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LF: RE: [Tech] Electronic Goniometer?

To: [email protected]
Subject: LF: RE: [Tech] Electronic Goniometer?
From: "Talbot Andrew" <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2001 08:37:46 -0000
Reply-to: [email protected]
Sender: <[email protected]>
For the weighting elements why not use a binary switched attenuator.  At low
frequencies, FET switches onto a tapped constant impedance resistor ladder
will give you constant impedance and exact attenuation steps and will have
good strong signal handling capability
You can get the precise sin/cos values from a look up table.   Use a
processor (which could be as simple as a PIC) to make the look up from
sin/cos data stored in EEPROM based on input from your interface - voltage
from a potentiometer, rotary shaft encoder or whatever you like.

Andy  G4JNT


-----Original Message-----
From: Johan Bodin [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 2001-11-15 21:39
To: [email protected]
Subject: LF: [Tech] Electronic Goniometer?


Dear LF group

Does anyone have an idea how to design an electronic goniometer?

Imagine a "black box" that is fed with two signals from a pair of orthogonal (for example N/S and E/W) untuned loop antennas, let's call them X and Y. The output from the box should ideally be X * cos(A) + Y * sin(A) where A is a control signal which could be a simple DC voltage, a digital control word or whatever.. Such a "black box" could be very useful for direction finding
without the need to rotate a loop physically.

When combined with an omnidirectional antenna and a phasing circuit, the resulting cardioid pattern can also be used to null out interference, just like a K9AY antenna does, but better - with steerable, instead of fixed, null directions. My two loop / eight nulls (modified) K9AY is doing a nice job
but I miss the ability to put the null in ANY direction...

The "black box" could be a pair of attenuators with ability to switch the phase 180 deg's. In its simplest form it could be just two potentiometers and two switches (and phase reversal transformers). This would be OK to manually
null out interference but to make accurate D.F. measurements, precise
sin/cos behaviour of the attenuators is required.


Any ideas? (besides making a "physical" goniometer)

73 de Johan SM6LKM






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