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candy rosa January 4th 08 02:45 AM

Oscillators
 
Could someone try to explain to me -- very succintly -- what exactly
an oscillator does in a radio??

Thanks.


RHF January 4th 08 03:13 AM

What is an Oscillator ? + The Electronic Oscillator + AboutOscillation + How Oscillators Work
 
On Jan 3, 6:45*pm, candy rosa wrote:
-
- Could someone try to explain to me
-- very succintly
-- what exactly
- an oscillator does in a radio??
-
- Thanks.


CR - Better would be to Read and Review
these Links/URLs at your own pace. ~ RHF

[Generates a Frequency to be used by the Radio's Circuity]

The Electronic Oscillator
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_oscillator
http://my.integritynet.com.au/purdic/oscillators.htm

About - Oscillation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscillation
http://www.lon-capa.org/~mmp/applist/damped/d.htm

How Stuff Works ? - How Oscillators Work !
http://www.howstuffworks.com/oscillator.htm

What is an Oscillator ? -a definition from- What Is .Com
http://searchcio-midmarket.techtarge...12723,00..html

m II January 4th 08 03:20 AM

Oscillators
 
candy rosa wrote:

Could someone try to explain to me -- very succintly -- what exactly
an oscillator does in a radio??

Thanks.


The oscillator makes a frequency which can be subtracted from the
received signal. That's how they free the sound wave from the radio
frequency carrier.




mike

Doug Smith W9WI[_2_] January 4th 08 06:15 AM

Oscillators
 
On Thu, 03 Jan 2008 18:45:46 -0800, candy rosa wrote:
Could someone try to explain to me -- very succintly -- what exactly
an oscillator does in a radio??


An oscillator generates a pure, steady single-frequency signal.

Most of the time, this is used to change the frequency of a received
signal to some other frequency. For example:

1105kHz (oscillator) - 650kHz (signal) = 455kHz
1435kHz (oscillator) - 980kHz (signal) = 455kHz
1965kHz (oscillator) -1510kHz (signal) = 455kHz

By tuning the oscillator from 1105 to 1435 to 1965, you can convert the
signals of three different stations, on 650, 980, and 1510kHz, all to a
constant 455kHz. You can then amplify the 455kHz signal, remove the
program audio, and send it to the speaker. You don't have to change the
frequency of the amplifier - it's always 455kHz.

Oscillators can be used for other things in a radio. For example, to make
it easier to copy a Morse Code station. (on a regular radio, a Morse Code
station would sound like a regular station going on and off the air really
fast. Which really is precisely what it is. By mixing an oscillator on
456kHz with the Morse signal on 455, you get a 1kHz audible tone when the
Morse station is transmitting - and nothing when it isn't.)

They are also used to allow computer circuitry to "keep time" - so it can
count the frequency of another oscillator, telling you what frequency
you're tuned to. Or so that, when you program your radio to turn itself
on at 3:45pm, the radio knows when 3:45pm is. Or to generate high voltage
to run the frequency displays in some radios.


Billy Burpelson January 5th 08 03:34 PM

Oscillators
 
candy rosa wrote:

Could someone try to explain to me -- very succintly -- what exactly
an oscillator does in a radio??


m II wrote:

The oscillator makes a frequency which can be subtracted from the
received signal.


OR added...it works either way.

That's how they free the sound wave from the radio
frequency carrier.


Uh, Mike, I thought -that- function was done by the -detector- stage,
not the oscillator.


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