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#1
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Hi;
I've recently bought two aircraft rx modules, there's only 'LOC/VOR receiver' written on the chassis, neither manufacturer nor any additional infos. Single aerial input, and several connectors. As I inspected, it is a complete 108-117MHz rx, with RF amp, LO, mixers, quartz filters, and demodulator. One of them (1990) is equipped with a PLL synthesis, and the other (1975) has 10 switched crystals instead. Whole RX is a metal, rigid can (as for high-end devices used in aircrafts). Unfortunately, I haven't found any documentation concerned with it. The schematic diagram would be the best, however I suppose this stuff is not widely available. Nevertheless, if anyone had any info how to connect such things or make them work, would be appreciated. Of course, I can redraw the wiring; although that could take weeks ![]() Cheers, -- Pawe³ Stobiñski SQ9NRY @ JO90WP Republic of Poland |
#2
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In article , "Pawe³ Stobiñski"
writes: I've recently bought two aircraft rx modules, there's only 'LOC/VOR receiver' written on the chassis, neither manufacturer nor any additional infos. Single aerial input, and several connectors. As I inspected, it is a complete 108-117MHz rx, with RF amp, LO, mixers, quartz filters, and demodulator. One of them (1990) is equipped with a PLL synthesis, and the other (1975) has 10 switched crystals instead. Whole RX is a metal, rigid can (as for high-end devices used in aircrafts). Unfortunately, I haven't found any documentation concerned with it. The schematic diagram would be the best, however I suppose this stuff is not widely available. If you can give us some sizes (mm or cm okay) and describe the other (not coaxial) connectors pin count or connector identification, it would be a start. If this was used on air-transport aircraft, the box sizes, connectors, and connector pin functions are all standardized under ARINC specifications. ARINC documents are available from them but are very expensive to order from that industry group. The cabinet/box sizes are described by "ATR-x" and slide into aircraft racks (also standardized) and lock down through bottom front end pins. Nevertheless, if anyone had any info how to connect such things or make them work, would be appreciated. VOR (Very high frequency Omnidirectional radio Range) uses a combination of AM at 30 Hz (from the ground station antenna pattern actually rotating at that rate) and a 30 Hz signal derived from FM demodulating a 9.96 KHz subcarrier as the reference phase for azimuth bearing to the ground station. There are many ways to show or compare the two 30 Hz phases (automatic or semi-manual) and would be done in a pilot's OBS or Omni Bearing Selector, usually a separate panel mounting instrument. The "open space" from 30 Hz to near 10 KHz can be used for voice audio from the air traffic controller to the aircraft or for automated airport condition recordings. LOC or Localizer is also a sort-of azimuth bearing radionavigation system but is specifically for the approach path azimuth for landing. Uses only two tones and compares the amplitudes (equal when centered on approach path). In most OBSs, the "left-right" needle is switchable to either VOR or LOC but the audio signals for each function are different. From the basic VOR function, the receivers would have a 10 KHz minimum bandwidth and tune 108.20 MHz upwards in 200 KHz increments. LOC tunes from 108.10 MHz upwards in odd increments, interleaved with VOR. Note: Later ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization) specifications may have 50 KHz increments in some countries, but the even-odd interleaving still holds. AM demodulation for both receivers. If your receivers are modules that fit into a larger one, the full documentation would have to come from the manufacturer. Nothing secret about it...just isn't widely used outside of the civil aviation world. ARINC was first organized before World War 2 in the USA as a private airline communication company ("Aeronautical Radio, INC") but became a non-profit industry standards group after the war, principally for airlines and air transport companies to allow very quick substitution of standard communications and radionavigation radios and indicators anywhere in the world. Of course, I can redraw the wiring; although that could take weeks ![]() If you can't identify the receivers from existing website manufacturer's photographs, that might be the unfortunate necessity. Try a search on the Internet using "aircraft radionavigation radio" and see if anything comes close. Personal story: In 1947 at age 14 I got started in "real radio hardware" by having to