Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Revision Initial Release (K807139) Revision 1 (1010331) Revision 2 (1010332) Revision 3 (9002391) Revision 4 (9002391) Revision 5 (901047-1) Revision 6 (901047-2) Revision 7 Revision 8 Print Date June 1996 November 1996 August 1997 February 1998 October 1998 October 1999 May 2000 March 2002 February 2006
Important Notices
2006, Crown Broadcast, a division of International Radio and Electronics, Inc. Portions of this document were originally copyrighted by Michael P. Axman in 1991. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language in any form by any means without the written permission of Crown International, Inc. Printed in U.S.A. Sony and RCA are trademarks of their respective companies. Crown attempts to provide information that is accurate, complete, and useful. Should you find inadequacies in the text, please send your comments to the following address: International Radio and Electronics 25166 Leer Drive, P.O. Box 2000 Elkhart, Indiana, 46515-2000 U.S.A.
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Contents
Section 1Getting Acquainted ..................................... 11
1.1 Your Transmitter ............................................................................................... 12 1.2 Applications and Options ................................................................................... 13 1.2.1 Stand-Alone .................................................................................................. 14 1.2.2 Backup .......................................................................................................... 14 1.2.3 Booster ......................................................................................................... 14 1.2.4 Exciter ........................................................................................................... 14 1.2.5 Translator ...................................................................................................... 15 1.2.6 Satellator ...................................................................................................... 16 1.3 Transmitter/Exciter Specifications ..................................................................... 17 1.4 Receiver Specifications ..................................................................................... 19 1.5 Safety Considerations ...................................................................................... 110 1.5.1 Dangers ...................................................................................................... 110 1.5.2 Warnings .................................................................................................... 110 1.5.3 Cautions...................................................................................................... 110
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INFORMATION
Getting Acquainted
11
I
1.1 Your Transmitter
The FM500 is a member of a family of FM stereo broadcast transmitters. Crown transmitters are known for their modularity, ease-of-use, and reliability. The modularity is most apparent in the standard transmitter configuration which incorporates audio processing, stereo generation, and RF amplification without compromised signal quality. A single Crown transmitter can replace several pieces of equipment in a traditional system. Ease-of-use is apparent in the user-friendly front panel interface and in the installation procedure. Simply select your operating frequency (using four rotary switches), add an audio source, attach an antenna, connect AC power, and you're ready to broadcast. Of course, the FM series of transmitters also feature more sophisticated inputs and monitoring connections if needed. Reliability is a Crown tradition. The first Crown transmitters were designed for rigors of worldwide and potentially portable use. The modular design, quality components, engineering approach, and high production standards ensure stable performance. Remote control and metering of the transmitter is made possible through a builtin I/O port. For more direct monitoring, the front panel includes a digital multimeter display and status indicators. Automatic control circuitry provides protection for high VSWR as well as high current, voltage, and temperature conditions.
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
12
1.2
Crown transmitters are designed for versatility in applications. They have been used as stand-alone and backup transmitters and in booster, translator, and satellator applications. The following discussion describes these applications further. Model numbers describe the configuration of the product (which has to do with its intended purpose) and the RF output power which you can expect. The number portion of each name represents the maximum RF output power. The FM500, for example, can generate up to 500 watts of RF output power. Suffix letters describe the configuration. The FM500T, for example, designates a "transmitter" configuration. Since this is standard, it is what is described in the manual except where specified. In this configuration, the product includes the following modules (functions): u audio processor u stereo generator u RF exciter u metering u low-pass filter
Audio Processor
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Getting Acquainted
13
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1.2.1 Stand-Alone
In the standard configuration, the FM500 is an ideal stand-alone transmitter. When you add an audio source (monaural, L/R stereo, or composite signal), an antenna, and AC power, the transmitter becomes a complete FM stereo broadcast station, capable of serving a community. As stand-alone transmitters, Crown units often replace multiple pieces of equipment in a traditional setup (exciter, audio processor, RF amplifier).
1.2.2
Backup
In the standard configuration, Crown transmitters are also used in backup applications. Should your primary transmitter become disabled, you can continue to broadcast while repairs take place. In addition, the FM transmitters can replace disabled portions of your existing system including the exciter, audio processor, or amplifier. Transfer switches on each side of the existing and backup transmitters make the change-over possible with minimal downtime.
1.2.3
Booster
Also in the standard configuration, Crown transmitters have been used as booster transmitters. Booster applications typically involve certain geographic factors which prevent your system from broadcasting to the full coverage area allowable. For example, a mountain range might block your signal to a portion of your coverage area. Careful placement of a Crown transmitter, operating on the same frequency as your primary transmitter, can help you reach full coverage.
1.2.4
Exciter
In addition to the standard configuration, the FM500 is available in optional configurations to meet a variety of needs. An "E" suffix, as in the FM500E, for example, represents an exciter-only configuration. In this configuration, the audio processor and stereo generator are not included. The exciter configurations are the least expensive way to get Crownquality components into your transmission system. You might consider the Crown exciter when other portions of your system are performing satisfactorily and you want to maximize your investment in present equipment.
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1.2.5
Translator
A receiver configuration (FM500R, for example) takes an exciter configuration and adds receiver circuitry as well. This added feature makes the FM500 ideal for translator service in terrestrial-fed networks. These networks represent a popular and effective way to increase your broadcasting coverage. Translators, acting as repeater emitters, are necessary links in this chain of events. Traditionally, network engineers have relied on multiple steps and multiple pieces of equipment to accomplish the task. Others have integrated the translator function (receiver and exciter) to feed an amplifier. Crown, on the other hand, starts with an integrated transmitter and adds a solid-state Receiver Module to form the ideal translator.
RF IN Low-pass Filter RF Out
Stereo Generator
RF Exciter
Metering
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Illustration 13 Crown's Integrated Translator This option enables RF in and RF out on any of Crowns FM series of transmitters. In addition, the module supplies a composite output to the RF exciter portion of the transmitter. From here, the signal is brought to full power by the built-in power amplifier for retransmission. The Receiver Module has been specifically designed to handle SCA channel output up to 100 kHz for audio and high-speed data. FSK ID programming is built-in to ensure compliance with FCC regulations regarding the on-air identification of translators. Simply specify the call sign of the repeater station when ordering. Should you need to change the location of the translator, replacement FSK chips are available. The Receiver Module option should be ordered at the time of initial transmitter purchase. However, an option kit is available for field converting existing Crown units.
Getting Acquainted
15
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1.2.6 Satellator
Another option is available for all configurationsan FSK Identifier (FSK IDer). This added feature enables the FM500 to transmit its call sign or operating frequency in Morse Code. This option is intended for use in satellite-fed networks. Transmitters equipped in this fashion are often known as "satellators." Connect the transmitter to your satellite receiver and the pre-programmed FSK IDer does the restshifting the frequency to comply with FCC requirements and in a manner that is unnoticeable to the listener. The FSK IDer module should be ordered at the time you order your transmitter but is available separately (factory programmed for your installation). Add the FSK IDer option to the exciter configuration for the most economical satellator (a composite input signal is required).
