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![]() john wilkinson wrote: Thank you all for being pacient with me and my stupid questions. Another thought has just raised its head. I have 2 IF amps. 1ts with approx 20dB gain, second with 100dB gain. The first IF has a XTAL filter at 45MHz. The second has the collins mech filter at the beginnig, then 100dB gain, straight into a diode detector. I think I need some form of additional filtering at the output of the second IF, before the detector, to reduce the noise introduced by the 100dB amp, else it don't work. Except for strong signals. Is that right? Many thanks, John. Andy wries: Exactly. The noise generated by a 100 db amp with a fairly wide bandwidth with be great compared to the noise which is admitted thru the narrow bandpass filter in front of it, and will probably be the major factor to the noise floor of the system.. Do NOT use the canned Noise Figure programs in a case like this since they usually do not consider the bandpass of each individual element..... You have to write your own. It ain't rocket surgery, but canned programs have their limitations... It is a very poorly designed receiver that has a high gain wide band amp following a narrow filter... Optimally, two narrow filters should be used --- one in front of the high gain amp to prevent interference and intermod from out of band signals, and a second narrow band filter to keep the noise from the high gain amp from reaching the detector.....and set the noise bandwidth of the sytem... In practice, filters are often distributed thru the gain of the amplifier to keep the noise bandwidth down in addition to stopping out of band signals. Using two narrow band crystal filters is much more expensive. In my homebuilt receivers, I use the two xtal filter approach, and never have a problem. But I am building one of a kind, not for production, and don't mind spending a few more dollars in parts..... But, again, yes you are correct in your analysis.... 100 db is far too much gain to put in a wideband amp feeding a wideband detector for keeping the noise floor down... Regarding FM versus Am ---- noise floor is noisefloor... A high noise floor will degrade FM as much as AM.... Limiting does NOT buy higher sensitivity, since if the noise causes most of the limiting, the phase noise introduced to an FM detector is just as bad as the amplitude noise put into an AM detector....... One small, insignificant exception is a possible 5.6 db SNR improvement if the FM signal is wide band, but in narrow band FM signals the SNR improvement is negligible.....Remember , you can't tell narrowband FM from AM on a spectrum analyzer ---- the sideband levels are about the same..... Fm starts having an advantage only when you start adding in the extra sidebands ( see Bessel function chart) since the FM sidebands are coherent and the extra noise is not --- this is an advantage that wide band FM has...... Andy W4OAH |
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