[aprssig] APRS Bandwidth
Stephen H. Smith
wa8lmf2 at aol.com
Wed Jun 24 00:04:00 EDT 2009
Steve Noskowicz wrote:
>
> I never considered that this can be analyzed either as FM or AM.
> What Steve S. has is completely correct except for the fact that the modulation won't be square waves limited by the transceiver. At least it shouldn't be or rather needn't be. Only the first set if sidebands should be needed (and are in the calculation).
> The SSB transmitter would allow more (>500 Hz.) if a real square wave is used.
>
> Thinking about it, I don't think FSK teletype does any band limiting (at least it didn't when I was doing it), but just switches between the two frequencies, therefore taking more BW than ncessary.
>
> I wonder what modern transceivers do that have FSK.
>
>
For AFSK, the less-than-infinite bandwidth the TX modulator &b IF
filters limit the bandwidth, especially if you use a 500-800 Hz CW
filter in the TX path. Further, the better hardware and software AFSK
generators have limited transition rates between mark and space freqs,
i.e. not instantaneous.jumps. Usually the transition from one tone
freq to the other is made precisely as the zero-crossing point of the
wave form.
The old time direct FSK RTTY setups from the 50s-60s actually
diode-switched a small capacitor across the analog mechanical VFO L/C
circuit to shift the VFO freq slightly. Later, this was done with a
varactor diode across the VFO. Since the era of synthesized rigs, the
shift has been achieved by commanding the synthesizer to two freqs 200
Hz apart.
For direct FSK, most rigs have some sort of slew-rate limiting in the
"data input" channel, sometimes controlled by a menu to select the
appropriate time constant for either 45, 100 or 300 baud to "round off"
the square wave. This is essentially the same kind of rise-time
limiting/waveform "softening" used for CW "key click" filtering.
In either case (AFSK with a good tone generator, or rise-time-limited
FSK), the tone doesn't jump instantanously and discontinuously from F1
to F2, but rather very rapidly sweeps from one to the other.
For PLL-synthesized rigs, the slew rate limitation of the synthesizer
can inherently do this since the PLL osc can't jump instantaneously
between two freqs, but rather very rapidly "slides" from one freq to the
other.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
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