RF Out
Audio Processor
Audio Input
2 10
Metering
Fault Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High Band
High 2 Expand Compress 20
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
16
1.3
Transmitter/Exciter Specifications
87 MHz108 MHz (65 MHz73 MHz optionally available) 100550 watts (VSWR 1.5:1 or better) 50 Meets FCC specifications from 0-50 degrees C 50 k bridging, balanced, or 600 Selectable for 10 dBm to +10 dBm for 75 kHz deviation at 400 Hz Selectable for 25, 50, or 75 sec; or Flat Conforms to 75 sec pre-emphasis curve as follows 0.30 dB (50 Hz10 kHz) 1.0 dB (10 kHz15 kHz)
Frequency Range
Complete transmitter
Exciter only Distortion (THD + Noise) Complete transmitter Exciter only Stereo Separation Complete transmitter Exciter only Crosstalk
Less than 0.7% (at 15 kHz) Less than 0.3% (50 Hz15 kHz)
Better than 40 dB (50 Hz15 kHz) Better than 40 dB (50 Hz15 kHz) Main into sub, better than 40 dB Sub into main, better than 40 dB
Stereo Pilot Subcarrier Suppresion FM S/N Ratio (FM noise) Complete transmitter Exciter only
Getting Acquainted
17
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AM S/N Ratio Asynchronous and synchronous noise better than NAB recommendations 120 kHz, better than 35 dB 240 kHz, better than 45 dB RF Spurious Products Operating Environment Better than 70 dB Temperature (050o C) Humidity (080% at 20o C) Maximum Altitude (3,000 meters; 9843 feet) AC Power 100, 120, 220, or 240 volts (+10%/15%); 50/60 Hz Type notified for FCC parts 73 and 74; Meets FCC, DOC, and CCIR requirements 17.8 x 41.9 x 44.5 cm (7.0 x 16.5 x 17.5 inches) Weight 29.5 kg (65 lbs); 31.8 kg (70 lbs) shipping weight RF Bandwidth
Regulatory
Dimensions
18
1.4
Receiver Specifications
3.5 V for signal-to-noise > 50 dB 12.6 V for signal-to-noise > 60 dB
Stereo Sensitivity (19kHz pilot frequency added) 2.8 V for signal-to-noise > 40 dB 8 V for signal-to-noise > 50 dB 31 V for signal-to-noise > 60 dB Connector Shipping Weight Standard type N, 50 1 lb
Getting Acquainted
19
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1.5 Safety Considerations
Crown Broadcast assumes the responsibility for providing you a safe product and safety guidelines during its use. Safety means protection to all individuals who install, operate, and service the transmitter as well as protection of the transmitter itself. To promote safety, we use standard hazard alert labeling on the product and in this manual. Follow the associated guidelines to avoid potential hazard.
1.5.1
Dangers
DANGER represents the most severe hazard alert. Extreme bodily harm or death will occur if DANGER guidelines are not followed.
1.5.2
Warnings
1.5.3
Cautions
CAUTION indicates potential personal injury or equipment or property damage if the associated guidelines are not followed. Particular cautions in this text also indicate unauthorized radio-frequency operation.
Type of Hazard
WARNING
Severe shock hazard!
Turn power off and wait approximately 1 minute for capacitors to discharge before handling them.
Explanation of Hazard
110
Section 2Installation
This section provides important guidelines for installing your transmitter. Review this information carefully for proper installation.
Installation
21
CAUTION
Possible equipment damage! Before operating the transmitter for the first time, check for the proper AC line voltage setting and frequency selection as described in sections 2.3 and 2.4.
2.1
Operating Environment
You can install the FM transmitter in a standard component rack or on a suitable surface such as a bench or desk. In any case, the area should be as clean and wellventilated as possible. Always allow for at least 2 cm of clearance under the unit for ventilation. If you set the transmitter on a flat surface, install spacers on the bottom cover plate. If you install the transmitter in a rack, provide adequate clearance above and below. Do not locate the transmitter directly above a hot piece of equipment.
2.2
The Crown FM 500 is shipped with spacers between the PA tray and the transmitter back panel. The spacers prevent damage to internal contacts during shipping. Remove and save the spacers and screws before installing the FM500.
#8 #8
#6
Illustration 2-1 FM 500 PA Tray Mounting Screws 1. 2. 3. Remove screws and spacers from five locations. Firmly push the PA tray into the FM 500 until the PA tray panel touches the back panel. Locate the bag labeled 500 Hardware. Install four #8 screws and washers and one number #6 screw and washer. See photo for locations.
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2.3
Power Connections
The FM500 operates on 100, 120, 220, or 240 volts AC (50 or 60 Hz; single phase). As shipped (factory default settings), the FM500 operates on 120 volts at 60 Hz. If you are operating the transmitter at 120 volts you do not need to make any changes. To operate the FM500 at 100, 220, or 240 volts, a few changes are necessary. To change the voltage setting, follow these steps: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Disconnect the power cord if it is attached. To set the input voltage for 100 volts, skip to step 7. Open the cover of the power connector assembly using a small, flat blade screwdriver. See Illustration 22. Insert the screwdriver into the top slot of the voltage selection assembly (red) and pry out the assembly from the power connector. If you are setting the input voltage for 220 or 240 volts, replace the installed fuses with 12 amp fuses (included in your package). See Illustration 23. Replace the red fuse assembly so that the "230V" setting appears right side up in the window. Close the assembly window.
115V
115V 230V
Installation
23
7.
Turn the transmitter upside down and remove the bottom cover. Note: The front panel filter grill must be removed to expose all of the bottom
front of transmitter
cover screws for bottom cover removal and installation. 8. 9. 10. Locate the power distribution circuit board on the left side next to the large transformer cover. See Illustration 24. For 100 or 220 volt operation, change the jumper setting of P1 to the 100/ 220 V setting. For 220 or 240 volt operation, remove the jumper connecting P6 and P7. remove the jumper connecting P4 and P5. use a jumper to connect P5 and P6. 11. 12. Replace the bottom cover, and the front grill. Connect the AC power cord.
For your reference, use 12 amp fuses for 220 or 240 volt operation and 20 amp fuses for 100 or 120 volt operation.
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2.4
You may select an operating frequency of 87 to 108 MHz in the FM broadcast band with 100 kHz channel spacing (10 kHz spacing is optional with the addition of a fifth rotary selector switch). To adjust the operating frequency, follow these steps: 1. 2. Remove the top cover by removing 15 screws. Locate the RF Exciter board and identify the frequency selector switches which will be used to change the setting. See Illustrations 25 and 26.
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
MEGAHERTZ
.1
.01
Installation
25
3.
Use small flat blade screwdriver or another suitable device to rotate the switches to the desired setting. (The selected number will appear directly above the white indicator dot on each switch.) See examples of selected frequencies in the illustration below.
