[net.ham-radio] trick for out-of-band reception on UHF receivers

parnass@ihu1h.UUCP (Bob Parnass, AJ9S) (01/15/85)

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       TRICK FOR OUT OF	BAND RECEPTION ON UHF RECEIVERS

		       Bob Parnass, AJ9S

   Articles in Monitoring Times	and  Popular  Communications
   have	described how one may "trick" various scanner radios
   into	receiving frequencies  they  were  not	designed  to
   receive.  These tricks fall into 2 categories:

     1.	 Exploiting a bug in the  receiver's  microprocessor
	 firmware  by  entering	a particular series of keys-
	 trokes.

     2.	 Exploiting the	receiver's finite image	rejection by
	 listening  to simple images (e.g. to listen to	fre-
	 quency	F, tune	the receiver to	F + 2 *	[the  inter-
	 mediate frequency]).

   This	article	describes a third technique,  which  permits
   listening  in  the  512  -  657 MHz range (UHF television
   channels 21 through 44) using radios	designed to  receive
   the	402  -	512 MHz	range.	The technique uses "multiple
   injection frequencies", and requires	no receiver  modifi-
   cation or additional	hardware.

   I discovered	that my	Radio Shack PRO30  scanner  receives
   the	audio from TV channel 38 (619.75 MHz) when the radio
   is programmed for  483.5375	MHz,  and  from	 channel  32
   (583.75  MHz)  when	programmed to 456.5375 MHz.  This is
   also	true for the Radio Shack PRO2020 scanner.

   Bearcat BC100, BC210, and BC350 scanners can	also receive
   UHF	TV signals on odd frequencies, but at different	pro-
   grammed  settings:  483.7125	 for  TV  channel  38,	 and
   456.7125 for	TV channel 32 (Bearcat and Radio Shack scan-
   ners	use different intermediate frequencies).

   By checking the arithmetic, I've concluded that the	same
   mechanism  permits  out  of	band  reception	on all these
   scanners.


			  The Method

   In the formulas that	follow,	all frequencies	are in units
   of Megahertz.  To listen on a frequency U between 512 and
   657 MHz, tune your radio to:

			 3(U) -	7(IF)
			 ------------
			       4

   where IF is the intermediate	frequency of the receiver.

   Conversely, if you hear a strange signal  when  your	 UHF
   radio  is  tuned  to	 T  MHz,  you  may be simultaneously
   listening to	the frequency of:

			 4(T) -	7(IF)
			 ------------
			       3

   When	using this technique to	receive	TV audio on a  scan-
   ner,	the signal may be weak or distorted because:

      -	The bandwidth of a TV audio signal exceeds  that  of
	the IF filtering in the	typical	scanner.

      -	A typical scanner radio	is not as sensitive  in	 the
	512  - 657 MHz range as	it is on the frequencies for
	which it was designed, due to the inability  of	 the
	front  end  tuned  circuits to resonate	out of their
	normal range.

      -	The   TV   signal   format   maybe   unconventional.
	Chicago's  channel  44,	 a pay TV service, scrambles
	the video and transmits	the audio  signal  using  an
	unconventional	format	not  known  to	this author.
	PRO30 scanners receive Chicago channel 44 audio	when
	programmed for 510.4875	or 510.5875 MHz.



		     Technical Explanation

   What's happening is that an injection signal	with  multi-
   ple	constituent  frequencies  is  being being fed to the
   mixer stage.

   To hear the audio from TV channel 32	 (583.75  MHz),	 the
   PRO30 is set	to 456.5375 MHz.  At this setting, the local
   oscillator/tripler chain is injecting a signal  into	 the
   mixer stage at:

			456.5375 - 10.7
			= 445.8375 MHz.

   This	445.8375 MHz signal is the  output  of	a  frequency
   tripler, whose input	frequency is:

			 445.8375 / 3
			= 148.6125 MHz.

   But,	in addition to this 3rd	harmonic, there	seems to  be
   a 4th harmonic component present:

			 4 (148.6125)
			= 594.4500 MHz,

   which when mixed with a signal  on  583.75  MHz  (channel
   32),	produces a 10.7	MHz IF:

		      594.4500 - 583.750
			  = 10.7 MHz


		  Other	Frequencies Possible

   Although the	scheme described in this article requires no
   scanner  modifications or additional	hardware, a multiple
   injection scheme forms the basis for	 a  product  already
   familiar to scanner enthusiasts, the	Grove "Scanverter."

   The Scanverter, a novel 216 - 420  MHz  converter,  makes
   use	of multiple injection frequencies to accomplish	what
   Bob Grove terms "band stacking".  In	 the  Scanverter,  a
   local  oscillator  produces	a  signal rich in harmonics.
   This	signal is fed into a broadband mixer along with	sig-
   nals	 from the antenna, causing several frequencies to be
   received at each setting of the attached scanner.

   The ability to receive TV signals on	a scanner is usually
   of little value, but	there may be ways of using this	mul-
   tiple injection phenomenon to receive  bands	 other	than
   512	-  657 MHz.  I recall receiving	the 787.75 MHz audio
   from	TV channel 66 somewhere	on a BC100 once!

   A simple scanner modification may be	possible  that	pur-
   posely distorts the injection signal	in a way that produ-
   ces both the	fundamental frequency and  its	second	har-
   monic.   Theoretically, this	could cause a scanner with a
   10.7	MHz IF and 420 - 512 MHz coverage, to  be  receptive
   to  signals	in  the	807.9 -	991.9 MHz band.	 Readers are
   urged to experiment to find other  frequencies  to  which
   their  scanners  may	 be  receptive.	  A well calibrated,
   harmonic-free signal	generator would	be helpful.

-- 
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Bob Parnass,  Bell Telephone Laboratories - ihnp4!ihu1h!parnass - (312)979-5414