generate a schematic for the ARC-5 airborne radios sold as military surplus...the new store owned by two long-time hams did not have a reproducible schematic for less than a few dollars. Took me a week-plus to do it as a beginner using an ordinary multimeter. By then the store had obtained copies of the schematics, selling them for much less than originally...:-) It was good training for me at the time. In 1981 another engineer and myself had to generate several schematics from existing PCB assemblies because a project manager refused to spend extra project money for documentation. Together, we cost the project a LOT more than the documentation and wasted a whole month. :-) Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
#3
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In article , "Pawe³ Stobiñski"
writes: I've recently bought two aircraft rx modules, there's only 'LOC/VOR receiver' written on the chassis, neither manufacturer nor any additional infos. Single aerial input, and several connectors. As I inspected, it is a complete 108-117MHz rx, with RF amp, LO, mixers, quartz filters, and demodulator. One of them (1990) is equipped with a PLL synthesis, and the other (1975) has 10 switched crystals instead. Whole RX is a metal, rigid can (as for high-end devices used in aircrafts). Unfortunately, I haven't found any documentation concerned with it. The schematic diagram would be the best, however I suppose this stuff is not widely available. If you can give us some sizes (mm or cm okay) and describe the other (not coaxial) connectors pin count or connector identification, it would be a start. If this was used on air-transport aircraft, the box sizes, connectors, and connector pin functions are all standardized under ARINC specifications. ARINC documents are available from them but are very expensive to order from that industry group. The cabinet/box sizes are described by "ATR-x" and slide into aircraft racks (also standardized) and lock down through bottom front end pins. Nevertheless, if anyone had any info how to connect such things or make them work, would be appreciated. VOR (Very high frequency Omnidirectional radio Range) uses a combination of AM at 30 Hz (from the ground station antenna pattern actually rotating at that rate) and a 30 Hz signal derived from FM demodulating a 9.96 KHz subcarrier as the reference phase for azimuth bearing to the ground station. There are many ways to show or compare the two 30 Hz phases (automatic or semi-manual) and would be done in a pilot's OBS or Omni Bearing Selector, usually a separate panel mounting instrument. The "open space" from 30 Hz to near 10 KHz can be used for voice audio from the air traffic controller to the aircraft or for automated airport condition recordings. LOC or Localizer is also a sort-of azimuth bearing radionavigation system but is specifically for the approach path azimuth for landing. Uses only two tones and compares the amplitudes (equal when centered on approach path). In most OBSs, the "left-right" needle is switchable to either VOR or LOC but the audio signals for each function are different. From the basic VOR function, the receivers would have a 10 KHz minimum bandwidth and tune 108.20 MHz upwards in 200 KHz increments. LOC tunes from 108.10 MHz upwards in odd increments, interleaved with VOR. Note: Later ICAO (International Civil Aviation Organization) specifications may have 50 KHz increments in some countries, but the even-odd interleaving still holds. AM demodulation for both receivers. If your receivers are modules that fit into a larger one, the full documentation would have to come from the manufacturer. Nothing secret about it...just isn't widely used outside of the civil aviation world. ARINC was first organized before World War 2 in the USA as a private airline communication company ("Aeronautical Radio, INC") but became a non-profit industry standards group after the war, principally for airlines and air transport companies to allow very quick substitution of standard communications and radionavigation radios and indicators anywhere in the world. Of course, I can redraw the wiring; although that could take weeks ![]() If you can't identify the receivers from existing website manufacturer's photographs, that might be the unfortunate necessity. Try a search on the Internet using "aircraft radionavigation radio" and see if anything comes close. Personal story: In 1947 at age 14 I got started in "real radio hardware" by having to generate a schematic for the ARC-5 airborne radios sold as military surplus...the new store owned by two long-time hams did not have a reproducible schematic for less than a few dollars. Took me a week-plus to do it as a beginner using an ordinary multimeter. By then the store had obtained copies of the schematics, selling them for much less than originally...:-) It was good training for me at the time. In 1981 another engineer and myself had to generate several schematics from existing PCB assemblies because a project manager refused to spend extra project money for documentation. Together, we cost the project a LOT more than the documentation and wasted a whole month. :-) Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
