Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Group,
Any one have an IF strip that they can give, trade or, swap? Needs to be transistor type. De KJ4UO |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() RCM ) writes: wrote: On 21 Jan 2005 14:07:17 GMT, (PDRUNEN) wrote: Hi Group, Any one have an IF strip that they can give, trade or, swap? Needs to be transistor type. De KJ4UO Ah, your request is still far from specific enough to answer. Is the IF to be used for AM, FM, SSB, ISB or some other? It does make a difference. Allison KB1GMX Says IF strip...not detector... No, an IF strip tends to mean including the detector. If he meant "IF amplifier" he would have said that. Even if the detector is not included, the modulation mode is needed to define the solution. An FM strip will include limiter stages, which you don't want for AM modes. Bandwidth selectivity is usually part of the IF strip, and bandwidth depends on type of modulation, and indeed can vary widely on the same type of mode. The original poster sounds like he expects to find a module, and that's not likely the case. If someone needs an FM broadcast band IF strip, the obvious solution is an FM broadcast receiver of some sort. A portable, a stereo receiver, a car radio. There'll be the needed ceramic filter(s), and at this point an IC that does the work. It won't be a module, but one could either chop out the section, or trace it and then desolder the parts and then rebuild it elsewhere. Narrow deviation FM, an obvious solution is an existing two-way radio. I've pulled actual modules out of older (and clunky) cellphones, but they tend to have a first IF in the 45MHz range, or higher, and then convert down to 455KHz. 49MHz superhet walkie talkies can supply an IF strip for this, and most of them were 10.7MHz first IF and then 455KHz. But some dropped down to 455KHz. Old cordless phones operated at 49MHz, and again many use the same conversion scheme. The walkie talkies, and many of the cordless phones, that I've taken apart use one of the (now old) Motorola FM IF strip ICs, the included the conversion stage from 10.7MHz to 455KHz. Again, these won't be modules, but the walkie talkie boards are fairly small and one just needs to feed the signal in around the front end. AM IF strips, the obvious solution is an AM broadcast radio. For narrower selectivity, a CB set will offer up narrower filters, and many will be double conversion with a 10.7MHz first IF and a 455KHz second IF. CW, well there isn't likely to be anything floating around in consumer equipment. Either you live with wider bandwidth for AM, and then add a BFO, or you build from scratch. Same with SSB. While some firms over the years have offered SSB IF strip modules, that's a rarity. And there's not much one can extract an IF strip from where the whole unit is not just useable to start with. So for SSB and CW, one likely has to build from scratch. But until we see a more detailed response, there really can't be an answer. Michael VE2BVW |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 22 Jan 2005 00:30:32 -0500, RCM wrote:
Says IF strip...not detector... Still makes a difference. If you were to use a 455 if from say a Motrac RX for ssb you'd find the lack of AGC (and easy way to do it) as it was designed to limit would make for very poor results. Also an IF intended for SSB use may not have enough gain and poor limiting for a FM RX use. So the answer is that the intended use is important. Usually the detector is part of the IF "strip" asssembly. Allison KB1GMX |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FA: Collins 455Khz Mechanical Filter | Equipment | |||
FA: Collins 455Khz Mechanical Filter | Equipment | |||
WTB: 10.7 Mhz hc-6u crystal | Homebrew | |||
WTB: 10.7 Mhz hc-6u crystal | Homebrew | |||
Computed paramiters for CBC domestic SW relay from Whitehorse, YKN | Shortwave |