Don,

Stripped of a lot of stuff, the essence of it is this:

When we transmit using a SSB transmitter (and except for true FSK, all modern 
radios use SSB for all modes, including CW and digital) all that is really 
happening is the up-conversion of an audio frequency to a radio frequency.  
When we receive, we do the opposite, convert a radio frequency to an audio 
frequency.

Although there are (usually) intermediate steps, the process can actually be 
done directly and with some switching, the same hardware can be used to do 
both.  

For example if there is a CW signal on 7100 KHz and we would like to hear it in 
our headphones with an audio tone of 1000 Hz, we can use a frequency mixer in 
which we combine the 7100 KHz signal with another one which we generate on 7101 
KHz.  When we subtract the first from the second, we get the tone that we 
desire.

Now if we put enough "smarts" in the radio, we can say to the radio, "When I 
listen to CW, the "pitch" of the tone that I prefer is 1000 Hz."  The radio 
then knows that when you (or it) tune the signal so the pitch is 1000 Hz, the 
actual frequency of the incoming signal is offset by that amount from the 
locally generated conversion frequency.

In the case of a synthesized radio like the K3, it already knows the frequency 
of the conversion oscillator (the "LO") so it just does the math and in this 
case, subtracts 1000 Hz from that number and presents it on the display as 
7.100.000

To transmit, we do the reverse: subtract 1000 from 7101 KHz and get 7100 KHz. 
But here it's not so simple, the mixer also adds the two signals and we get 
7102 KHz too.  Plus, the 7101 KHz LO also appears in the mixer output.  So we 
have a mess, 7100, 7101 and 7102 KHz.  The 7101 LO is also called the "carrier" 
since it is the vehicle that "carries" the audio signal to the radio frequency 
spectrum.  The other two signals, 7100 and 7102 are called the "sidebands" 
since they reside equally spaced around the carrier.  The FCC (and our soon to 
be enemy ham friends) would really frown on us transmitting this signal in the 
40-meter CW band.  So we have to do some more work.

When was hams say, "SSB", what we really are indicating is, 
"Suppressed-Carrier-Single-Sideband."  So with our messy signal we can use a 
special kind of mixer called a balanced-modulator that does the suppression of 
the carrier, that's the 7101 KHz signal in this case. Now we are left with the 
two sidebands, when we want only one.

We can deal with this several ways, the most common are to either use phasing 
techniques to cancel one sideband while enhancing the other, or to use a narrow 
filter to remove the unwanted sideband.

The phasing technique can be performed over a band of frequencies, however, the 
narrow filter we would need has to be done using crystals, hence we would be 
stuck on 7100 KHz.  So another frequency conversion is usually used with filter 
radios so that a single filter at an intermediate frequency can be utilized.  
This frequency conversion operates just as before, with the same math used and 
the same, or more, problems associated with unwanted frequencies.

Now this is a long-winded explanation of more-or-less how the K3 handles tone 
offsets.  I have tried and rejected HRD so I can't begin to explain how it 
accounts for this.  But maybe this fundamental explanation will help you sort 
it out or at least formulate more specific questions.

Good luck,

Wes  N7WS

--- On Sun, 1/2/11, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear All,
> 
> When operating CW or Rtty there is a split tone that you
> have to know 
> about.  I have been reading on the HRD forums to
> figure this out to get 
> the software set up correctly.  I know it has
> something to do with 
> carrier supression, but it just does not make sense to me.
> 
> So the more I read there the more confused I become. 
> I have also tried 
> google searches but I still have not figured it out yet.
> 
> So if someone can direct me to some reading sources to help
> me 
> understand this I would really appreciate it.
> 
> Thanks
> Don
> KD8NNU



      
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