#4
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ON5MJ wrote:
Maybe publish a picture of the front face (+ address) so we can have an idea. 73, de Jacques - ON5MJ That could be a problem - I do not posess any digital camera to take a photo. If it's about the device - an ordinary, rigid, metal box, 40x10x2 cm. There are a few holes to make necesary adjustments (IF AGC, RF AGC) too. If it's not any help, will try to find a cam, anyway. -- Pawe³ Stobiñski SQ9NRY @ JO90WP Republic of Poland |
#5
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ON5MJ wrote:
Maybe publish a picture of the front face (+ address) so we can have an idea. 73, de Jacques - ON5MJ That could be a problem - I do not posess any digital camera to take a photo. If it's about the device - an ordinary, rigid, metal box, 40x10x2 cm. There are a few holes to make necesary adjustments (IF AGC, RF AGC) too. If it's not any help, will try to find a cam, anyway. -- Pawe³ Stobiñski SQ9NRY @ JO90WP Republic of Poland |
#6
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Pawe³ Stobiñski wrote:
ON5MJ wrote: Maybe publish a picture of the front face (+ address) so we can have an idea. 73, de Jacques - ON5MJ That could be a problem - I do not posess any digital camera to take a photo. If it's about the device - an ordinary, rigid, metal box, 40x10x2 cm. There are a few holes to make necesary adjustments (IF AGC, RF AGC) too. If it's not any help, will try to find a cam, anyway. Do you have a computer scanner? With a scanner you can make perfect pictures of printed circuit boards and other 3_D objects Hans |
#7
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Pawe³ Stobiñski wrote:
ON5MJ wrote: Maybe publish a picture of the front face (+ address) so we can have an idea. 73, de Jacques - ON5MJ That could be a problem - I do not posess any digital camera to take a photo. If it's about the device - an ordinary, rigid, metal box, 40x10x2 cm. There are a few holes to make necesary adjustments (IF AGC, RF AGC) too. If it's not any help, will try to find a cam, anyway. Do you have a computer scanner? With a scanner you can make perfect pictures of printed circuit boards and other 3_D objects Hans |
#8
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2003 20:39:32 +0000, Hans wrote:
Maybe publish a picture of the front face (+ address) so we can have an That could be a problem - I do not posess any digital camera to take a photo. Do you have a computer scanner? With a scanner you can make perfect pictures of printed circuit boards Well provided the distance is only few cm it is usually better pictures than digital camera. I made much efforts to photograph labels on rigs with my Olympus C-220 Zoom, but didn't succeed until I put the rig into the scanner, hi, but when using scanner or digital camera it has always been neccessary to treat the picture with a photo program to resize, crop, rotate, and adjust the light and contrast 73 Jan-Martin LA8AK http://home.online.no/~la8ak/ -- remove ,xnd to reply (Spam precaution!) |
#9
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On Tue, 28 Oct 2003 20:39:32 +0000, Hans wrote:
Maybe publish a picture of the front face (+ address) so we can have an That could be a problem - I do not posess any digital camera to take a photo. Do you have a computer scanner? With a scanner you can make perfect pictures of printed circuit boards Well provided the distance is only few cm it is usually better pictures than digital camera. I made much efforts to photograph labels on rigs with my Olympus C-220 Zoom, but didn't succeed until I put the rig into the scanner, hi, but when using scanner or digital camera it has always been neccessary to treat the picture with a photo program to resize, crop, rotate, and adjust the light and contrast 73 Jan-Martin LA8AK http://home.online.no/~la8ak/ -- remove ,xnd to reply (Spam precaution!) |
#10
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![]() "J M Noeding" wrote in message ... Well provided the distance is only few cm it is usually better pictures than digital camera. I made much efforts to photograph labels on rigs I don't know about the VOR rig in question, but UL in the USA requires that PC boards have a manufacturer's identification. Perhaps, being a professional, not consumer, item, the boards do not carry ID. |