, I must say that I'm very much in agreement with you although I know little about the linearity of the particular analog switch used in this configuration. When I started this, I was paranoid about out of band signals mixing and creating problems. Read posts from almost anyone using an LF preamp or presenting a design for one and they will almost certainly contain warnings about overload and mixing byproducts. So, I wanted an almost unattainable filter on the front end, without realizing in fact how much attenuation the antenna I hope to build will have for out of band signals. You are exactly right, there is probably no need at all for a tuned input in the receiver since the antenna tuning will be so sharp. Maintaining HI-Q in the antenna should be the primary goal I think rather than worrying about the input filter parameters! I disagree about the rf preamp however, Bill Ashcock says I shouldn't need one at all as long as I keep the Q high in the antenna and feed it into a balanced line to get to the shack. Bill says some of the guys who have single turn loops 40 feet per side or larger have so much signal, they have to attenuate. I'd like to start out without a preamp unless it is really needed. By the way, the antenna might not be balanced.....but if it's fed through a balun on each, the feedline is balanced. And, the feedline can be simple twisted wire pairs....which goes a long way towards reducing stray rf pickup and makes the feedline cheap and the losses low. If I feed the antenna into a balun and run that to another balun at the receiver, isn't that the same as having a traditional center tapped loop in terms of 'balance'? I'll try to find some software for loop design and see what the loop looks like in terms of impedance and then decide how to couple that directly into the receiver without a front end filter (just simple impedance matching). Thanks so much to you and everyone who wrote regarding this, and for the nudge in the 'right direction'. I feel a lot better now regarding the plan of attack than I did just 2 or 3 days ago! Regards, T PS:I like your estimate for my loop impedance. If it's 1000 ohms as you think it might be, I can handle that step down just fine with a balun or 2. I hope it turns out to be true: |
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