2.4.1
Modulation Compensator
The Modulation trim-potentiometer (see illustration 28) compensates for slight variations in deviation sensitivity with frequency. Set the trim-pot dial according to the following graph:
Modulation Compensation Pot Setting
90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
75 80 85 90 95 100 105 110
Frequency (MHz)
Illustration 28 Modulation Compensator Settings These compensator settings are approximate. Each mark on the potentiometer represents about 1.8% modulation compensation. For more exact settings, refer to section 5.2.2.
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2.4.2
RF Tuning Adjustments
All the RF stages are broadband to cover the 88 to 108 MHz broadcast band. The RF amplifier stages require no tuning.
2.5
1. 2. 3.
If you have a transmitter equipped with the receiver option, you will need to set the receiving or incoming frequency.
RF IN
RF Exciter
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Fault
High Band
SWR Lock Input PA DC PA Temp
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Installation
27
Frequency 87.9 88.0 88.1 88.2 88.3 88.4 88.5 88.6 88.7 88.8 88.9 89.0 89.1 89.2 89.3 89.4 89.5 89.6 89.7 89.8 89.9 90.0 90.1 90.2 90.3 90.4 90.5 90.6 90.7 90.8 90.9 91.0 91.1 91.2 91.3 91.4 91.5 91.6 91.7 91.8 91.9 92.0 92.1 92.2 92.3 92.4 92.5 92.6 92.7 92.8 92.9
SW1 SW2 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 0 8 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 A A B B C C D D E E F F 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9
Frequency 93.0 93.1 93.2 93.3 93.4 93.5 93.6 93.7 93.8 93.9 94.0 94.1 94.2 94.3 94.4 94.5 94.6 94.7 94.8 94.9 95.0 95.1 95.2 95.3 95.4 95.5 95.6 95.7 95.8 95.9 96.0 96.1 96.2 96.3 96.4 96.5 96.6 96.7 96.8 96.9 97.0 97.1 97.2 97.3 97.4 97.5 97.6 97.7 97.8 97.9
SW1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 1 9 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 2 A 3 B 3 B 3
SW2 9 A A B B C C D D E E F F 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 A A B B C C D D E E F F 0 0 1 1 2
Frequency 98.0 98.1 98.2 98.3 98.4 98.5 98.6 98.7 98.8 98.9 99.0 99.1 99.2 99.3 99.4 99.5 99.6 99.7 99.8 99.9 100.0 100.1 100.2 100.3 100.4 100.5 100.6 100.7 100.8 100.9 101.0 101.1 101.2 101.3 101.4 101.5 101.6 101.7 101.8 101.9 102.0 102.1 102.2 102.3 102.4 102.5 102.6 102.7 102.8 102.9
SW1 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 3 B 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4
SW2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 A A B B C C D D E E F F 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 A A B
Frequency 103.0 103.1 103.2 103.3 103.4 103.5 103.6 103.7 103.8 103.9 104.0 104.1 104.2 104.3 104.4 104.5 104.6 104.7 104.8 104.9 105.0 105.1 105.2 105.3 105.4 105.5 105.6 105.7 105.8 105.9 106.0 106.1 106.2 106.3 106.4 106.5 106.6 106.7 106.8 106.9 107.0 107.1 107.2 107.3 107.4 107.5 107.6 107.7 107.8 107.9 108.0
SW1 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 4 C 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 5 D 6 E 6 E 6 E 6 E 6 E
SW2 B C C D D E E F F 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 A A B B C C D D E E F F 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4
2.6
RF Connections
Connect the RF load, an antenna or the input of an external power amplifier, to the type-N, RF output connector on the rear panel. VSWR should be 1.5:1 or better.
WARNING
Severe shock hazard! Do not touch the inner portion of the RF output connector when transmitter power is on.
The RF monitor is intended primarily for a modulation monitor connection. Information gained through this connection can supplement that which is available on the transmitter front panel displays. If your transmitter is equipped with the receiver option, connect the incoming RF to the RF IN connector.
RF Output Monitor
115V
Installation
29
2.7
Attach audio inputs to the Left and Right XLR connectors on the rear panel. (The Left channel audio is used on Mono.) Pin 1 of the XLR connector goes to chassis ground. Pins 2 and 3 represent a balanced differential input with an impedance of about 50 k. They may be connected to balanced or unbalanced left and right program sources. The audio input cables should be shielded pairs, whether the source is balanced or unbalanced. For an unbalanced program source, one line (preferably the one connecting to pin 3) should be grounded to the shield at the source. Audio will then connect to the line going to pin 2.
SCA IN
COMPOSITE IN R
RIGHT
LEFT/MONO
Audio Inputs
Illustration 2-10 XLR Audio Input Connectors By bringing the audio return line back to the program source, the balanced differential input of the transmitter is used to best advantage to minimize noise. This practice is especially helpful if the program lines are fairly long but is a good practice for any distance. If the program source requires a 600 termination, install resistors on the 8pin DIP socket on the motherboard (socket A501 located between the XLR connectors). See the motherboard schematic, on page 613.
210
2.8
You can connect external SCA generators to the SCA In connectors (BNC-type) on the rear panel. The inputs are intended for the 60 kHz to 99 kHz range, but a lower frequency may be used if the transmitter is operated in Mono mode. (The 23 to 53 kHz band is used for stereo transmission.) For 7.5 kHz deviation (10% modulation), input of approximately 3.5volts (peak-to-peak) is required.
SCA IN
COMPOSITE IN R
RIGHT
LEFT/MONO
2.9
To use the Crown transmitter as an RF Exciter only ("E" version or when using the "T" version with composite input), it is necessary to use the Composite Input section of the transmitter. This will feed composite stereo (or mono audio) directly to the RF exciter. In the "T" version, this will bypass the internal audio processor and stereo generator. See Section 2.12 on the next page for caution in using the bypass option. Input sensitivity is approximately 3.5volt P-P for 75 kHz deviation. 1. 2. Enable the Composite Input by grounding pin 9 of the Remote I/O connector (see Illustration 215). Connect the composite signal using the Composite In BNC connector.
Installation
211
SCA IN
COMPOSITE IN R
RIGHT
LEFT/MONO
2.10
Processed, de-emphasized samples of the left and right audio inputs to the stereo generator are available at the Monitor jacks on the rear panel. The signals are suitable for feeding a studio monitor and for doing audio testing. De-emphasis is normally set for 75 sec; set to 50 sec by moving jumpers, JP203 and JP204, on the Stereo Generator board.
2.11
Pre-emphasis Selection
Select the pre-emphasis curve (75 sec, 50 sec, 25 sec, or Flat) by jumpering the appropriate pins of header JP1 on the audio processor board. If you change the pre-emphasis, change the de-emphasis jumpers JP203 and JP204 on the Stereo Generator board to match.
2.12
You may bypass the audio processor in order to feed the left and right (preemphasized) audio directly to the stereo generator. The Normal-Bypass slide switch is near the left-rear corner of the motherboard. If the audio source is already processed and you do not desire further processing, use the Normal mode but turn the Processing control (on the front panel) to 0. (See also section 3.5.)
