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LF: RE: LF SDR - SoftRock Lite mods for 136k and 500k

To: <[email protected]>
Subject: LF: RE: LF SDR - SoftRock Lite mods for 136k and 500k
From: Lubomír Bobalík <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 10 Jul 2007 21:22:30 +0200
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Hello Jim!
Thanks for the schematic of LF SoftRock, no problem to have a look at
this one. It is enough similar to my home made SDR. 
Sorry, there is a lot of storms in this days, so I can´t continue my
tests of the little 500kHz radio. 

GL and 73

Lubos, OK2BVG

************************************************************************
****


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of James Moritz
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2007 7:30 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: LF: LF SDR - SoftRock Lite mods for 136k and 500k

Dear LF Group,

I don't claim any great originality for this, but I have modified a
couple
of the SoftRock Lite v6.2 kits by KB9YIG for use on 136k and 500k - the
details are attached.

I changed the local oscillators to 4MHz for 500k and 1MHz for 136k, with
the
"x8" jumper set. This gives nominal LO frequencies of 500kHz and 125kHz
respectively, putting the output frequency within the range of a sound
card.
At 4MHz, the existing SoftRock LO circuit just about works, but it
didn't on
1MHz. I made some component value changes to the oscillator and buffer
to
get a reasonable waveform on each band, which are detailed in the
attachment. 4MHz crystals are easy to get - I had several 1MHz xtals in
my
junk box, but these seem to be harder to buy now than they once were. An
alternative for 136k would be to use a 1MHz DIL oscillator module,
feeding
the flip-flop directly. Another possibility is a 500kHz ceramic
resonator,
but the stability is not as good as a crystal.

The original input filter could be re-designed for the LF/MF range, but
the
components wouldn't fit on the tiny board, and the rejection of
broadcast
band signals would not really be good enough. So I designed off-board
input
filters with higher rejection of signals at harmonics of the LO
frequency.
Like the original design, these require no adjustment and use fixed
value
components - values are given in the attachment. I used 1/2-watt
resistor
sixed axial-leaded chokes on 500kHz, which were fine. Similar components
had
insufficient Q  at 136k, but the larger radial-leaded chokes wound on a
ferrite bobbin were adequate..The original tuned mixer input balun
transformer is replaced with an un-tuned ferrite-cored transformer.

I have used the two SoftRocks with I2PHD's "Winrad" software, and
DL4YHF's
SpecLab, both with excellent results. The Rocky software does not like
the
PCs I have available.  The sensitivity is not quite as good as my other
receivers, but since I normally use a preamp with various receiving
loops,
this is not important. The sensitivity should be adequate when used with
a
TX type antenna. It is important to set up the amplitude and phase
balance
carefully, especially on 136kHz, where there is a lot of Loran noise in
the
image sideband.

Let me know if you have any problems viewing the attached schematic,

Cheers, Jim Moritz
73 de M0BMU



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