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Daft question but someone might know.
"Jim Lesurf" wrote in message
In article , Arny Krueger wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message In article , Arny Krueger wrote: I think the lesson is that economies of scale can be quite impressive. The development, tooling and sales costs don't increase that much when the sales double. Tell me about it! I'm trying to find a UK supplier who will sell small quantities of items like Toko-type low-pass filters! Countless similar filters are in all kinds of tuners, etc. Must be legacy technology. The FM tuner in my Sansa Clip+ can't have many coils, given that they fit the FM stereo tuner (biggest weakness - no dedicated antenna terminals), a computer (with DSP), EPROM (firmware), two banks of gigabytes of RAM, headphone amps, jacks, color display, pushbuttons and a battery in less than a cubic inch. So how does it filter/suppress the 19kHz pilot tone and the remains of the 38kHz DSBSC after stereo demodulation? Good question. Obviously, it could be done with active filters. I direct you to the data sheets for the relevant chips which are online. I'd study it myself right now but I'm off to a gig this morning. |
Daft question but someone might know.
In article ,
Jim Lesurf wrote: Must be legacy technology. The FM tuner in my Sansa Clip+ can't have many coils, given that they fit the FM stereo tuner (biggest weakness - no dedicated antenna terminals), a computer (with DSP), EPROM (firmware), two banks of gigabytes of RAM, headphone amps, jacks, color display, pushbuttons and a battery in less than a cubic inch. So how does it filter/suppress the 19kHz pilot tone and the remains of the 38kHz DSBSC after stereo demodulation? Maybe like my old Quad FM3 tuner - don't bother to? -- *If you don't like the news, go out and make some. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Daft question but someone might know.
"Jim Lesurf" wrote in message
In article , Arny Krueger wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message In article , Arny Krueger wrote: I think the lesson is that economies of scale can be quite impressive. The development, tooling and sales costs don't increase that much when the sales double. Tell me about it! I'm trying to find a UK supplier who will sell small quantities of items like Toko-type low-pass filters! Countless similar filters are in all kinds of tuners, etc. Must be legacy technology. The FM tuner in my Sansa Clip+ can't have many coils, given that they fit the FM stereo tuner (biggest weakness - no dedicated antenna terminals), a computer (with DSP), EPROM (firmware), two banks of gigabytes of RAM, headphone amps, jacks, color display, pushbuttons and a battery in less than a cubic inch. So how does it filter/suppress the 19kHz pilot tone and the remains of the 38kHz DSBSC after stereo demodulation? It appears that all audio signal processing is done in the digital domain: http://read.pudn.com/downloads159/doc/710424/Si4706.pdf Please see page 15 for listing of external components required (a bypass cap on the power supply). |
Daft question but someone might know.
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Jim Lesurf wrote: Must be legacy technology. The FM tuner in my Sansa Clip+ can't have many coils, given that they fit the FM stereo tuner (biggest weakness - no dedicated antenna terminals), a computer (with DSP), EPROM (firmware), two banks of gigabytes of RAM, headphone amps, jacks, color display, pushbuttons and a battery in less than a cubic inch. So how does it filter/suppress the 19kHz pilot tone and the remains of the 38kHz DSBSC after stereo demodulation? Maybe like my old Quad FM3 tuner - don't bother to? The diagram I have for the FM3 shows it using an MC1310 followed by a pair of active LP filters. (The FM4 seems to use the Toko type '21 filter modules. But I don't know the filter shapes for these as they don't give a part number I could trace to any of the Toko sheets I have.) Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Daft question but someone might know.
In article , Arny
Krueger wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message Must be legacy technology. The FM tuner in my Sansa Clip+ can't have many coils, given that they fit the FM stereo tuner (biggest weakness - no dedicated antenna terminals), a computer (with DSP), EPROM (firmware), two banks of gigabytes of RAM, headphone amps, jacks, color display, pushbuttons and a battery in less than a cubic inch. So how does it filter/suppress the 19kHz pilot tone and the remains of the 38kHz DSBSC after stereo demodulation? It appears that all audio signal processing is done in the digital domain: http://read.pudn.com/downloads159/doc/710424/Si4706.pdf Please see page 15 for listing of external components required (a bypass cap on the power supply). Thanks, I'll have a look. Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Daft question but someone might know.
In article ,
Jim Lesurf wrote: So how does it filter/suppress the 19kHz pilot tone and the remains of the 38kHz DSBSC after stereo demodulation? Maybe like my old Quad FM3 tuner - don't bother to? The diagram I have for the FM3 shows it using an MC1310 followed by a pair of active LP filters. (The FM4 seems to use the Toko type '21 filter modules. But I don't know the filter shapes for these as they don't give a part number I could trace to any of the Toko sheets I have.) My early FM3 caused real problems when recording to my A77. Had to fit a filter to it. -- *Virtual reality is its own reward* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Daft question but someone might know.
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Jim Lesurf wrote: So how does it filter/suppress the 19kHz pilot tone and the remains of the 38kHz DSBSC after stereo demodulation? Maybe like my old Quad FM3 tuner - don't bother to? The diagram I have for the FM3 shows it using an MC1310 followed by a pair of active LP filters. (The FM4 seems to use the Toko type '21 filter modules. But I don't know the filter shapes for these as they don't give a part number I could trace to any of the Toko sheets I have.) My early FM3 caused real problems when recording to my A77. Had to fit a filter to it. I haven't analysed the filter but it doesn't have an obvious 19k 'trap'. Just looks like a standard 3rd order LC design for a low pass. I'd expect the 1310 to leak fair amounts of 19k, etc. That's why the 600s used a Toko filter, and perhaps why the FM4 does as well! Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Daft question but someone might know.
In article ,
Jim Lesurf wrote: My early FM3 caused real problems when recording to my A77. Had to fit a filter to it. I haven't analysed the filter but it doesn't have an obvious 19k 'trap'. Just looks like a standard 3rd order LC design for a low pass. I'd expect the 1310 to leak fair amounts of 19k, etc. That's why the 600s used a Toko filter, and perhaps why the FM4 does as well! ISTR it being said the recorder should have the filtering - perhaps switchable - rather than restricting the tuner audio output? For say mono? -- *A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Daft question but someone might know.
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Jim Lesurf wrote: My early FM3 caused real problems when recording to my A77. Had to fit a filter to it. I haven't analysed the filter but it doesn't have an obvious 19k 'trap'. Just looks like a standard 3rd order LC design for a low pass. I'd expect the 1310 to leak fair amounts of 19k, etc. That's why the 600s used a Toko filter, and perhaps why the FM4 does as well! ISTR it being said the recorder should have the filtering - perhaps switchable - rather than restricting the tuner audio output? For say mono? Clearly some makers/designers have thought that. :-) However my own view is that it should be the tuner that suppresses anything that isn't intended as audio from appearing the outputs. If nothing else, some people can hear 19kHz. And having a lot of ultrasonics isn't very kind to following amplifiers, etc. Personally I liked the Yamaha method. Have an active null to cancel out the 19k pilot, then use a Toko filter flat to about 17kHz to ensure good behaviour up to 15k but still cut down the ultrasonic hash. Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Daft question but someone might know.
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote
ISTR it being said the recorder should have the filtering - perhaps switchable - rather than restricting the tuner audio output? For say mono? It was a licensing requirement for recorders fitted with Dolby B noise reduction that they include a 19kHz notch filter and a low-pass filter to remove the 38kHz sub-carrier and sidebands. Some high-end domestic recorders, reel-to-reel and cassette, made the notch filter switchable, though most domestic cassette decks didn't bother. David. |
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