CAUTION
In the BYPASS position, the pre-emphasis circuits and the filters that protect the pilot and stereo subcarrier are bypassed. As a result, the occupied bandwidth specifications of the transmitter could be compromised. The 15Hz high-pass filters are also bypassed which may mean that modulation with frequencies below 10 Hz could cause the frequency synthesizer to unlock.
212
2.13
You can enable an automatic turn-off of the carrier in the event of program failure. To enable this option, see the table on the next page. The time between program failure and carrier turn-off is set by a jumper (JP701) on the voltage regulator board (see Illustration 64 for board location). Jumper pins 1 and 2 (the two pins closest to the edge of the board) for a delay of approximately 30 seconds; pins 3 and 4 for a 2minute delay; pins 5 and 6 for a 4minute delay, and pins 7 and 8 for an 8minute delay.
2.14
Remote control and remote metering of the transmitter is made possible through a 15pin, D-sub connector on the rear panel. (No connections are required for normal operation.)
SCA IN
COMPOSITE IN R
RIGHT
LEFT/MONO
Remote I/O
Illustration 214 Remote I/O Connector The following table summarizes the Remote I/O pin connections.
Installation
213
Pin Number 1 2 3 4
Function Ground (no connection) Composite Out (sample of stereo generator output) FSK In (Normally high; pull low to shift carrier frequency approximately 7.5 kHz. Connect to open collector or relay contacts of user-supplied FSK keyer.) /Auto Carrier Off (Pull low to enable automatic turnoff of carrier with program failure.) Meter Battery (unregulated DC volts; 5 volts = 50 VDC) Meter RF Watts (1 volt = 100 watts) Meter PA Volts (5 volts = 50 VDC) /Ext. Enable (Pull low to disable internal stereo generator and enable External Composite Input.) a) 38 kHz Out (From stereo generator for power supply synchronization.) b) For transmitters equipped with tuner option, this pin becomes the right audio output for an 8ohm monitor speaker. 38kHZ Out is disabled.
5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15
ALC /Carrier Off (pull low to turn carrier off.) Fault Summary (line goes high if any fault light is activated.) Meter PA Temperature (5 volts = 100 degrees C.) Meter PA Current (1 volt = 10 amperes DC.)
15
214
Section 3Operation
This section provides general operating parameters of your transmitter and a detailed description of its front panel display.
Operation
31
3.1
These steps summarize the operating procedures you should use for the initial operation of the transmitter. More detailed information follows.
CAUTION
Possible equipment damage! Before operating the transmitter for the first time, check for the proper AC line voltage setting and frequency selection as described in sections 2.3 and 2.4.
1.
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
Power
Stereo
50 40 30 20
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Power Switch
Illustration 31 Front Panel Power Switches 2. Verify the following: a. b. 4. 5. 6. 7. The bottom cooling fans runs continuously. The Lock Fault indicator flashes for approximately 5 seconds, then goes off.
Set the Input Gain switches for mid-scale wideband gain reduction on an average program level (see section 3.4). Set the Processing control (see section 3.5; normal setting is 50). Set the Stereo-Mono switch to Stereo (see section 3.6). Turn on the Carrier switch.
32
8.
Check the following parameters on the front panel multimeter: a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. RF Power should be 500550 watts. SWR should be less than 1.25 (A reading greater than 1.25 indicates an antenna mismatch). ALC should be between 4.00 and 6.00 volts. PA DC Volts should be 4656 volts. (Varies with antenna match, power, and frequency.) PA DC Amperes should be 1216 amps. (Varies with antenna match, power, and frequency.) PA Temperature should initially read 2035 degrees C (room temperature). After one hour the reading should be 3550 degrees C. Supply DC Volts should display a typical reading of 6570 V with the carrier on and 8085 V with the carrier off Voltmeter should be reading 0.0.
The remainder of this section describes the functions of the front panel indicators and switches.
Operation
33
3.2
3.2.1
Power Switches
DC Breaker
The DC breaker, on the rear panel, must be on (up) for transmitter operation, even when using AC power. Electrically, the DC breaker is located immediately after diodes which isolate the DC and AC power supplies.
3.2.2
Power Switch
The main on/off power switch controls both the 120/240 VAC and the DC battery power input.
3.2.3
Carrier Switch
This switch controls power to the RF amplifiers and supplies a logic high to the voltage regulator board, which enables the supply for the RF driver. In addition, the Carrier Switch controls the operating voltage needed by the switching power regulator. A "Lock Fault" or a low pin 12 (/Carrier Off) on the Remote I/O connector will hold the carrier off. (See section 2.12.)
Carrier Switch
Fault
SWR Lock Input PA DC PA Temp
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
Power
Stereo
50 40 30 20
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Power Switch
34
3.3
Bar-dot LEDs show audio input levels, wideband and highband audio gain control, and modulation percentage. Resolution for the gain control and modulation displays is increased over a conventional bar-graph display using dither enhancement which modulates the brightness of the LED to give the effect of a fade from dot to dot. (See section 4.7.)
3.3.1
Two vertical, moving-dot displays for the left and right channels indicate the relative audio levels, in 3 dB steps, at the input of the audio processor. Under normal operating conditions, the left and right Audio Processor indicators will be active, indicating the relative audio input level after the Input Gain switches. During program pauses, the red Low LED will light. With the receiver module option installed, the audio processor indicators are disabled.
3.3.2
During audio processing, the moving-dot displays indicate the amount of gain control for broadband (Wide) and pre-emphasized (High) audio. These indicators are disabled if the receiver module option is installed. As long as program material causes activity of the Wideband green indicators, determined by the program source level and Input Gain switches, the transmitter will be fully modulated. (See section 3.4.) The Wideband indicator shows short-term syllabic-rate expansion and gain reduction around a long-term (several seconds) average gain set. Program material and the setting of the Processing control determine the magnitude of the short-term expansion and compression (the rapid left and right movement of the green light). High-frequency program content affects the activity of the Highband indicator. With 75sec pre-emphasis, Highband processing begins at about 2 kHz and increases as the audio frequency increases. Some programs, especially speech, may show no activity while some music programs may show a great deal of activity.
3.3.3
Modulation Display
A 10segment, vertical peak-and-hold, bar graph displays the peak modulation percentage. A reading of 100 coincides with 75 kHz deviation. The display holds briefly (about 0.1 seconds) after the peak. The Pilot indicator illuminates when the transmitter is in the stereo mode. To verify the actual (or more precise) modulation percentage, connect a certified modulation monitor to the RF monitor jack on the rear panel.
Operation 35
3.4
The +6 dB and +12 dB slide switches set audio input sensitivity according to the following table.
Nominal Input Sensitivity +10 dBm +4 dBm -2 dBm -8 dBm Switches +6 dB +12 dB Down Down Up Down Down Up Up Up
Table 31 Input Gain Switches Find, experimentally, the combination of Input Gain switch settings that will bring the Wideband gain-reduction indicator to mid scale for normal level program material. The audio processor will accommodate a fairly wide range of input levels with no degradation of audio quality.
