0% found this document useful (0 votes)
10 views

Measurement_of_deviation_and_frequency_in_F.M._two-way_radio_systems-3X2

The document discusses the measurement of deviation and frequency in frequency modulation (F.M.) two-way radio systems, emphasizing the importance of proper modulation settings to prevent interference. It explains the differences between frequency modulation and phase modulation, highlighting their spectral characteristics and the need for accurate measurement tools. Additionally, it outlines the challenges in measuring deviation and the necessity of using appropriate equipment to ensure accurate readings in various modulation scenarios.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
10 views

Measurement_of_deviation_and_frequency_in_F.M._two-way_radio_systems-3X2

The document discusses the measurement of deviation and frequency in frequency modulation (F.M.) two-way radio systems, emphasizing the importance of proper modulation settings to prevent interference. It explains the differences between frequency modulation and phase modulation, highlighting their spectral characteristics and the need for accurate measurement tools. Additionally, it outlines the challenges in measuring deviation and the necessity of using appropriate equipment to ensure accurate readings in various modulation scenarios.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 7

MEASUREMENT OF DEVIATION AND

FREQUENC Y IN F. M. TWO- WAY RADIO SYSTEMS

M. COOPER

INTRODUCTION SOME THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS


A pleaforpropersetting of deviationand REGARDING F. M. AND P. M.
frequencybefore a grouphavingthestature of
Thesimplestwaytodescribethevarious
the PGVCwould a p p e a r t o be as n e c e s s a r y a s a signals associated with modulation is in the use
strong pitch for motherhood before the local PTA.
of thetimeandfrequencygraphsasshownin
Certainly everyone believes in it. Many two-way Fig. 1. Fig. l ( a ) andl(b).representplots of the
systemsusershavenot,however,realizedthe
amplitude of the modulating signal andcarrier as
f u l l i m p o r t a n c et h a tt h e s ep a r a m e t e r sh a v e at-
a function of time. Fig. l ( c ) i s a plot of t h e f r e -
tainedsincethetighttolerances of thesplit
quency spectrum resulting from the combination
channel have been imposed upon us.
of c a r r i e r and modulation.
I will attempt, in this paper, to discuss some
of the theoretical considerations regarding fre- Anamplitudemodulatedsignal i s disp!ayed
quency modulation deviation, and to briefly peruse in Fig. Note that the degree of modulation i s
a few of t h e m o r e p r a c t i c a l a s p e c t s of deviation veryclearlyindicated by thetimeplot of the
and frequency measurement. I promise to use the c a r r i e r (whichcouldeasily be anoscilloscopic
expression "Bessel Function'' only once, just to trace) andthat thespectrum, assuming dis-
give it officialcognizance of t h i sc o n f e r e n c e , tortionlessmodulation,consists of only t h r e e
and to leave any mathematical derivation to the d i s t i n c tf r e q u e n c i e s ,t h ec a r r i e r ,a n dt h e two-
more ambitious readers. sidebandsspaced at anintervalequaltothe

I
t

Fig. 1 Unmodulated c a r r i e r . Fig. 2 Amplitude modulation.

Authorized licensd use limted to: IE Xplore. Downlade on May 10,2 at 19:046 UTC from IE Xplore. Restricon aply.
modulatingfrequency.Thepowerinthecarrier lation.The 90° phasedifferenceshownbetween
is a constant and a p a i r of sidebands is added for Fig.3(b)and3(c) is notimportantanddoesnot
eachmodulatingfrequency.Forlinearmodula- affect the spectra or recovered signal. It is only
tion, the energy in the sidebands maynot exceed whenthespectra of differentmodulatingfre-
half the carrier power. As long a s t h e c a r r i e r is quencies is observed that the difference becomes
not over-modulated, the sidebands resulting from obvious.Fig. showsthespectra of a n F. M.
m u l t i t o n et r a n s m i s s i o na r e all independentand
have no effect u p each other.

