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Guys,
There has been quite a bit of discussion about use of very wide filters for HF narrow signal mode operation here recently. If QRM gets to be a problem the fallback position is to narrow the filter. Keep in mind the following. The AF pitch you will get for a fixed frequency signal is a function of the filter. The amount of pitch shift between filters can be 3 Hz at times. How the decoder handles such a step function change in pitch, I don't know. Here is some data (CW mode, pitch =500): filter width OFFSET IF FREQ pitch change 400 Hz 0 8.215 MHz defined to be zero 200 -.83 8.214170 -3.6 Hz 250 -.02 8.214980 -2.5 1800 0 8.214450 -0.9 2.7 -.85 8.213200 -1.2 The IF frequencies are nominal. They reflect the filter offset and other considerations. In reality, actual frequency produced by the synthesizer board and its AD9834 synthesizer IC and may differ. One reason may be the programming 32 bit word is inaccurate. I ran into this with another synthesizer where it was impossible to calculate an precise 32 bit programming word with 32 bit IEEE floating point math. One gets about 25-26 bits of accuracy in the floating point operations results. There are certain lucky numbers which produce exact results. Like here, the observed differences were in the 0-5 Hz range. In that case, I was able to augment the accuracy through error look up tables and reduce the error to under 0.5 Hz. The math coprocessor used did not permit 64 bit math. Numerical studies showed that 64 bit math would have completely solved the problem. To see if the errors were similar to the numerical experiments, I used the 250 Hz filter and varied the filter offset between -0.050 and +0.050 in 0.01 steps. The result was a sawtooth pitch error curve ranging from -2.5 Hz to zero. (Numerical studies showed a sawtooth error form). There are also certain "magic" numbers which produce zero error. Based on this, I'm guessing the K3 math used for the programming word calculation is 32 bit floating point. The resultant synthesizer 32 bit programming word error is most likely producing the observed effect. The problem is the amount of the error is a function of your filter offset. One has no idea how much difference there may be as filters are switched. If this is a problem for JT9 users, there is a solution for the wider filters-- simply tweak the offset in 0.01 steps till the pitch difference between filters disappears. I then looked at the linearity of the 1Hz tuning steps suspecting the same sawtooth effect to show up. It does. 2-3 Hz departures from linearity exist. I suspect the small band to band differences in accuracy (calibrated at one frequency and off at another) are also due in part to synthesizer output frequencies. All of this is irrelevant to most users. I'm not sure if JT9 users are impacted or not. How many other amateur rigs can say they do this well? I am always amazed that the almost lab-grade performance of the K3. Keep in mind of don't have super lab grade equipment here. However the HP8675B generator is locked to Rb and has a very clean stable signal. SpectrumLab, as employed, is able to resolved pitch differences of <<.1Hz. The K3 is using the high stability oscillator. YMMV I don't claim to be an expert in all of this stuff. If the conclusions are off base, please correct me. 73 de Brian/K3KO ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2012.0.2242 / Virus Database: 3222/6235 - Release Date: 10/09/13 ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
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With PSK31, 3 Hz is a significant shift. I have not really
noticed a shift of that magnitude as I move from wide-bandwidth -- 300 to 2600 Hz -- which gives me a full waterfall with no edge falloff, down to 50 Hz wide at the audio frequency shown on the waterfall. Narrowing the bandwidth thru this range starts with the 2.7K filter and moves thru the 2.1K and the 250 Hz filters. My software will allow .1 Hz adjustments for the decoder. I mostly adjust using 1 Hz shifts, but sometimes I use finer shifts. Cheers - Bill On 10/9/13 at 6:58 AM, [hidden email] (Brian Alsop) wrote: >Keep in mind the following. The AF pitch you will get for a >fixed frequency signal is a function of the filter. The amount >of pitch shift between filters can be 3 Hz at times. How the >decoder handles such a step function change in pitch, I don't know. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Bill Frantz | Since the IBM Selectric, keyboards have gotten 408-356-8506 | steadily worse. Now we have touchscreen keyboards. www.pwpconsult.com | Can we make something even worse? ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html |
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