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HP 8901B - Page 246

HP 8901B
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Model 8901B
Service
AM
Demodulator Assembly (A6)
The down-converted signal from the IF Amplifier
is
filtered by a 2.5
MHz
Low-Pass Filter. The AM
IF Buffer drives the AM Demodulator. The FM
IF
Buffer drives the
FM
Demodulator and rear-panel
IF OUTPUT connector.
The AM is demodulated by means of a precision, half-wave rectifier in
an
automatic level control (ALC)
circuit. The buffered IF signal
is
amplified
by
a Current-Variable Amplifier then rectified (detected)
by the AM and
IF
Average Level Detector. The detected signal,
after
carrier filtering, represents the
carrier level (dc component) plus AM (ac component). The ac component accurately represents the AM
only
if
the dc component is known
or
set to a known level. The detected signal
is
filtered and amplified
by the Level Amplifier and Carrier Filter. The signal is then compared
to
a constant ALC Reference
by the
BW
Control and Level Comparison Amplifier. The output of this amplifier is the carrier level
error. The error voltage is amplified by the Resistor Drive Amplifier which sets the current input to
the Current-Variable Amplifier. Current-variable resistors in the amplifier adjust the amplifier gain to
cause the dc component of the carrier to equal the ALC Reference.
The amount of filtering in the Bandwidth Control and Level Comparison Amplifier determines the
minimum AM rate which can be accurately demodulated. An ALC Bandwidth Control line sets the
ALC loop for a fast
or
slow response. The feedback loop may
also
be defeated by the ALC Defeat line.
Special Function 6 controls the ALC loop.
The second output of the AM and IF Average Level Detector
is
buffered by the AM Output Buffer.
One output of the buffer is fed
to
the rear-panel AM OUTPUT connector. The other output is fed to
the audio circuits
for
filtering and audio processing.
The output of the FM
IF
Buffer is detected by
two
detectors. The
IF
Peak Detector output is read by
the Voltmeter.
It
is used in the automatic tuning routine and for making Tuned
RF
Level measurements
using the
IF
Peak Detector. (Refer to the
nned
RF
Level
detailed operating instruction
in
the
Operation
and
Calibration
Manual.
The IF Present Detector
is
used
to
stop the LO sweep during
a signal search (independent of the Controller).
The Voltmeter also receives IF level information from the output of the Level Amplifier and Carrier
Filter. The IF level
is
measured after completion of tuning
to
confirm that the AM ALC loop is
operating within range.
The IF Level measurement mode (invoked by pressing the
S
(shift) and IF LEVEL keys) compares
the level from the Level Amplifier and Carrier Filter with the ALC reference and displays the ratio
of
the
two
(normally
100%
unless the IF signal
is
too low
or
Special Function 6.2
is
used).
The voltage from the Resistor Drive Amplifier
is
an
indication of the ALC current driving the input
resistor circuit.
It
is used for setting the Input Attenuator, (see Service Sheet BD2) when the ALC is
on. (When the ALC
is
off,
the Input Attenuator is set using the
IF
Peak Detector for FM
or
the level
read on the IF AVG Level line for AM.)
FM
Demodulator (A4)
The signal from the FM
IF
Buffer drives the FM IF Limiters. The limiters strip AM and noise
08
the
IF to minimize demodulation of AM by the FM Demodulator (called incidental FM). The three stages
each have 22
dJ3
of
gain. The output of the limiters
is
a squarewave which drives a Precision Limiter.
This limiter clamps the upper and lower levels of the squarewave to highly-stable references required
by the Charge-Count Discriminator.
For
each cycle of the IF signal, the discriminator passes a fixed
quantity of charge through the feedback resistor of an amplifier. The voltage developed at the amplifier’s
output
is
proportional to the amount
of
charge delivered per unit of time. Fluctuations in
IF
frequency
(FM) produce fluctuations in the voltage at the output of the discriminator. The demodulated FM
passes through the FM
Output
Amplifier and on to the audio circuits for further filtering and audio
processing.
The Squelch Switch grounds the output of the discriminator whenever the IF level detected by the
Squelch Detector
is
insufficient. This squelch action attenuates the large noisy output that results when
8D-26
Service Sheet BD3