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#1
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Basic dumb question:
I read this in passing and am not sure I understood correctly. It seemed to say that you can do image rejection with a quadrature demodulator (by summing the outputs). For example, feed 11MHz to an IQ demod running at 1MHz. The I & Q outputs will each have 10MHz & 12MHz components in them. Sum the outputs. One of the frequencies will phase-cancel, the other will add constructively. Is this correct? thx Michael mdunn **at** cantares.on.ca |
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#2
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Yep. It's called an image-reject mixer, and is well-covered in all the
usual references. Why they are not more widely used in ham radio remains a mystery. Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Que les nuages soient notre Grid: CN89mg pied a terre..." ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Hospital/Shafte |
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#3
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Yep. It's called an image-reject mixer, and is well-covered in all the usual references. Why they are not more widely used in ham radio remains a mystery. Laura Halliday VE7LDH Usually has something to do with providing quadrature LO without going to 4X frequency. W4ZCB |
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#4
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Yes, that is correct.
However, the choice of frequencies in your demod example is likely to give you other problems not obvious from the basic theory. Harmonics of the 1 MHz are likely to show up in the 10 (or 12 Mhz) output. There are also likely to be many mixing products of all of the harmonics of 1 MHz and any other frequency that can mix with 1 Mhz to produce a 10 (or 12) Mhz output. In general, it's problematic to make a frequency conversion (mixer) process where the LO is substantially lower than the output frequency, and especially so if the LO is an exact sub-multiple of the output. Joe W3JDR "Michael Dunn" wrote in message .. . Basic dumb question: I read this in passing and am not sure I understood correctly. It seemed to say that you can do image rejection with a quadrature demodulator (by summing the outputs). For example, feed 11MHz to an IQ demod running at 1MHz. The I & Q outputs will each have 10MHz & 12MHz components in them. Sum the outputs. One of the frequencies will phase-cancel, the other will add constructively. Is this correct? thx Michael mdunn **at** cantares.on.ca |
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#5
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In article .com,
laura halliday wrote: Yep. It's called an image-reject mixer, and is well-covered in all the usual references. Why they are not more widely used in ham radio remains a mystery. Maybe now that monolithic implementations are a dime-a-dozen they will be...? |
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#6
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laura halliday wrote:
Yep. It's called an image-reject mixer, and is well-covered in all the usual references. Why they are not more widely used in ham radio remains a mystery. Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Que les nuages soient notre Grid: CN89mg pied a terre..." ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Hospital/Shafte The fact that it's difficult to get image rejection better than 40dB perhaps? Or am I behind the times? -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com |
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