Thepicture is quitedifferentforphaseor
a frequency modulated signals as shown in Fig. 3.
We note here that, even though the modulation is
d i s t o r t i o n - f r e e , a large number of sidebands ap-
pear, spaced at intervals equal to the modulating
frequency. Unlike the A. M. case, the total power
in the sidebands and carrier is equal to that of the
u n m o d u l a t e d c a r r i e r a n d t h e c a r r i e r mbea yl a r g e r
o r s m a l l e r t h a n t h e s i d e b a n d s . In f a c t , t h e c a r r i e r
actuallydisappearsundersomecircumstances.
Addition of modulating frequencies causes a r e -
distribution of t r a n s m i t t e r e n e r g y , but the F. M.
o r P. M. s i d e b a n d s a r e all i n t e r - r e l a t e d a n d s i d e -
li,:Il" .Ii
bandsoccuratintervalsequaltotheindividual
modulating frequencies as well a s v a r i o u s c o m -
binations of these frequencies.
0
A few words on the difference between Fre-
quencyModulationandPhaseModulation are in
orderatthispoint.AsindicatedinFig. 3, the Fig. 4 Frequencymodulation spectra
s p e c t r a of the two systems are identical for the variable modulation frequency.
same modulating frequency and degree of modu-
signal having 5 Kc deviation with modulating fre-
quencies of 300 cps, 1000 cps and 3000 cps. Note
thattheenvelope of thespectraispractically
independent of themodulatingfrequency. On the
otherhand,phase
modulation spectra
forthe
sa,me frequencies and a constant phase shift of 5
radians indicates, in Fig. 5 , that the width of the
phase modulated spectrum is a direct function of
the modulating frequency.

CARRIER It is c l e a r now that the two f o r m s of rnodula-


tion are identical except that for F. M. having a
fixed deviation, the phase angle of modulationde-
c r e a s e sd i r e c t l yw i t hi n c r e a s i n gf r e q u e n c ya n d
for P . M . having a fixedphaseangle,thede-
viation increases directly with frequency.

R e g a r d l e s s of the type of modulating and de-


tectingcircuitry,an F. M. s y s t e mc a n be con-
verted to P . M o. rv i c ev e r s ab y a p p r o p r i a t e l y
adjusting the frequency response prior to modu-
lationandafterdetection.Toconvert a P.M.
modulatorto F. M. weneedonlyde-emphasize
the high frequencies relative to the low frequencies
a t 6 db per octave. On the other hand, an F. M.
modulator can produce P. M. with addition of p r e -
emphasis. De-emphasis applied to the modulation
Fig. 3 Frequencymodulation phase described by Fig. 5 will convert it to the spectra
modulation. of F i g .

