Radio Signals and Equipment
Radio Signals and Equipment
Bandwidth
AM Voice
6 kHz
SSB Voice
2 to 3 kHz
FM Voice
5 to 15 kHz
SSB Digital
CW
Digital Modes
Digital information is sent as binary data or
bits (two states, 0 or 1).
A symbol can be a signal bit, or a group of
bits. The symbol rate (Baud rate) is rate
at which symbols are transmitted. As the
symbol rate increases, the signals
bandwidth also increases.
The duty cycle for a digital tranmission is
nearly 100%. Therefore, you should
reduce your transmit power to about 50%
of maximum power.
Packet Modes
A packet is a structured data group. An
entire packet must be received to be
processed correctly at the receiving end.
Mixers
A mixer combines two signals and creates
sum or difference frequency at the output.
This is called heterodyning.
Multipliers
Multipliers are used to generate
harmonics, or multiples, of the input
frequency.
Multipliers are often used at VHF or UHF
where stable oscillators are those high
frequencies are not possible.
Modulators
Modulators are a part of a transmitter that
encodes the information onto the radio
wave.
Transmitter Structure
A simple CW transmitter has a key that
turns on and off the transmitter.
Adding a mixer and local oscillator (LO)
allows for added bands.
Signal Quality
Overmodulation of
an AM signal will
cause distortion in
the received signal
and generate
spurious signals
(splatter) beyond
the normal
bandwidth.
Overmodulation of FM or PM signals
results in overdeviation, which causes
interference in adjacent channels, and
distortion of the audio.
Amplifiers
Amplifiers are used to increase the output power
of a transmitter. SSB requires a linear amplifier.
FM, PM, and CW do not require a linear
amplifier.
Class A most linear, amplifying device is on all the
time
Class B also called push-pull. Uses a pair of
amplifying devices that are only on half the time.
Linearity and gain are good.
Class AB midway between classes A and B.
Class C highest efficiency but very non-linear. Can
be used for FM, PM , or CW.
Efficiency of an amplifier is its RF output power
divided by its DC input power.
Receiver Structure
Receivers must be able to select out very
tiny signals (nW or pW) from a mix of all the
radio signals present. A receiver needs to
be selective and sensitive.
Superheterodyne receivers are both
selective and sensitive.
HF Station Installation
Mobile operation is easier with todays
solid state radios that run on 13.8 V.
HF radios typically transmit 100 W, which
requires 20 A. The best power connection is
directly to the battery (not the cigarette lighter
or auxiliary power) with two fused wires.
Antennas are the most significant limitation to
HF mobile operation due to their small size
(by necessity).
Sources of noise/interference from the car
include ignition, onboard computers, and
electric motors (fuel pump, electric windows).