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#1
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ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down
the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. 1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? 2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? 3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? 4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough to determine the BFO freq? TIA, Tom |
#2
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On transmit, you need to get some of the carrier
suppression by means of the filter. Most balanced modulators are not able to get good enough carrier suppression when operated at low enough levels to have good IMD. This is main reason why phasing rigs went out of fashion. Rick N6RK "Tom Holden" wrote in message .. . ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. 1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? 2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? 3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? 4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough to determine the BFO freq? TIA, Tom |
#3
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On transmit, you need to get some of the carrier
suppression by means of the filter. Most balanced modulators are not able to get good enough carrier suppression when operated at low enough levels to have good IMD. This is main reason why phasing rigs went out of fashion. Rick N6RK "Tom Holden" wrote in message .. . ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. 1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? 2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? 3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? 4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough to determine the BFO freq? TIA, Tom |
#4
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On Thu, 5 Feb 2004 22:13:05 -0500, "Tom Holden"
wrote: ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. 1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? 2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? 3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? 4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough to determine the BFO freq? TIA, Tom 20 db down is where they are usually set. It is not too critical though. It does provide that much carrier suppression in addition. The best way is to set it where it sounds the best. Too far down and you get better opposite side band suppression but it also cuts the low frequency response of the wanted side band. Yes it will depend on the shape factor of the filter as to where the best point on the slope is. You can easily measure 20 db down or how far you want it by just measuring the output voltage level from what you get at the center of the filter. Measuring is much easier than interpolating the correct point as only a few tenths of a cycle change on the slope will make a large change in db down. 73 Gary K4FMX |
#5
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On Thu, 5 Feb 2004 22:13:05 -0500, "Tom Holden"
wrote: ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. 1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? 2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? 3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? 4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough to determine the BFO freq? TIA, Tom 20 db down is where they are usually set. It is not too critical though. It does provide that much carrier suppression in addition. The best way is to set it where it sounds the best. Too far down and you get better opposite side band suppression but it also cuts the low frequency response of the wanted side band. Yes it will depend on the shape factor of the filter as to where the best point on the slope is. You can easily measure 20 db down or how far you want it by just measuring the output voltage level from what you get at the center of the filter. Measuring is much easier than interpolating the correct point as only a few tenths of a cycle change on the slope will make a large change in db down. 73 Gary K4FMX |
#6
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On Thu, 5 Feb 2004 22:13:05 -0500, "Tom Holden"
wrote: |ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down |the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. |1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? |2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? |3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? |4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough |to determine the BFO freq? | Perhaps an example is the best way to explain this. Assume that you have a nominal 9 MHz crystal filter, with a 2.0 KHz BW at the -6 dB points. The -6 dB frequencies are thus 8.999 and 9.001 MHz. Forgetting the bandwidth restrictions on the incoming signal, let's say you would like the recovered audio signal to be 6 dB down at 500 and 2500 Hz respectively. For an upper sideband signal, the BFO should be 500 Hz below the lower cutoff frequency, i.e. 8.9985 MHz. For lower sideband, the BFO should be 500 Hz above the upper cutoff frequency, 9.0015 MHz. Where these two frequencies land on the skirts is dependent on the shape factor. These "rules" that say the BFO should be so many dB down are really "rules of thumb" that work with typical shape factors. Wes Stewart N7WS |
#7
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On Thu, 5 Feb 2004 22:13:05 -0500, "Tom Holden"
wrote: |ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down |the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. |1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? |2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? |3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? |4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough |to determine the BFO freq? | Perhaps an example is the best way to explain this. Assume that you have a nominal 9 MHz crystal filter, with a 2.0 KHz BW at the -6 dB points. The -6 dB frequencies are thus 8.999 and 9.001 MHz. Forgetting the bandwidth restrictions on the incoming signal, let's say you would like the recovered audio signal to be 6 dB down at 500 and 2500 Hz respectively. For an upper sideband signal, the BFO should be 500 Hz below the lower cutoff frequency, i.e. 8.9985 MHz. For lower sideband, the BFO should be 500 Hz above the upper cutoff frequency, 9.0015 MHz. Where these two frequencies land on the skirts is dependent on the shape factor. These "rules" that say the BFO should be so many dB down are really "rules of thumb" that work with typical shape factors. Wes Stewart N7WS |
#8
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![]() |ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down |the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. |1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? |2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? |3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? I think you understand. The filter is placed in relation to the AUDIO or sideband that it has to pass. The filter shape factor then determines where on the skirt the BFO happend to fall. On the type of filter (commonly) used, it appears to be the -20dB point. Someof the other reaponses are saying the same thing in various ways. |4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough |to determine the BFO freq? That's probablu not to bad, but the answer above says that this is going at it the wrong way. Place the filter pass band where it needs to be and the BFO goes on the carrier freq, wherever it is. If you want the filter to cut off some of the highs, then put the BFO further down the skirt - visa-versa. If I actually answer your question and consider a "typical" (in my mind anyway) filter shape, linear interpolation will put the BFO a little too close (less than -20dB down -- as in like -18dB down) to the bandpass. -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#9
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![]() |ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down |the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. |1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? |2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? |3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? I think you understand. The filter is placed in relation to the AUDIO or sideband that it has to pass. The filter shape factor then determines where on the skirt the BFO happend to fall. On the type of filter (commonly) used, it appears to be the -20dB point. Someof the other reaponses are saying the same thing in various ways. |4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough |to determine the BFO freq? That's probablu not to bad, but the answer above says that this is going at it the wrong way. Place the filter pass band where it needs to be and the BFO goes on the carrier freq, wherever it is. If you want the filter to cut off some of the highs, then put the BFO further down the skirt - visa-versa. If I actually answer your question and consider a "typical" (in my mind anyway) filter shape, linear interpolation will put the BFO a little too close (less than -20dB down -- as in like -18dB down) to the bandpass. -- Steve N, K,9;d, c. i My email has no u's. |
#10
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Tom Holden wrote:
ARRL Handbook says that the BFO frequency should be at the -20dB point down the skirt of the SSB filter. Pete, KE9OA, says -24dB. 1. What is the reasoning behind these choices? 2. How critical is it that the BFO be so positioned? 3. Wouldn't the shape factor have some bearing on where it should be? 4. Is linear interpolation between the -6 and -60dB points accurate enough to determine the BFO freq? Thanks for all the useful replies! I neglected to explain that this question is related to upgrading a particular receiver and another design target is that the BFO frequency must be fixed at +/-1500Hz from the filter and IF centre frequency (1 side for USB, the other for LSB) due to the way this double conversion receiver tunes and displays frequency. So it is more a question of determining what filter bandwidth and shape would be most suitable. By targetting -20 to -24dB attenuation with this offset, I computed that example filters suited to that offset would have -6dB/-60dB bandwidths and corresponding audio passbands of: 1) 2kHz/5.4kHz ----- 500-2500Hz 2) 2.3kHz/4.7kHz --- 350-2650Hz 3) 2.5kHz/4.2kHz --- 250-2750Hz Do these calculations seem reasonable? Examples 2 and 3 seem to be acceptable for communications speech but the steeper the skirts the greater the risk that filter tolerances will place the BFO somewhere else on the skirts well removed from the -20dB target. Are there any economical 455kHz filters with the characteristics of examples 2 or 3 with symmetrical skirts? TIA , Tom |
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