Whoa - those softrock prices from Waters & Stanton are outrageously
high. Instead go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/softrock40/ and
order from the source, Tony Parks KB9YIG. Also, there's a new all
ham-band RXTX kit coming out that has an Si570 synthesized clock
generator on board. The Si570 equipped Softrock Lite V8.3 receiver is
now shipping and Tony can now also supply the Si570 generators as
well. V8.3 coverall all ham bands with four plug in filters, you
change bands/frequencies via a DIP switch. The V8.3 receiver kit with
four filters and an Si570 generator is $43 USD including international
shipping, payment via PayPal. Some of us are looking at switching the
BPF's and changing frequency with hex encoded rotary switches - just
one example of how you can enhance these tiny kits.

73's David

--- In [email protected], "Patricia Wilson"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I had no idea single-band boards were so inexpensive. There is a
Japanese
> supplier who will sell a board delivered to the US for $21. The softrock
> boards though, sound like they are better documented. I just wish that
> either supplier had down-loadable manuals so I could get a better
idea what
> the off-board needs are and what software is available/required.
> BTW my PC is running Linux. Is that a bad thing?
> 
> On Wed, May 14, 2008 at 3:47 PM, Dave Wade <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> 
> >
> > --- In [email protected] <soft_radio%40yahoogroups.com>,
> > "Patricia Wilson"
> > <wilson.pr.gm@> wrote:
> > >
> > > Thank you Carlos, a useful answer.
> > >
> > > I am rather new to this SDR thing and have a really newby question.
> > > Where in the chain between antenna and speaker should the signal be
> > > sampled by an SDR? The Nyquist limit imposes a sample rate of at
> > > least twice the highest frequency component so if you want to sample
> > > at the input RF and that RF is 29 MHz then you need a sample rate of
> > > 58 MHz which is not only pretty fast but will also produce a LOT of
> > > data very quickly. On the other hand if you mix it down to a first
> > > IF you lose the possibility of digitally filtering out unwanted
> > > signals earlier in the signal path before they have a chance to
> > > overload something.
> > >
> > > As with nearly everything in engineering it is a trade-off. But
> > > where do most SDR's do the sampling?
> >
> > It depends on what you mean by "most". There are probably more
"baseband"
> > SDRs (in effect direct conversion) "in the field" as they are
reasonably
> > cheap to make and can be very versatile. The Softrock series of boards
> >
> > http://www.wsplc.com/acatalog/SOFTROCK-RXTX.html
> >
> > each of which can be squeezed to cover most of an amateur band using a
> > single crystal, are probably the most populous. There are also a
number of
> > home brew designs. I myself have the Elektor (Dutch Magazine)
design which
> > is general coverage. Providing you use a pair of mixers with 90
degree out
> > of phase carriers you can easily eliminate unwanted side bands and
even
> > demodulate FM digitally. By putting the mixer close to the antenna you
> > don't
> > get the same blocking issues you get with traditional multiple
conversion
> > Receivers, and the image problems are much reduced.
> >
> > These are also useful as add-ons to traditional receivers when
tuned to the
> > IF frequency and used to replace the filtering function. In this
case you
> > may still get issues from the higher level mixer, but you do get a
very
> > versatile set of filters. In addition you can use software (I
forget its
> > name and google is no help) that will simultaneously decode and
display
> > multiple CW signals at once...
> >
> > On the other hand I feel that direct sampling receivers must offer
the way
> > forward. Sampling directly at RF will give the best fidelity of
signal.
> > Trouble is at present its more expensive :-(
> >
> > Dave
> > G4UGM
> >  
> >
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Patricia Wilson
> Apache Junction, AZ
> Member NRA, BMWMOA, AMA, ARRL
> WB8DXX
> BMW '06 R1200RT "Graues Gespenst"
>


Reply via email to