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Re: [TenTec] Noise Reduction Setting

To: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Noise Reduction Setting
From: Ken Brown <ken.d.brown@hawaiiantel.net>
Reply-to: ken.d.brown@hawaiiantel.net,Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Date: Thu, 07 Dec 2006 20:24:46 -1000
List-post: <mailto:tentec@contesting.com>
It's news to me that SAWs are processors. I would be more inclined to 
believe that a SAW filter may be used in front of some type of dsp 
processor.

Last time I read about Surface Acoustic Wave devices they were basically 
bandpass filters, that work similarly to Collins mechanical filters. The 
electrical signal is converted into a mechanical signal using some type 
of elecromechnical transducer (like a piezoelectric device, or a moving 
coil device) and then propagated through some mechanically resonant 
parts, later to be converted back to an electrical signal by another 
electromechanical transducer. In the case of Collins mechanical filters 
the signal travels as torsion in a rod, which has resonant disks 
attached. In a SAW the signal travels as, you guessed it, a surface 
acoustic wave, and the surface it travels across has some resonant 
pieces either etched out or deposited upon it.

I've probably got some of the details, or maybe even the whole concept, 
wrong. I'd love to hear about it from someone who has a better, more 
authoritative explanation of either mechanical filters or SAWs. Is a SAW 
a processor? Or is it just another way to make a bandpass filter?

DE N6KB
>  In the military applications for example, SAW processors (Surface
> Acoustic Wave) handle this nicely, as do various hard wired ASICS.  The
> latter are comparatively cheap.  Neither do much actual processing, as the
> algorithm is pretty much hard wired in.
>   
>   

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