3.5
Processing Control
Two factors contribute to the setting of the Processing control: program material and personal taste. For most program material, a setting in the range of 40 to 70 provides good program density. For the classical music purist, who might prefer preservation of music dynamics over density, 10 to 40 is a good range. The audio will be heavily processed in the 70 to 100 range. If the program source is already well processed, as might be the case with a satellite feed, set the Processing to 0 or 10.
3.6
Stereo-Mono Switch
The Stereo-Mono slide switch selects the transmission mode. In Mono, feed audio only to the left channel. Although right-channel audio will not be heard as audio modulation, it will affect the audio processing.
36
3.7
RF Output Control
Set this control for the desired output power level. Preferably, set the power with an external RF wattmeter connected in the coaxial line to the antenna. You may also use the RF power reading on the digital multimeter. The control sets the RF output voltage. Actual RF output power varies as the approximate square of the relative setting of the control. For example, a setting of 50 is approximately 1/4 full power. Operation below 100 watts is not recommended as instability can occur which could damage the transmitter.
CAUTION
Possible equipment damage! Operation below 100 watts can cause oscillations and other problems that could damage the transmitter.
3.8
Digital Multimeter
The four-digit numeric display in the center of the front panel provides information on transmitter operation. Use the Up and down push-buttons to select one of the following parameters. A green LED indicates the one selected.
Multimeter Push-buttons
Fault Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High Band
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Illustration 33 Digital Multimeter RF PowerActually reads RF voltage squared, so the accuracy can be affected by VSWR (Voltage Standing-Wave Ratio). See section 5.4 for calibration. Requires calibration with the RF reflectometer being used. SWRDirect reading of the antenna standing-wave ratio (the ratio of the desired load impedance, 50 ohms, to actual load).
Operation 37
ALCDC gain control bias used to regulate PA supply voltage. With the PA power supply at full output voltage, ALC will read about 6.0 volts. When the RF output is being regulated by the RF power control circuit, this voltage will be reduced, typically reading 4 to 5.5 volts. The ALC voltage will be reduced during PA DC overcurrent, SWR, or LOCK fault conditions. PA DC VoltsSupply voltage of the RF power amplifier. PA DC AmpsTransistor drain current for the RF power amplifier. PA DC TemperatureTemperature of the RF power amplifier heatsink in degrees C. Supply DC VoltsUnregulated DC voltage at the input of the voltage regulators. For battery operation, this reading is the battery voltage minus a diode drop. VoltmeterReads the voltage at a test point located on the front edge of the motherboard. A test lead connected to this point can be used for making voltage measurements in the transmitter. The test point is intended as a servicing aid; an alternative to an external test meter. Remember that the accuracy is only as good as the reference voltage used by the metering circuit. Servicing a fault affected by the reference affects the Voltmeter reading. The metering scale is 0 to 199.9 volts.
3.9
Fault Indicators
Faults are indicated by a blinking red light as follows: SWRLoad VSWR exceeds 1.5:1. ALC voltage is reduced to limit the reflected RF power. LockFrequency synthesizer phase-lock loop is unlocked. This indicator normally blinks for about five seconds at power turn-on. Whenever this light is blinking, supply voltages will be inhibited for the RF driver stage as well as for the RF power amplifier. InputThe automatic carrier-off circuit is enabled (see sections 2.11 and 2.12) and the absence of a program input signal has exceeded the preset time. (The circuit treats white or pink noise as an absence of a program.) PA DCPower supply current for the RF power output amplifier is at the preset limit. ALC voltage has been reduced, reducing the PA supply voltage to hold supply current to the preset limit. PA TempPA heatsink temperature has reached 8085 C (178185 F). At about 83 C (181F), ALC voltage begins to decrease, reducing the PA supply voltage to prevent a further increase in temperature. By 85 C (185 F), the PA will be fully cut off.
38
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Principles of Operation
41
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scrivendo con ondo, ma uestoom s in q se, un i dice for diciamo che se scrivendo con a m diciamo che se scrivendo con ma
4.1
Part Numbering
As this section refers to individual components, you should be familiar with the part numbering scheme used. Although parts on the various circuit boards and circuit board drawings may be marked with identical reference numbers, each component in the transmitter has a unique part reference number. The circuit boards and component placement drawings use designators such as R1, R2, and C1. These numbers represent only a portion of the full part numbers (as shown on the schematic). To find the full number, refer to the chart below. R401, for instance, is marked R1 on the Metering board and on its component placement drawing.
Circuit Name Audio Processor Stereo Generator RF Exciter/Synthesizer Metering/Protection Motherboard Display Voltage Regulator Power Regulator RF Predriver Chassis Wiring RF Power Amplifier RF Low-Pass Filter
Part numbers 0-199 200s 300s 400s 500s 600s 700s 800s 900s 1000's 1100's 1200's
42
4.2
The audio processor board provides the audio control functions of a compressor, limiter, and expander. Illustration 65 and accompanying schematic may be useful to you during this discussion.
Audio Processor
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Illustration 42 Audio Processor Board This board also contains the pre-emphasis networks. Reference numbers are for the left channel. Where there is a right-channel counterpart, references are in parenthesis. One processor circuit, the eighth-order elliptical filter, is located on the stereo generator board. Audio input from the XLR connector on the rear panel of the transmitter goes to differential-input amplifier, U1A (U2A). Binary data on the +6 dB and +12 dB control lines sets the gain of inverting amplifier U1B (U2B). Analog switch, U3, selects one of four feedback points in 6 dB steps. The output of U1B (U2B) goes to an eighth-order, elliptical, switched-capacitor, low-pass, 15.2 kHz filter. The filter finds its home on the stereo generator board to take advantage of the ground plane and proximity to the 1.52 MHz clock. The circuit associated with U4B (U4A), along with R22/C8 (R58/C20), form third-order, low-pass filtering, attenuating audio products below 30 Hz. The output level of analog multiplier U5 (U6) is the product of the audio signal at pin 13 and the DC voltage difference between pins 7 and 9. At full gain (no gain reduction) this difference will be 10 volts DC.
Principles of Operation
43
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When either the positive or negative peaks of the output of U5 (U6) exceeds the gain-reduction threshold, U13A generates DC bias, producing broadband gain reduction. Q5 is a precision-matched transistor pair. Q5 and U13B form a log converter, so that a given voltage change produces a given change in gain control dB of U5 (U6). The log conversion ensures uniform level-processing characteristics well beyond the 20 dB control range. The log conversion has an additional benefit; it allows a display of gain control on a linear scale with even distribution of dB. Q1 (Q2) is a recover/expansion gate with a threshold about 18 dB below the normal program level. The amount of short-term expansion and gain reduction is controlled by R650, located on the front panel display board. (See section 3.5.) Pre-emphasis, in microseconds, is the product of the capacitance of C10 (C22), multiplied by the gain of U8 (U9), times the value of R31 (R67). For a 75 second pre-emphasis, the gain of U8 (U9) will be about 1.11. Select the pre-emphasis curve (75 sec, 50 sec, 25 sec, or Flat) by jumpering the appropriate pins on header JP1. Use trim pot R29 (R65) to make fine adjustments to the pre-emphasis. (See section 5.1.) For highband processing, the peak output of U10B is detected and gain-reduction bias is generated, as with the broadband processor. The highband processing, however, shifts the pre-emphasis curve rather than affecting overall gain. Peak audio voltages are compared to a plus and minus 5 volt reference, U17 and U18. This same reference voltage is used by the stereo generator, metering, and display boards. For an explanation of on-board adjustments see section 5.1.