99

Authorized licensd use limted to: IE Xplore. Downlade on May 10,2 at 19:046 UTC from IE Xplore. Restricon aply.
Because of c e r t a i nc h a r a c t e r i s t i c s of voice frequencies with equal maximum fidelity, such a
and of the recovered noise in pure F. M. t r a n s - s y s t e m wouldbenecessary.Forvoicetrans-
mission,mostso-called F. M. e y s t e m si nu s e mission,however, we wouldbepenalizingthe
today, including broadcast F; M. a s well a s F. M. s p e c t r u m of maximum voice energy from 300 to
mobile radio, are to a large extent actually P. M. cpsinordertogetfaithfultransmissionof
systems. seldomusedhighfrequencies.Thecharacteris-
t i c s of the human voice are such that high f r e -
Sir.ce the channels allotted to mobile use are quency high amplitude
peaks canberemoved
closely spaced, some means must be provided without degradingintelligibility and,in
some
to limit the modulation in such a way as t o p r e v e n t cases, actually improving it. It is f o r t h i s r e a s o n
splatter into adjacent channels and thus to prevent that two-wayradiosystemsuseaform of in-
interference between channels. It i s a l s o d e s i r a b l e stantaneous deviation limiting. With thisform
t ok e e pa sm u c h of thetransmittedpower as of limiting, low levelsignals of allfrequencies
possiblewithinthereceiverbandpasstomaxi- usetruephasemodulation.Asthelevel is in-
m i z er e c e i v e rp e r f o r m a n c e .E v e nt h o u g hp h a s e c r e a s e d , high f r e q u e n c i e sa r ec l i p p e df i r s ta n d
i s t h e v a r i a b l e of modulation in o u r s y s t e m , it is as level increases further, clipping may extend to
evident from Figs. and 5 that limiting of phase lower frequencies.
alone, which is equivalent to limiting the modula-
tionamplitudein P . M . , willbeinadequateto
prevent splatter. It is t h e r a t e of change of phase, DEVL4TION.MEASUREMENT
or deviation which,must be limited.
Since a maximumdeviationhasbeende-
termined as a prime system criterion, measure-
ment of this factor becomes important. The
fundamentalrequirementforthismeasurement
isabroadbandwidthreceiverhaving a wide,
l i n e a r ,d i s c r i m i n a t o r( ar a t i od e t e c t o ro rp h a s e
detector could equally well be used provided they
canbemadetorecoverthefulldeviationrange
faithfully).Thereceiverbandwidthmustbead-
lblyDu*TINE equate to include all significant sidebands of the
signal to be measured. Attenuation of s o m e o f t h e
I sidebandswilldistorttherecoveredaudioand
thusaffect ‘the a c c u r a c y of theresult.Thedis-
criminator must be compatible with the receiver
bandwidth and linear to the degree of m e a s u r e m e n t
accuracy required.
It is now n e c e s s a r y to add some form of in-
dicating device to display the discriminator out-
put and to calibrate the entire instrument for de-
viation readings. The most direct, and generally
themostaccurate,indicator is a cathoderay
oscilloscope having a low d i s t o r t i o n v e r t i c a l a m -
plifier. A meter may be calibrated for deviation
measurements provided that certain precautions
a traek eTn .hmeoism t p o r t a tnrta n s m i t t e r
Fig. 5 F h s e modulation spectra d e v i a t i o nm e a s u r e m e nitsm a d e when the de-
variable maulat% freqUenCY. viationlimitingcircuitisfullyoperative.Under
Toillustrate this,
consider
split
a band this condition, the recovered signal is quite dis-
systemwith 3 Kc audiobandpass. It hasbeen tortedasseeninFig. 6 andtheonlysignificant
d e t e r m i n e d that, topreventexcessivespreading measurement which can be m a d e i s a peakto peak
of the spectrum the peak phase shift at 3000 C P S orpeaktoaveragevoltagereading.Theoscil-
shouldnotbegreaterthanoneandtwo-thirds loscope measurement is easily made by counting
radianswhich is equivalentto 5 Kc deviation. s q u a r e s on thereticule. A truepeakmeasuring
If themodulation is limitedto radiansfor metermaybeusedprovidedthatthescaleis
allaudiofrequencies,splatterwill no longerbe c a l i b r a t e dt ot h ed i s c r i m i n a t o ru s e d .E v e nw i t h
aproblembutonlyaverysmallportion of the an accurate peak reading meter, some error may
spectrum will be u s e d a t t h e low audio frequencies beintroduced if the recovered signal is unsym-
(i.e. 500 cpsdeviation at 300 cpsmodulation). m e t r i c a l a s i s t h e c a s e w i t h c e r t a i n f o r m s of d i s -
Now, if ourobjectiveistotransmitallaudio tortion.

Authorized licensd use limted to: IE Xplore. Downlade on May 10,2 at 19:046 UTC from IE Xplore. Restricon aply.
varied in level until the beat note disappears.
Considerable d i f f i c u l t y m q . ~be encountered i n
aurally separating the beatnote fmm the mdula-
t i o n sidebands which occur when t h e modulation is
turned up. The use of a spectrum analyser as i n
7(b) produces t h e same results without the confu-
sion of t h e sidebandbeatnotes. The r e s u l t a n t
spectrum is sham i n Fig. 7(c).

