| Crystal oscillator
The start of this process is with the
crystal oscillators. These have to create :-
frequency suitable for the part of the
circuit in which they are employed.
The reason for the stability is so that
they do not "drift" off frequency and possibly put the transmissions outside
the amateur bands but almost certainly a drift in frequency would take you
into another QSO!! (Drift is a slight and gradual, yet unwanted change or
frequency.)
The reason for the accuracy is that you
must know for absolute certainty that you are inside the amateur bands. It
is desirable to ensure that you use the appropriate frequency for the mode
you are using - SSB, FM, CW or data ETC.
There are several ways to achieve the
above:-
Crystal oscillator
The old way was to use a crystal oscillator
and to change the crystal to change frequency very stable and frequencies
accurately known but limited to the number of crystals you have and they
were and still are expensive!
VARIABLE Frequency
Oscillator
Another old way was to use a VARIABLE
Frequency Oscillator. This gave you an infinite number of frequencies in
a section of the amateur band.
Changing bands involved using a harmonic
(multiple) of the same oscillator and returning later stages of the transmitter
suit. The draw back was that such units were affected by heat, impact, when,
say, you tapped your rig (microphonics) and thus did drift off frequency,
and could give additional modulation to the wanted mode.
Frequency synthesiser
The modern way is to use a crystal oscillator
which gives a stable frequency and link this to a frequency synthesiser which
then gives you an accurate range of frequencies.
In all the methods mentioned above a
stable voltage is needed which is in addition to the voltage power source
for the power amplifier -again this is to ensure stability.
The synthesiser has two variants the
PLL or Phase Locked Loop and the DDS or Direct Digital Synthesis (the DDS
is not covered here as not part of the syllabus).
HOWEVER there is one draw back in using
a synthesiser rather than a crystal oscillator or VFO and that is what is
called "noise level" - this is the back ground level of noise sidebands present
in higher quantities than crystal or VFO oscillators.
WHY 2 Crystal oscillators?
These are in two different parts of the
circuits and thus are performing quite separate operations (Note: some designs
can use more than two crystal oscillators).
So what happens from microphone to
aerial ?
The audio amplifier is linked to the
modulator. Once the appropriate modulation has been applied, we now have
a modulated signal which may be appropriately filtered but it is not on the
correct frequency. This signal is then mixed with the output from the synthesiser
to produce the desired output frequency, this then passes into the RF power
amplifier and then is filtered again before it goes into the aerial.
So the transmitter has achieved
-
Create an RF signal inside the amateur
band - All oscillators correctly chosen and working properly.
-
For the signal to be nice and clean
- Appropriate design and filtering.
-
For the signal to be stable - crystal
oscillator.
-
For the signal to have minimum band width
for the type of transmission - filters
and the use of linear amplification for SSB or other amplitude modulation
modes.
-
For the signal to have the correct power
output - correct use of RF power amplifier
-
for the signal to have minimum output
on other frequencies - Band pass and harmonic filtering.
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