4.3
The stereo generator board (see Illustration 43) generates a composite stereo signal from left and right-channel audio inputs. The component side of the board is mostly a ground plane. Once again, the eighth-order, 15.2 kHz, elliptical, low-pass filters (U201 and U202) are on this board, but belong to the audio processor. Illustration 66 and accompanying schematic complement this discussion. U207A and Y201 comprise a 7.6 MHz crystal oscillator from which the 19 kHz and 38 kHz subcarriers are digitally synthesized. U207F is a buffer. The 7.6 MHz is divided by 5 in U208A to provide 1.52 MHz at pin 6, used by filters U201 and U202. 3.8 MHz, 1.9 MHz, and 304 kHz are also derived from dividers in U208. Exclusive-OR gates, U210A and U210B, provide a stepped approximation of a 38 kHz sine wavea scheme described in the CMOS Cookbook by Don Lancaster (Howard W. Sams &. Co., Inc., Indianapolis, IN, 1978). With the resistor ratios used, the synthesized sine wave has very little harmonic energy below the 7th harmonic. U210C and D generate the 19 kHz pilot subcarrier. U211 is a dual, switched-capacitor filter, configured as second-order, low-pass filters,
44
Stereo Generator
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
each with a Q of 5. The 38 kHz and 19 kHz outputs of pins 1 and 20, respectively, are fairly pure sine waves. Harmonic distortion products are better than 66 dB downTHD of less than 0.05%. U212 is a precision, four-quadrant, analog multiplier. The output of U212 is the product of 38 kHz applied to the X input and the difference of left and right audio (L-R signal) applied to the Y input. The resulting output is a double sideband, suppressed carrierthe L-R subcarrier. The SCA subcarrier, the left, right, and left-minus-right subcarriers, and the 19 kHz pilot subcarrier are combined into the composite stereo signal by summing amplifier U206B. Analog switch U205, at the input of U206B, provides switching of left and right audio for stereo and mono modes. In the mono mode, right channel audio is disabled, and the left channel audio is increased from 45% modulation to 100%. MON L and MON R outputs go to the AF Monitor jacks on the rear panel. R208+R210 (R220+R222) and C207 (C211) comprise a 75 sec de-emphasis network. Processed, de-emphasized (75 sec) samples of the stereo generator input signals are used for a studio monitor and for audio testing. Option jumpers JP203 (JP204) allow you to select 50 sec. VR201 and VR202 supply +6 volts and 6 volts, respectively. A 5 volt reference from the audio processor board supplies the subcarrier generators. For an explanation of on-board adjustments see section 5.2.
Principles of Operation
45
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scrivendo con ondo, ma uestoom s in q se, un i dice for diciamo che se scrivendo con a m diciamo che se scrivendo con ma
4.4
This board is also known as the Frequency Synthesizer board. The entire component side of the board is a ground plane. Rotary switches along the front edge of the board establish the operating frequency. The VCO (voltage-controlled oscillator) circuitry is inside a shielded cover. Illustration 67 and accompanying schematic can be used as reference in this discussion. The following theory may apply to previous versions of the exciter board, but it is typical of the operation of the current board which has the latest technological improvements. VCO, VCO61, operates at the synthesizer output frequency of 87 MHz to 108 MHz. The frequency is controlled by voltage-variable capacitors DV71 and DV72. U7A and U7B form an active filter to supply clean DC to the drain of Q71. They also serve as a common-base RF amplifier for Q71. A71 and A1 are hybrid RF amplifiers to provide buffering and gain. A sample of the RF from the VCO goes to the input of A2. A2 amplifies the signal and feeds it back to the synthesizer IC, U6. This signal, available at pin 4 of U6, may be used with a high frequency receiver for deviation and frequency measurements. (See sections 5.2 and 5.3.) U6 is a phase-locked-loop frequency synthesizer IC. The 10.24 MHz from the crystal oscillator is used by U6, along with ICs U1 through U3 and the frequency selector switches, to generate the frequencies of the transmitter.
RF Exciter
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
46
U6 is programmed with the four or five rotary switches. The binary output of the 0.1 MHz switch programs the A counter directly. BCD data from the 100s, tens, and units rotary switches is converted to binary data by U3 to set the N counter. An optional fifth digit rotary switch for 10kHz spacing is available. U5C is a differential amplifier and filter for the error signal. Audio that is out of phase with that appearing on the error voltage is introduced by U5A, allowing for greater loop bandwidth with less degradation of the low-frequency audio response. U5D is an integrator. U5B is a VCO input voltage clamp. DV71 and DV72 are hyper-abrupt varactor tuning diodes with a square-law capacitance vs DC voltage curve, giving a straight-line frequency vs voltage curve in a LC oscillator where the varactors are the dominant source of capacitance. Lock and unlock status signals are available at the outputs of U4E and U4F, respectively. Modulation is introduced to the VCO through R17 and R71 to R75. About 4.1 millivolts across R75 produces 75 kHz deviation. An FSK signal (used for automatic identification of FM repeaters) shifts the frequencies of the 10.24 MHz crystal reference and the VCO. With keying, diodes D9 and D10, are reverse biased, increasing the crystal reference frequency. At the same time, current through R72 increases the VCO frequency. See section 5.3.4.
Principles of Operation
47
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scrivendo con ondo, ma uestoom s in q se, un i dice for diciamo che se scrivendo con a m diciamo che se scrivendo con ma
4.5
The ALC and metering circuitry is on the metering board (see Illustration 44). This board processes information for the RF and DC metering, and produces ALC (RF level-control) bias. It also provides reference and input voltages for the digital panel meter, voltages for remote metering, fan control, and drive for the front-panel fault indicators. Illustration 68 and accompanying schematic complement this discussion. PA voltage and current come from a metering shunt on the power regulator board. The PAI input is a current proportional to PA current; R405 converts the current to voltage used for metering and control. A voltage divider from the PAV line is used for DC voltage metering.
Metering
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
U406A, U406B, and U407A, with their respective diodes, are diode linearity correction circuits. Their DC inputs come from diode detectors in the RF reflectometer in the RF low-pass filter compartment. U407B, U407C, Q405, and Q406 are components of a DC squaring circuit. Since the DC output voltage of U407C is proportional to RF voltage squared, it is also proportional to RF power. U404C, U404A, U403A, and U404D are level sensors for RF power, reflected RF power, PA temperature, and external PA current, respectively. When either of these parameters exceeds the limits, the output of U404B will be forced low, reducing the ALC (RF level control) voltage, which, in turn, reduces the PA supply voltage.
