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That is correct. Another thing that can cause that (2 X 2nd I.F.) image is
2nd LO leakage coming back into the input of the 1st mixer. Once the concept of mixer theory is understood, things become clear. I know that many, if not most of the folks on this group understand this, but for the new folks, I will repeat it. A mixer is a three port device. It doesn't matter if it is used as an SSB detector or as the first stage in a superheterodyne receiver; the concepts are the same. In the first stage of a receiver, the antenna input is applied to the RF port of the mixer, the tuning oscillator is applied to the LO port, and and the resultant signal is taken from the IF output port. Here is where it gets a little tricky (not really!). If you could see the IF output of the mixer on a spectrum analyzer, you would see three distinct signals. You would see a lower sideband signal, the LO signal (suppressed by a certain amount, depending on the LO feedthrough), and an upper sideband signal. Both the lower sideband and the upper sideband will be separated from the LO feedthrough signal by the intermidiate frequency. This means that if you have a 455kHz I.F., the lower sideband will be 455kHz BELOW the LO signal, while the upper sideband will be 455kHz ABOVE the LO signal. If you have now preselection ahead of the mixer, the receiver will respond equally well to both of those sidebands. This is why if you are tuned to 580kHz, for example, you can also receive a signal on 1490kHz. This is not a defect of the receiver; instead, it is a characteristic of this type of receiving system. On lower frequency receivers, high-side LO injection is used. This means that the lower sideband is the desired sideband. In this case, the upper sideband is the image. Now, in the case of the DX394, the 1st I.F. is 45MHz. The 1st LO operates from 45 to 75MHz. This means that the receiver can conceivably respond to two bands, depending which sideband (or band of frequencies) is selected by the preselector that is ahead of the 1st mixer. The desired band of frequencies is 0 to 30 MHz, but the upper sideband range of frequencies is 90 to 120MHz. This explains why this receiver can hear some FM band responses in the 19 Meter band (15MHz LSB.................105MHz upper sideband). This can be cured by additional low-pass filtering ahead of the front end, of better shielding of the receiver from external signals. In the case of an SSB detector, the 455kHz (or 450kHz in some cases) I.F. signal is applied to the RF port of a mixer, the BFO signal is applied to the LO port, while the audio is recovered from the IF port. You still have an upper sideband and a lower sideband signal, except these signals are now at an audio frequency. There are three ways to select the desired signal in this case (there may be others). The first way is to use a 455kHz BFO signal, and use ceramic, crystal, LC, or mechanical filters ahead of the SSB detector. With a 2.3kHz bandwidth, the LSB filter will typically be centered at 453.5kHz, while the USB filter will be centered at 456.4kHZ. The second way (and the more common way) is to use a filter centered at 455kHz, and use two different BFO frequencies of 453.6kHz and (you guessed it) 456.4kHz. This is done either by using two different resonators in the BFO circuit or by using one resonator and warping it with either a varactor diode or a trimmer capacitor. The third way (less common) involves using the phasing method to eliminate the undesired sideband. Finally, concerning that 1st mixer..................as far as I know, there are only two ways to eliminate that primary image. The first one involves using either a lowpass (when an upconversion scheme is used), a bandpass, or a combination of the two. The bandpass can either be a tracking type or a fix tuned type. The second way involves using a Quadrature image-reject mixer, the way that Drake does it with the R8 receiver. This technology has been around for a long time, being used by Hallicrafters in their SSB transmitters (the phasing method of sideband generation). I hope all of this LONG explaination helps to clarify at least some of the questions you might have. Remember, just because a receiver is dual conversion..........it doesn't mean that it will totally reject that 910kHz image. If you look at the crystal filter specs, a 910kHz rejection factor is usually given. For a single monolithic two-pole filter at 45MHz, this factor is usually about -50dB, while a 4-pole set is usually about 60dB, and an 8-pole filter is around 80dB. This "roofing" filter is what usually determines the close-in IP3 rating, since the 2nd mixer characteristics are the dominating factor here. If this isn't enought, feel free to e-mail me directly, and I can explain this stuff in more detail! You're all a great bunch a folks! Pete |
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