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Michael Black wrote:
Look again, the Galaxy does not use a Wadley loop. It uses a phase locked loop synthesizer to generate the first local oscillator signal every 500KHz (or is it 1MHz in the Galaxy?). A Wadley loop, while providing the same overall effect, is a result of the right mixing, adding and subtracting, in the signal chain. What confuses people is that the design of the synthesizer in the Galaxy uses a similar bit to the Wadley, putting the reference frequency through a multiplier that puts out signals at every harmonic of that reference. IN the Wadley, that signal is used to generate the needed beat signals, in the Galaxy that signal is compared to the local oscillator in a phase detector to lock the local oscillator. Visually change the multiplier to a programmable divider chain, and in the Galaxy you'd have a more recognizeable synthesizer. It just came before programmable dividers were cost effective, just as the case with the National HRO-500, so they went with the muliplier, though there is a tradeoff in use and performance compared to a synthesizer with a programmable divider. Change the mulitplier in the Wadley to a divider, and the thing won't work at all. Michael The Panasonic RF-3100 used a 'semi-synthesizer' design which generated the MHZ ranges and combined these with conventional analog tuning within each MHZ range. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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