48
The DC voltage setpoint for U404A (reflected RF voltage) is one-fifth that of U404C (forward RF voltage). This ratio corresponds to an SWR of 1.5:1 [(1+.2)/(1.2)=1.5]. The U405 inverters drive the front panel fault indicators. To get a direct reading of SWR, the reference input of the digital panel meter is fed from a voltage proportional to the forward-minus-reflected RF voltage, while forward-plus-reflected is fed to the digital panel meter input. The panel meter provides the divide function. U408 & U409 function as data selectors for digital panel meter input and reference voltages. Binary select data for U408 & U409 comes from the display board. The output voltage of U403D goes positive when the temperature exceeds about 35 degrees C (set by R426) providing proportional fan control. When the Carrier switch is off or the RF power is less than about 5 watts, the SWR automatically switches to a calibrate-check mode. U406C provides a voltage that simulates forward power, while Q403 shunts any residual DC from the reflectedpower source. The result is a simulation of a 1.0 to 1 SWR. (See section 5.4.)
4.6
Motherboard
The motherboard is the large board in the upper chassis interconnecting the audio processor, stereo generator, RF exciter, and metering boards. The motherboard eliminates the need for a wiring harness, and provides input/output filtering, test points, and modular customization. Motherboard components are passive with the exception of the fan driver transistor, power FET Q501. With Normal-Bypass slide switch SW501, it is possible to bypass the audio processor, connecting the left and right audio inputs directly to the inputs of the stereo generator.
CAUTION
In the BYPASS position, the pre-emphasis circuits and the filters that protect the pilot and stereo subcarrier are bypassed. As a result, the occupied bandwidth specifications of the transmitter could be compromised. The 15Hz high-pass filters are also bypassed which may mean that modulation with frequencies below 10 Hz could cause the frequency synthesizer to unlock.
If the audio source is already processed, and further processing is not desired, use the Normal mode instead of Bypass and turn the Processing control on the front panel to 0. If it is necessary to provide resistive terminations at the audio inputs (either lineto-line or line-to-ground), you may place resistors directly into the 8pin DIP socket, A501, located between the XLR input connectors. See Illustration 69 and accompanying schematic for the socket pin-out.
Principles of Operation
49
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scrivendo con ondo, ma uestoom s in q se, un i dice for diciamo che se scrivendo con a m diciamo che se scrivendo con ma
4.7
The front-panel LEDs, the numeric display, the slide switches, and the processing and RF level controls are mounted on the display circuit board. To access the component side of the board, remove the front panel by removing 12 screws. The board contains circuits for the digital panel meter, modulation peak detector, and LED display drivers, as well as indicators and switches mentioned above. Illustration 610 and accompanying schematic complement this discussion. Left and right audio from input stages of the audio processor board (just after the Input Gain attenuator) go to the L VU and R VU input on the display board. Peak rectifiers U601A and U601B drive the left and right Audio Input displays. The LED driver gives a 3 dB per step display. The lowest step of the display driver is not used; rather a red LOW indicator lights when audio is below the level of the second step. Transistors Q601 and Q602 divert current from the LOW LEDs when any other LED of the display is lit. Resolution of the linear displays, High Band, Wide Band, and Modulation, has been improved using dither enhancement. With dither, the brightness of the LED is controlled by proximity of the input voltage relative to its voltage threshold. The effect is a smooth transition from step to step as input voltage is changed. U606A, U606B, and associated components comprise the dither generator. Dither output is a triangular wave. Composite stereo (or mono) is full-wave detected by diodes D605 and D606. U607, U613, Q603, and Q604 are components of a peak sample-and-hold circuit. Oscillator, U609F, supplies a low-frequency square wave to the Fault indicators, causing them to flash on and off. Digital multimeter inputs are selected with push buttons located to the right of the multimeter menu. Signals from the push buttons are conditioned by U609A and U609B. U610 is an up/down counter. Binary input to U611 from U610 selects a green menu indicator light, and lights the appropriate decimal point on the numeric readout. The binary lines also go to analog data selectors on the ALC/ metering board. Processing control, R650, is part of the audio processor. (See section 4.2.) The DPM IN and DPM REF lines are analog and reference voltage inputs to digital multimeter IC U612. They originate from analog data selectors on the ALC/ metering board.
410
4.8
The voltage regulator board is the longer of two boards mounted under the chassis toward the front of the unit. It has switch-mode voltage regulators to provide +12, 12, and 24 volts. It also contains the program detection and automatic carrier control circuits. Illustration 611 and accompanying schematic complement this discussion. U703E and U703F convert a 38 kHz sine wave from the stereo generator into a synchronization pulse. In the transmitter, synchronization is not used, thus D709 is omitted. U704 and U705 form a 24 volt switching regulator running at about 35 kHz. U704 is used as a pulse-width modulator; U705 is a high-side driver for MOSFET switch Q701. Supply voltage for the two ICs (approximately 15.5 volts) comes from linear regulator DZ702/Q705. Bootstrap voltage, provided by D710 and C714, allows the gate voltage of Q701 to swing about 15 volts above the source when Q701 is turned on. Current through the FET is sensed by R738 and R738A. If the voltage between pin 5 and 6 of U705 exceeds 0.23 volts on a current fault, drive to Q701 is turned off. Turn-off happens cycle by cycle. The speed of the turn-off is set by C713. U706 is a switching regulator for both +12 volts and 12 volts. It runs at about 52 kHz. Energy for 12 volts is taken from inductor L702 during the off portion of the switching cycle. The 12 volts tracks the +12 volts within a few tenths of a volt. There will be no 12 volts until current is drawn from the +12 volts. Q702, Q703, and Q704 form an active filter and switch, supplying DC voltage to the RF driver, when the Carrier switch is on. The program detection circuit is made up of U701 and U702. U701A and U701D and associated circuitry discriminate between normal program material and white noise (such as might be present from a studio-transmitter link during program failure) or silence. U701A and surrounding components form a band-pass filter with a Q of 3 tuned to about 5 kHz. U701D is a first-order low-pass filter. Red and green LEDs on the board indicate the presence or absence of program determined by the balance of the detected signals from the two filters. U702 and U701C form a count-down timer. The time between a program fault and shutdown is selected by jumpering pins on header JP701. For times, see section 5.7. The times are proportional to the value of R721 (that is, times can be doubled by doubling the value of R721).
