kd2bd@ka2qhd.UUCP (John Magliacane) (02/04/90)
This is in response to the discussions concerning SCA receivers. SCA transmissions are made on 41 KHz, 67 KHz and 92 KHz NBFM subcarriers. 41 KHz is used only when stereo transmissions are not employed. 92 KHz is a new allocation that has been available for a few years now. 67 KHz SCA subcarriers are transmitted at only 10% of the total main carrier deviation. The amplitude of the 92 KHz subcarrier (if used) is even less than 10%. Most FM broadcast stations use SCA subcarriers to transmit limited audience programming. Programs include PRN (the Physican's Radio Network), background music (Muzak), readings for the blind, digital signals, FAX, and foreign language programming. 53 KHz carriers (19 KHz x 3) are used for the ARI traffic information system. I designed several SCA receivers in the past ten years. My first receiver was built around an LM565 PLL working as a narrow-band FM detector. Reception was improved with the inclusion of an input amplifier and high-pass filter. Later, I obtained even better performance by replacing the input amplifier with a two-stage, discrete component, active filter. Further improvements were made with the inclusion of a carrier-operated mute (squelch) and output low-pass filtering. The mute was helpful in quieting noise when no SCA signal was present, as some stations drop their subcarriers between music selections (their subcarrier generators use "VOX-type" circuitry). Wide-band output noise was always a problem, especially on weak signals. While this circuit worked fine living 20 miles from an broadcast transmitter, it gave poor performance when I moved 50 miles from stations carrying SCA, so I decided to tackle SCA using a different and more sophisticated approach. My latest SCA adapter is a single conversion super heterodyne design (!!). It is a three channel receiver with AFC and a unique S/N squelch circuit. SCA signals are first amplified by a two-section active filter, using an LF353N op-amp. The filtered signals are then routed to a carrier detector and a doubly-balanced mixer (LM1496N). An LM566 VCO supplies the local oscillator injection voltage for the mixer. The oscillator operates at 455 KHz - f and the mixer output is a standard 455 KHz narrow-band FM signal. Output from the mixer is filtered through a single section 455 KHz ceramic filter (10 KHz bandwidth) and then fed into an MC1358/LM3065 amplifier and FM quadrature detector. The detected audio from this chip is diverted in several different directions. First, the DC component of the detected signal is low-pass filtered and fed back to the LM566 for AFC (automatic frequency control). The output is also fed to an active high-pass filter and detected. This DC is then differentially combined with the output of the carrier detector to yield a DC output that is proportional to the signal-to-noise ratio of the SCA subcarrier. This output then feeds a Schmitt trigger, which controls a 1N914 switching diode acting as as a series audio switch for audio muting purposes. It also drives an LED that acts as an SCA indicator light. The purpose of the "fancy squelch" is to avoid triggering on false signals. A noise operated squelch does not work well because strong FM stations void of an SCA subcarrier might quiet the SCA detector's output enough to open the squelch. A carrier operated squelch does not work well either because weak signals might contain enough high-frequency noise that could activate the 67 KHz carrier amplifier/detector and open the squelch on pure noise. The squelch circuit I developed works extremely well. It is very sensitive to weak signals and does not create an annoying "squelch-tail" during operation. A three position rotary switch selects the frequency to be received. The switch controls the center frequency of the input amplifiers as well as the operating frequency of the local oscillator. The receiver tunes 67, 78 and 92 KHz. Since almost all broadcast stations transmit in stereo, I didn't include a 41 KHz position on the channel selector switch. Instead, I included 78 KHz, the subcarrier frequency used by TV SAP (second audio program) channels. The detected SCA audio is then fed through a 7 KHz low-pass filter and made available for external audio power amplification. The entire receiver operates on 12 volts and is small enough to fit in the palm of your hand. I recently considered trying an XR2211 PLL as an SCA detector. The XR2211 is a popular Bell 202 FSK demodulator, but it can be used for linear demodulation as well as FSK detection. Some of the advantages of this chip over an LM565 include a single ended audio output, and a PLL lock detect output suitable for driving an indicator LED and squelch circuitry. I admit, my "super" design is a bit "robust" for SCA, but it is a design that works well. I never do anything the "easy way" anyway. :-) It is the result of many years of "tinkering", and I have been able to use some of the concepts developed here in other projects as well. I hope the information contained here might help others interested in SCA reception and subcarrier FM receiver design. 73, de John KD2BD -- AMPR : KD2BD @ NN2Z (Neptune, NJ) UUCP : ucbvax!rutgers!petsd!tsdiag!ka2qhd!kd2bd "For every problem, there is one solution which is simple, neat and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken