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Old October 31st 09, 09:53 PM posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.basics,rec.radio.amateur.misc,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
raypsi raypsi is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2008
Posts: 242
Default EMI prevention / protection?

Hey OM:

ASK is CW pure and simple. What you have is infinitely variable speed
CW. And some times the speed varies so much you can't tell if it's a
dit or a dah.

You can't beat CW, no way, no how, for the best source, of signal, in
an EMI environment.
Towit you can't beat ASK either.

Just keep on doing what you are doing.

As for square wave for audio, we are looking at an infinite number of
harmonics in a square wave, and that may be a good thing, but is it
what you want?

73 OM
de n8zu



On Oct 30, 12:40 pm, "dave.harper" wrote:
I'm using the wein bridge to generate audio tones that are fed to the
transmitter for digital radio communication (basically a homebrew ASK
radio modem). I'd be open to using that, but I'm not aware of any
radio modems that output square waves.

This oscillator also has 2 digital pots attached: 1 to trim the space
tone, and 1 to trim the mark tone. There's a high speed switch
between the two pots to rapidly switch between mark and space tones.
I could use this same setup with a 555 and trim the resistor to vary
the pulse duration, but I'm not sure what impact a square wave would
have on transmission, reception, decoding, etc...?

Has anyone heard of a square wave being used as an audio tone for
digital radio communication?

Thanks in advance,
Dave

On Oct 30, 12:06 pm, George Herold wrote:

Hmm I have no idea if that will make any difference. What are you
using to control the feedback? Can you use a more robust oscillator
(as John suggested) Some type of 'bang-bang' rather than sitting on
the 'knife-edge' of oscillation with the Wein bridge. I needed the
low harmonic distortion of the Wein bridge... Is that what you need?


George H.