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Re: Digital BFO Mod: Terrible Audio!
#bitx40help
Yes, his numbers are off.
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Filter passband on the Bitx40 is around 2000 hz wide, 3 dB passband might be 11996000 to 11998000, within a khz or so, depending on which bin the crystals for his rig were picked from. BFO is probably best placed maybe 500 hz beyond that, so 11995500 for USB and 11998500 for LSB. On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 05:37 pm, Tim Gorman wrote: I'm not sure what your frequencies mean. 11994420 - 11984800 = 12000 |
Re: Raduino oscilators. 33mhz and 57mhz. Documentation says one thinng, but this is what I measured.
Well, wrong or right isn't what I'm looking for, but the basic detail I was interested in here:?
Likewise, a high side clk1 of 56995000 hz? for USB always flips the sidebands when translating to 12mhz, however the low side clk1 of 32995000 hz we use to receive the 7.2mhz LSB signal does not: corresponds to what I measured basically. The high 57 is used for usb, and the low 33 is used for lsb. And of course, that doesn't match (at least last I looked) what Ashhar says. The description text is a little vague, but the block diagram specifically says 33 for usb, 57 for lsb. Maybe just a typo, but not sure.? If my counter is on freq, which I still haven't determined, the frequencies I'm measuring seem to indicate that possibly each raduino is matched to the radio, and the master clock actual frequency wouldn't be so important if some of the calibration routines are used. The radio would still be fairly accurate. I should know soon. thanks again. A part of Ashhars writeup that I did not notice before is down below,? "?VHF/UHF coverage?With the 45 MHz IF, it is trivial to build band-pass filters with microstriplines for 144 MHz, 220 MHz and 432 Mhz frequencies. The Si5351’s clock may not high enough for the first conversion directly at 432 Mhz but a sub-harmonic mixer that works with only half the local oscillator frequency can easily scale this rig for VHF/UHF work. MMICs like the MAR6 series and power modules from Mitsubishi can easily scale this radio to reasonable performance level for weak signal and satellite work."? WOW. Has this always been there ?? |
Re: Ubitx audio debug question
Rod,
Do your headphones have a stereo/mono switch? If so just unwire the speaker lead going to the ring contact on the audio jack and set your headphones to mono. That's what I am doing (actually I used a mono jack instead of a stereo jack). Then if I plug in a speaker using a mono plug everything will be copacetic. tim ab0wr On Wed, 14 Mar 2018 10:31:10 -0700 "WA9GQT via Groups.Io" <WA9GQT@...> wrote: I was very cautious and finally got the uBITX?wiring correct after |
Re: Digital BFO Mod: Terrible Audio!
#bitx40help
I'm not sure what your frequencies mean. 11994420 - 11984800 = 12000
and 11996450-11984800 = 9620. These don't match your 2030hz and 4060hz figures. If your crystals all average out to about 11984800hz then any bandpass filter will have a frequency just a little above that frequency. Let's assume it will run from 2khz to 5khz higher, i.e. a 3khz bandwidth or from 11986800hz to 11989800hz. I thought the bitx40 used a 5Mhz vfo and a 12Mhz if (i.e. crystal filter frequency)? Why are you adding a 12Mhz (vfo offset) to the frequency? And then using another 12Mhz (usbCarrier) signal to demodulate it? You just wind back up with a signal of 7Mhz. Am I misunderstanding what you are doing? There is a reason for shifting the vfo frequency. To make the best use of a crystal filter, which typically has a steeper cutoff at the lowest frequency and a less steep cutoff at the upper frequency, usually LSB signals are converted to USB signals where the audio frequencies higher in frequency than the carrier. tim ab0wr On Wed, 14 Mar 2018 01:54:42 -0700 "Ryan Flowers" <geocrasher@...> wrote: Hello Everyone, |
Re: Encoder details from various suppliers
Jack Purdum
Of all of those links, only the last one is any good. All of the others do not have a threaded shaft, which most people will want. I've probably purchased 50 KY-40 encoders and all have worked well. I haven't used them all, so there may be a bad one lurking in the pile, but so far, so good. These do have a detent, but another post here showed how to make it "detentless". Personally I like the detent as it stops on a dime and there is no coasting. Jack, W8TEE From: Michael Shreeve <shreevester@...> To: [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2018 8:14 PM Subject: [BITX20] Encoder details from various suppliers I've looked at encoders which I believe are used in the uBITX .? Perhaps you need one, they can be blown up with incorrect hookups, or physically just bad. Or perhaps your doing a special project and need one.? Of course, the encoder supplied with a uBITX is kind of a special animal.? It has the following specs. or close to it. There are a couple of important details, one the Number of Detent, and the Important spec is "without" and? , a few do not have switches and a few details like that. The link for a table showing these specs is here.? And here is the encoder I believe to be almost exactly what we use in the Raduino .? Now, if you try to get encoders, its really tough on ebay. Most of the details are left out. And, my experience with some listings is that if they give the details, it will be a very expensive item.? Here for example.? From England,? GPB 8.99 $12.67 US Dollars for ONE !? Most of the ebay listings are like this one. Cheap, but no details. And, you will be very disappointed because one of the most important details is the encoder is the "number of detents" which should say "without". Detents are the physical click you feel when you turn it, uBITX encoders are smooth, no detents, and Alps says "without" to describe this feature. Encoders with Detents are terrible for the uBITX.? And most likely the ones supplied by Ebay will have detents.? ?And Amazon doesn't give any details either.? I am told these would be like the ones the uBITX uses.? But, I'm not sure how the person who referred this to me knew that. Definitely not from the listing. Was he just? lucky ?? |
Encoder details from various suppliers
I've looked at encoders which I believe are used in the uBITX .? Perhaps you need one, they can be blown up with incorrect hookups, or physically just bad. Or perhaps your doing a special project and need one.?