6 Devistion mearurement by oscilloscope.

Many signal generators and monitoring equip-


mente incorporate a deviation meter which is de-
flected by t h ea v e r a g eo r r. m. s. value of the frequency
detected signal but which has a scale calibrated in
peak deviation frequency. These meters will read R i g . 7 M e r disappearance.
c o r r e c t l y o n l y f o r a distortionless sine wave modu-
l a t i o n a n d w i l l b e in e r r o r f o r a n y o t h e r w a v e f o r m .
A low distortion signal may be used with such a One pitfall in this technique is worth mentioning
m e t e r to calibrate an oscilloscope reticule but the at this time. The spectrum produced by a single
meter must never be used for readingdeviation of frequency signal phase modulating a c a r r i e r con-
a limitedsignal.Provisionisoftenmadefor tains the same frequencycomponents as t h e c a r r i e r
checking themeter calibration byapplying a modulated by a distorted signal. Only the relative
standard audio signal directly into the metercircuit. amplitudes of the sidebands change. Thus, a dis-
torted audio modulated carrierwill a p p e a r s i m i l a r
The most precise calibration method for any in s p e c t r u m to the pure sine wave case and will
indicatorinvolvesuse of t h e c a r r i e r d i s a p p e a r - displaythecarrierdisappearancephenomenon.
ance phenomenon which was mentionedpreviouely. The nulls will occur at the predicted deviations
When the peak phase shift or deviation ratio (ratio a n d r e s u l t swill be erroneous to the degree that the
of peak deviation to modulating frequency) equals signal i s d i s t o r t e d . C a r e m u s t b e t a k e n t o i n s u r e
2.40, 5.52, 8.65, etc., the amplitude of t h e c a r - that any signal used in this calibration method is
rier becomes zero and all the transmitted energy not in clipand is reasonably distortion-free.
is in the sidebands. Thus, if the disappearance of
t h e c a r r i e r is m e a s u r e d f o r a givenmodulating Actual measurement of deviation once a cali-
frequency,theindicatorcanbecalibratedusing bratedindicator is availablebecomes a s i m p l e
one of the ratios above. Fig. 7 shows block m a t t e r . It is only necessary to modulate the car-
d i a g r a m s of two test set-up for this type of cali- r i e r with a Kc signal db greater than that re-
bration and a typical spectrum. The methodillus- quiredfor two-thirds system modulation andto set
tratedinFig.7ta)involvesuse of a heterodyne the deviation control of t h e t r a n s m i t t e r to provide
frequency meter to mix the modulated calibratipg rated peak deviation. E t h e s y s t e m u s e s a f o r m o f
signal with an unmodulated carrier fixed several tone squelch, the tone must be included a s shown
hundredcyclesfromthemodulatedsignal.The in Fig. 8(b). The oscilloscope faces in Fig. 8have
modulationisturned off, thebeatnotedetected been calibrated at kc per division and the trans-
aurallyandthemodulationturned on againand m i t t e r s p r o p e r l y s e t at 5 kc deviation.

101

Authorized licensd use limted to: IE Xplore. Downlade on May 10,2 at 19:046 UTC from IE Xplore. Restricon aply.
Fig. 9 S p l i t channelspectrum and receiver
bandpass.

quency receiver bandpass characteristic. The


sidebands which a r e a t t e n u a t e d when the bandpass
is moved to one side or the other are effectively
s as any given receiver
l o s t t r a n s m i t t e r p o w e r afar
is concerned. In addition, a s m o r e s i d e b a n d s a r e
lost, noise appears in the receiver output to further
KC Deviation with degrade performance. The result of these effects
Tone Squelch
is a reduction in range and generally poor com-
munications. Even where signals are strong, the
Fig. Fmper deviation setting. off-frequencysignal is highlydistortedandhas
reduced intelligibility.

FREQUENCY MEASUREMENT Frequenciesshould


thus
be
checkedat
reasonable intervals, at least every 6 months, to
Theshortspacetobedevotedtofrequency eliminate this source of degradation.
m e a s u r e m e n t i n p a p e r is not intendedto minimize
the importance of this factor. Mis-setting of fre- T o meetFCCrequirements,thesecondary
quency in split channel systems can reduce per- standardused a s a station monitor must be
formance drastically both in area coverage and in checked against a p r i m a r y s t a n d a r d s u c h a s R a d i o
intelligibility. Station W W V e v e r y 4 months. Suitable receivers
for this purpose are generally included with station
Setting of frequency requires onlya ac- monitor equipment.
curate standard and a means for comparisonof this
standardwith the oscillatorunder test. Inthe case CONCLUSION
of receiver setting, the discriminator maybe used
as a zeroindicator.Mostsecondarystandards The time spent in accurately setting the de-
include a f o r m of indicator consisting of a m i x e r , viation and frequency in an F. M. two-way radio
low pass filter, detector, and meter. systemwillbewellrewarded by theimprove-
mentinsystemperformance.Theappreciation
Fig. 9 i l l u s t r a t e s a t o n e s p e c t r u m of a split of your neighbor channels for keeping within your
channel transmitter superimposed uponan on f r e - home grounds comes as an extra bonus.

102

Authorized licensd use limted to: IE Xplore. Downlade on May 10,2 at 19:046 UTC from IE Xplore. Restricon aply.

You might also like