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Re: [TenTec] Narrow signal on 28.027620 MHz

To: geraldj@weather.net, Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Narrow signal on 28.027620 MHz
From: John K3GHH <k3ghh@arrl.net>
Reply-to: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@contesting.com>
Date: Sun, 20 Dec 2009 03:16:35 -0500
List-post: <tentec@contesting.com">mailto:tentec@contesting.com>
Dr. Gerald N. Johnson wrote:
> On Sat, 2009-12-19 at 16:55 -0500, John K3GHH wrote:
>   
>> Ken Brown wrote:
>>     
>>>>>  I found a very narrow heterodyne 
>>>>>       
>>>>>           
>>> What do you mean by "very narrow heterodyne?" Is it a single CW carrier? 
>>> Why do you say it is very narrow? Is is so super pure that you can tell 
>>> it has less noise around the center carrier than typical, so it is 
>>> narrower than other CW carriers?
>>>
>>> Or does the audio note it produces change more quickly than "normal" 
>>> signals as you adjust your local oscillator (tuning) control? 
>>>       
>> Ken, on UCW the CW note (tuning up the band) is first heard as a 
>> high-pitched tone at 28,027,618 Hz, falling in pitch until it disappears 
>> at ...627 Hz (not audible at 628). On LCW, tuning up the band again, it 
>> is first heard as a low-pitched tone at 619 Hz and the last frequency at 
>> which it is audible as a high-pitched tone is 627 Hz. My "very narrow" 
>> adjective is relative to CW signals I've been copying for 50 years: I've 
>> never heard a signal only 9 Hz (per sideband) wide.
>>     
>
> What you are seeing is NOT a very narrow CW signal, you are seeing a
> signal tuned by a very high harmonic of the receiver LO. If it was an
> analogue receiver sweeping past the 500 HZ IF filter while tuning the
> dial 9 Hz would say you are hearing a beat note from about the 55th
> harmonic of the VFO and some other fixed oscillator harmonic. In the DSP
> receiver that might be fine tuning at 15 KHz. 28,027,618 / 55 is 509,593
> Hz. And that might actually be a spur from the processor in the fine
> tuning section or a digital spur in the DSP code. In an Omni VI that
> might be a beat happening at 275 MHz but this isn't an Omni VI with a 5
> MHz analogue VFO. Though the Orion has much the same front end analogue
> parts in places. The 9 MHz first IF of many TenTec radios has lead to a
> few "reliable" birdies, you have identified one in the Orion that many
> would miss because it tunes so fast. At least one crystal frequency in
> the Corsair and Omni is not exactly on the theoretical integral MHz
> because avoiding an in band birdie is most important and the digital
> display can handle such adjustments in crystal frequency.
>
> Might the Orion with its 455 KHz second IF and 15 KHz third IF, be using
> an oscillator about 470 KHz for very fine tuning. And wouldn't
> 28,027,618 / 59 be about 475 KHz while / 60 would be 467 KHz. Yet that
> fine tuning ought to be all in DSP at the 15 KHz IF I'd think.
>
> Its probably not something to be detected if tuning in 10 Hz steps
> either, only in 1 Hz steps which I presume are both valid Orion options.
>
> It probably would be worth the bother to clean all the cable connections
> between boards as well as the board to mother board connectors, and the
> tighten any board mounting screws to be sure of all grounds. But its an
> internal birdie, all multiple conversion radios have them. Some have had
> noisy mixers to hide more of the birdies, tweets, or bleeps.
>
>   
>> I do not know the 
>> difference between judging that the signal is "very narrow" and that 
>> "the audio note... changes more quickly than 'normal'"; the latter is 
>> how I judge the former.
>>
>>     
>>> If the 
>>> audio note changes more quickly than normal, then it is a birdie. 
>>> Birdies are products generated by undesired mixes of components, 
>>> harmonics for instance, of the various local oscillators in your 
>>> receiver. If one of the components mixing together to generate the 
>>> birdie is a harmonic of the local oscillator controlled by the main 
>>> tuning, then the audio tone it produces will change 2X, 3X, 4X, or 
>>> whatever harmonic number it is, as fast as a normal signal. When local 
>>> oscillators in receivers were not locked to stable reference 
>>> oscillators, these spurious responses would warble, tweet or chirp as 
>>> the LO frequency changed due to mechanical, thermal or power supply 
>>> instabilities. ( I have not found a historical reference to back this 
>>> up, but I think this is why they came to be called "birdies". With local 
>>> oscillators nowadays locked to super stable reference oscillators, 
>>> birdies no longer chirp, they just whistle.)
>>>   
>>>       
>>>>> just one sideband
>>>>>       
>>>>>           
>>> Any real signal should be heard with the receiver operating in either 
>>> sideband mode. If a birdie or other spurious response is detected only 
>>> in one sideband, then it would most likely have something to do with a 
>>> spur or harmonic of the BFO in an analog product detector type of 
>>> receiver. Use a different BFO frequency and the birdie moves. The Orion 
>>> is a DSP radio, so it may have to do with aliasing that occurs in one 
>>> sideband detection mode and not the other.
>>>   
>>>       
>>>>>  
>>>>> from 28,027,618 to 28,027,627 Hz. (With my step set normally at 10 Hz, 
>>>>> it was audible only at 28,027,620 Hz.) Anyone know its source?
>>>>>     
>>>>>       
>>>>>           
> 73, Jerry, K0CQ
>
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>   
Thanks, Jerry... your comments are consistent with what I had suspected, 
though I lack the technical knowledge to explain it as you have.

It's so narrow, and on a band I don't frequent anyway, that it's hardly 
a bother.

Thanks again, and 73...

-- 
John, K3GHH

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