On 4/20/2011 10:37 AM, Roger D Johnson wrote: > I had always assumed that the 1820 spur was the second harmonic > of a 910 kHz BC station.
What you are observing is simple intermodulation distortion. It can be created anywhere that the two RF signals are present at a level in a non-linear circuit. You're hearing a mix between the fundamental of one of the signals and the second harmonic of the other. Or the mix between the second harmonic of one and the third harmonic of the other. One place this commonly occurs is in the output stage of one of the transmitters when something has "broken" in the output circuitry. It's also common for mixes to occur in wiring far from the transmitter, even in wiring near your receiver. The link below is a simple Excel spreadsheet that I put together about seven years ago for computing the frequencies at which intermod products will be produced by two or three signals. It was originally intended for use with wireless mics, but the math is the same for signals of any frequency. No, I haven't done a spreadsheet to work the equation backwards. :) http://audiosystemsgroup.com/intermod.xls To use the spreadsheet, enter the suspect broadcast frequencies in the bold row under A, B, C, D, E, and F across the top. Resulting intermod frequencies will show up in column B. There's also a Quattro Pro version of this spreadsheet. Simply change .xls to .wb2 in the link. 73, Jim K9YC _______________________________________________ UR RST IS ... ... ..9 QSB QSB - hw? BK