Of course, the encoder supplied with a uBITX is kind of a special animal.? It has the following specs. or close to it. There are a couple of important details, one the Number of Detent, and the Important spec is "without" and? , a few do not have switches and a few details like that. The link for a table showing these specs is here.? And here is the encoder I believe to be almost exactly what we use in the Raduino .? Now, if you try to get encoders, its really tough on ebay. Most of the details are left out. And, my experience with some listings is that if they give the details, it will be a very expensive item.? Here for example.? From England,? GPB 8.99 $12.67 US Dollars for ONE !? Most of the ebay listings are like this one. Cheap, but no details. And, you will be very disappointed because one of the most important details is the encoder is the "number of detents" which should say "without". Detents are the physical click you feel when you turn it, uBITX encoders are smooth, no detents, and Alps says "without" to describe this feature. Encoders with Detents are terrible for the uBITX.? And most likely the ones supplied by Ebay will have detents.? ?And Amazon doesn't give any details either.? I am told these would be like the ones the uBITX uses.? But, I'm not sure how the person who referred this to me knew that. Definitely not from the listing. Was he just? lucky ?? |
I didn't notice it too much myself until someone pointed it out.? Now it drives me crazy.? Was thinking if I am going to build an audio filter I might as well socket the MX TDA2822 and mount the IC to board with a voltage regulator and a bandpass filter. May try to make it a plug in module that fits into the DIP socket.
-- Jason Schlager KM6AUS |
Re: Received my uBitx!
Either is probably good enough.
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Both is best. We don't really know much about the WX except that many have blown in the uBitx. I'd tend to replace the chip. There are reports on the web that some of the TDA2822 clones work fine at 5 or 6v, and blow when you go much higher. The WX seems to be one of those, so just a regulator is probably good enough. Let us know if you find out otherwise. Jerry On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 04:27 pm, Joe Puma wrote: Thanks Vince so should it be replaced completely or should add a regulator, or both? |
Re: Speaker Jack
On Fri, Mar 2, 2018 at 03:50 pm, Clark Martin wrote:
How would I set up this resistor divider? ? -- 73, W9KJO Walter |
Re: Received my uBitx!
Uh-oh. . . . . . ??? Roy WA0YMH On Mar 14, 2018 5:48 PM, "Joe Puma" <kd2nfc@...> wrote: Ordered Jan 17th. Got shipping notice 2 days ago and it showed up today in NY. |
Re: Raduino oscilators. 33mhz and 57mhz. Documentation says one thinng, but this is what I measured.
Nope.
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But that's what the code says it does. I'll be very surprised if it's wrong. On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 04:21 pm, Michael Shreeve wrote: Jerry, have you actually measured the frequencies of ck 2, ck 1, and ck 0 at specific frequencies, say 7.2 lsb if you would like. So far no one has reported their results.? |
Re: Received my uBitx!
Joe Puma
Thanks Vince so should it be replaced completely or should add a regulator, or both?
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Joe KD2NFC On Mar 14, 2018, at 7:02 PM, Vince Vielhaber <vev@...> wrote: |
Re: adrino
Robert McClements
The R3 starter kit is indeed an excellent way to learn Arduino programming.
This kit uses the Uno board with the same processor as used in the Nano fitted to the Raduino and will run the same program (sketch)..? The Nano, however has 2 extra analogue ports, one is spare and the other is used by the standard uBitx software and some of the enhanced software versions.? Once you have got up the initial learning curve? it would be worthwhile ordering a Nano board, but be careful to get the version with the 328 processor. |
Re: adrino
Jack Purdum
Starter kits are expensive for what you get. Buy a decent programming book and a Nano. I buy them on eBay 10 at a time for $3, $6 quantity 1 from US seller. Just make sure it's the ATmega328 and not the ATmega168, which some try to sell. Also, the Nano Pro Mini is cheaper, but doesn't have the USB connector on it, which is less convenient. Alas, there are several good introductory C programming books aimed at the Arduino. In any event, a good book and a Nano will cost under $40, but most starter kits are over $50. Plus, the Nano is what's in your ?BITX, too. Jack, W8TEE From: "wb7dmx@..." <wb7dmx@...> To: [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2018 6:45 PM Subject: [BITX20] adrino I am wanting to learn programing, looking at a starter kit r3, is this compatible with the one in the mbitx ?
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Re: Received my uBitx!
Vince Vielhaber
Are you safe? Nope. That's a WX chip. I have the same chip except the lettering is almost unreadable.
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Vince. On 03/14/2018 06:48 PM, Joe Puma wrote:
Ordered Jan 17th. Got shipping notice 2 days ago and it showed up today in NY. --
Michigan VHF Corp. |
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