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From: Roy Lewallen on May 26, 5:39 pm
Let me add one more general note about AGC design. The BFO frequency is very close to the IF, and it typically puts out volts of signal while the AGC circuit is trying to operate with millivolts. Unless you're very careful with layout, shielding, and balance, a lot of BFO signal can get into the AGC circuit and cause disturbances and malfunctions of various kinds. I agree on the need for isolation of various circuits but fail to see the relevance. A "BFO" is on for OOK CW reception and normally a manual RF/IF amplification control is used to set a comfortable listening level. Yes, AGC could be used on OOK CW but it would be a mistake to derive the AGC control from an AM detector getting "BFO" input...that would be the same as introducing a DC bias into the AGC control loop...which would change the AGC servo-action control...perhaps severely so. Note: A "BFO" source is steady-state. The detector mixes the incoming signal (usually at the IF) with the "BFO" to derive the audio. If the AGC control line is picked off this same detector, the DC component is akin to having a nearly fixed DC bias inserted. To use AGC on an OOK CW signal, the audio tone would have to be used...and that necessaitates a different sort of AGC control source derivation. A peak-riding, perhaps selective audio circuit could do that, but the complexity of that part of the receiving chain is growing. It might be easier all-around to just pick off the IF to a separate AM detector as the AGC control line source. The "original" detector could remain as the OOK CW output with isolated BFO feeding it. For SSB voice reception, a "BFO" is still present but a single diode detector all-purpose sort of detector is far from optimum as a combined audio source and AGC control line source. It WILL work, but it is non-linear for both audio and AGC purposes and that alone could be the source of AGC instability. It depends on the IF signal level at the detector diode (or "product detector" which is really a mixer stage). A single diode with large time-constant on its voltage output is a peak-riding source for the AGC control line. Whether or not it follows fast "attack" conditions depends on the source impedance capabilities of the final IF stage. If that is too high then the "attack" time is slowed from the necessity to build up a charge on the diode's load capacitance; that can be seen on examining an ordinary AC rectifier circuit in response to a step transient of AC input through various values of AC source resistors. The peak-riding capability is usually distorted on the leading edge...which then reflects on the AGC control characteristics (when loop is closed) in trying to hold the received signal constant at the detector. Thought of as a servo-control loop, the AGC subsystem can get rather involved and complex, affected by a number of different factors, ALL of which are important insofar as AGC instability is concerned. "BFO" level is just one item and I will disagree that it is a very important. It is no more important than anything else in that loop in my experience. As a suggestion to anyone else, I would recommend first either measuring or calculating the AGC control line versus both the antenna input level and the IF level at the AGC detector input. That yields a DC baseline datum on the controllable level of the receiving chain. From that, one can "back-track" calculate how well the closed-loop AGC action behaves; i.e., the antenna input RF level versus the peak audio output with AGC on. If that is using old-style "variable-mu" pentode tubes, then the control characteristics will show whatever non-linearity it has steady-state. That can be used as a special controlled- gain model baseline for a Spice analysis of the AGC loop. Differing time-constants IN the AGC control feedback can be set to observe closed-loop response with transient signal input to the antenna. The last AGC circuit I did was very conventional, and it's the sweetest operating one I've ever used. But I went to great pains to keep the BFO out of it, and feel that was one of the essential ingredients in getting it to operate so well. Having had a National NC-57 receiver since 1948, I decided to "play" with it in 1959 and "improve" its performance, such as increasing IF gain. The first IF stage as well as the RF stage were AGC-controlled. Not knowing enough about Control Theory then, nor considering the low-frequency characteristics of the AGC control voltage line R-C decoupling, that modification became a disaster for anything but manual RF gain control. The motorboating (very low-frequency oscillation) extended to having the VR-150 screen supply regulator (gaseous shunt regulator to those of solid-state era times) going on and off. It was restored to its original components and not played with for over a decade. Much later, on having had to get into Control Theory and servo control loops, I could analyze how bad it was and see what I SHOULD have done. The control was too "tight" in trying to hold the audio output too constant over a wide signal input range. There was low-frequency phase shift in the AGC voltage control decoupling that was responsible for most of the motor- boating; the VR-150 shunt regulator control range was a bit too narrow so naturally it had dropped out of regulation and added the final insult to the original "mod." [forty somethings and younger may not be familiar with such relaxation oscillator circuits :-) ] National Radio Company had made an acceptible product in the NC-57 but it was a low-end item in their product line. It worked well enough as a single-conversion HF receiver but it wasn't optimum in design and no doubt stock logistics at the factory probably accounted for some of the parts values. Several passive components seemed to be rather arbitrary in value choices. I had learned (or should say re-learned) that NO product is an example is "what something should be" as a design example. There just aren't any "easy" answers for some things in electronics. But, they can be WONDERFUL, challenging "cross-word puzzle" kinds of thing to solve! :-) |
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