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On Sep 21, 6:31*pm, "Alex Pogossov" wrote:
Curious circuit. Thanks. But as many others it is a pull-in locked oscillator, which means if the modulation is deep, it will be losing lock at the troughs of the envelope, distorting the signal. Nevertheless, the author made an attempt to lock the synchronous oscillator in phase with the carrier, not at 60 degrees as usually happens. Those who experimented with low end "communication receivers" with so called product SSB detector (such as Trio 9R-59DS or Lafayette HE-80, HA-225, etc) probably noticed that on strong AM stations the product detector does lock, but it locks naturally at 90 degrees. The sound becomes tinny, the detector picking up secondary phase modulation (caused by sideband asymmetry) rather than true AM. Quadrature lock happens because of capacitive coupling between the signal and BFO, in this case through space charge. In the presented circuit Mr. Tucker introduced another 90 deg phase shift.. He did not decouple g2,4 of the hexode to GND. As a result, signal on g2,4 is 90 degrees lagging due to the inevitable capacitance from g2,4 to GND. In turn, g2,4 are capacitively coupled to the oscillator via capacitance between g2,4 and g3 sandwiched between the former grids. So we have two 90 degrees shift which eventually provides lock in phase with the carrier. Regards, Alex(andre) Well, that kind of Synchrodyne for BC band didn't seem very popular. With those pots, maybe different and critical settings would be needed for different carrier F, and thus keep ordinary ppl swearing at their radios. Patrick Turner. |
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