Principles of Operation
411
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4.9
The power regulator boards are the two boards mounted under the chassis on either side of a pair of 15,000 f filter capacitors toward the front of the unit. Each board has the switch-mode voltage regulator for a RF power amplifier, and circuitry for PA supply current metering. Illustration 612 and accompanying schematic complement this discussion. Diode D804, in series with the battery input, together with the AC-supply diode bridge, provides diode OR-ing of the AC and DC supplies. U801 and U802 form a switching regulator running at about 35 kHz. U801 is used as a pulse-width modulator; U802 is a high-side driver for MOSFET switch Q801. Power for the two ICs comes from the 24 volt supply voltage for the RF driver (available when the Carrier switch is on). The voltage is controlled at 16 volts by zener diode DZ801. Bootstrap voltage provided by D802 and C809 allows the gate voltage of Q801 to swing about 16 volts above the source when Q801 is turned on. Current through the FET is sensed by R812 and R812A. If the voltage from pin 5 to 6 of U802 exceeds 0.23 volts on a current fault, drive to Q801 is turned off. This happens on a cycle-by-cycle basis. The speed of the turnoff is set by C805. In the transmitter, synchronization is not used, thus D801 is omitted. U803 and Q802 are used in a circuit to convert the current that flows through metering shunt, R819, into a current source at the collector of Q803. Forty millivolts is developed across R819 for each amp of supply current (.04 ohms x 1 amp). Q803 is biased by U803 to produce the same voltage across R816. The collector current of Q803 is the same (minus base current) as that flowing through R822 resulting in 40 microamperes per amp of shunt current. R405 on the metering board converts Q803 collector current to 0.1 volt per amp of shunt current (.04 ma X 2.49 k). (See section 5.4.)
4.10
RF Driver
The RF Driver module is mounted next to the heat sinks on the bottom of the RF Amplifier/Combiner sub chassis. The driver amplifies the approximate 20 milliwatts from the frequency synthesizer to about 15 watts to drive the RF power amplifiers. A CA2832 hybrid, high-gain, wideband amplifier, operating at about 20 volts, provides about one watt of drive to a single MRF137 MOSFET amplifier. The MRF137 stage operates from a supply voltage of approximately 15 to 16 volts. The circuit board has components for input and output coupling and for power supply filtering.
412
4.11
RF Amplifier
The two RF power amplifier modules are mounted on a combiner board, heat sink, slide rail assembly which slides into the main chassis at the rear, and is fastened to the back panel with six screws. RF power, DC power, and control voltages enter the PA assembly through a 72pin edge connector that it slides into at the front of the chassis. The amplifier is built around two Phillips BLF278, dual-power MOSFETs rated for 50 volts DC and a maximum power of about 300 watts. When biased for class B, the transistor has a power gain of 20 dB. (It is biased below class B in the transmitter.) Input transformer, T1111, is made up of two printed circuit boards. The four-turn primary board is separated from the one-turn secondary by a thin dielectric film. R1112R1117 are for damping. Trim pot R1111 sets the bias. Output transformer, T1121, has a one-turn primary on top of the circuit board and a two-turn secondary underneath. Inductors L1121 and L1122 provide power line filtering. The amplifiers are surrounded by a 50 impedance, input/output combiner board which takes the 15 watts input and divides it equally to each power amp. Then the output from each amplifier is combined to form a single output.
4.12
Chassis
The AC power supply components, as well as the bridge rectifier and main filter capacitor are mounted on the chassis. Changing the jumpers on the AC distribution board (located beside the transformer assembly on the bottom of the transmitter), configures the power transformer for 100, 120, 220, or 240 VAC; see section 2.2 for switching and fuse information. The board also includes MOV voltage-surge suppressors and in-rush current limiters as well as a 12 volt power supply for the PA assembly cooling fans. The main energy-storage/filter capacitors are located between the two power regulator boards. The DC voltage across each capacitor will be 65 to 70 volts when the carrier is on.
WARNING
Shock hazard! Do not attempt to short the capacitor terminals. A bleeder resistor will discharge the capacitor in approximately one minute after shutdown.
Principles of Operation
413
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4.13
The RF low-pass filter/reflectometer are located beside the motherboard in the right-hand compartment on the top of the chassis. See Illustration 614 and accompanying schematic for more information. A ninth-order, elliptic, low-pass filter attenuates harmonics generated in the power amplifier. The capacitors for the filter are circuit board pads. The reflectometer uses printed circuit board traces for micro-strip transmission lines. Transmission line segments (with an impedance of about 82 ohms) on either side of a 50 ohm conductor provide sample voltages representative of the square root of forward and reverse power. DC voltages, representative of forward and reflected power, go through a bulkhead filter board to the motherboard, then to the metering board, where they are processed for power control, metering, and for SWR metering and protection.
4.15
This option allows the transmitter to be used as a translator. The receiver board receives terrestrially fed RF signal and converts it to composite audio which is then fed into the exciter board. Microprocessor controlled phase lock loop technology ensures the received frequency will not drift, and multiple IF stages ensure high adjacent channel rejection. Refer to illustrations 46, 616 and its schematic for the following discussion. The square shaped metal can located on the left side of the receiver board is the tuner module. The incoming RF signal enters through the BNC connector (top left corner) and is tuned through the tuner module. Input attenuation is possible with jumper J1 on the top left corner of the receiver board. Very strong signals can be attenuated 20 dB automatically by placing the jumper on the left two pins (LO position). An additional 20 dB attenuation is also available with the jumpers in the top left corner of the board. The frequencies are tuned by setting switches SW1 and SW2 (upper right corner). These two switches are read upon power up by the microprocessor (U4). The microprocessor then tunes the synthesizer IC SA1057 (U3) to the selected frequency. The switches frequency range is 87.9 Mhz at setting 00 to 107.9 Mhz at setting 64. Other custom ranges are available. The synthesizer chip works on a phase lock loop system. It receives the frequency information from pin 6 of the tuner module, then goes through a FET buffer amplifier (Q2) on its way to synthesizer IC (U3). The synthesizer feeds back a DC voltage through two resistors to pin 4 of the tuner module. Different frequencies cause different tuning voltages to go to the tuner module to tune it on frequency. The frequency synthesizer locks on to the exact frequency needed and adjusts the DC voltage accordingly. The microprocessor tunes the frequencies of the synthesizer IC, but the DC tuning voltage is somewhat dependent on the tuner module.
414
RF IN
Stereo Generator
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Generally, the voltage is around 0.5 volt DC for tuning 88.1 MHz, and from 5.5 to 6.5 volts DC for tuning 107.9 MHz. The 10.7 MHz IF frequency comes out of the tuner module on pin 5 and is coupled into the first filter FL1; passes through FL1 and into the IF decoder system of IC LM1865 (U1). The FL1 filter sets the bandwidth or everything outside of the bandwidth depending on the filter that is selected. It could be a bandwidth of 180 kHz where everything outside of that is filtered out depending on the filter characteristics. A second filter (F3) is available when the signal has a great amount of interference from an adjacent signal. In such a case, remove the jumper cap that is in the F3 position, then remove the ceramic filter that is in the F4 storage position and place it into the F3 position. Then the signal goes to a buffer gain stage at pin 1 of LM1865 (U1). From there the signal passes through F2, which is a second filter for further removal of unwanted products, and then it goes on to the IF of that chip. The quadrature coil L4 is tuned to 10.7 MHz as per calibration procedures. This results in a low distortion of around 0.2 to 0.3% on the audio. The audio, still a composite at this point, will come out of pin 15 of that IC (U1) and go to the first buffer U9. Then it goes through a compensation network R54 and C26, and on to the stereo decoder chip at pin 2 of U5. When a stereo signal is present, Led 1 illuminates which indicates that left and right audio is available. Then the stereo signals go to gain stages U6A and U6B and out to the RCA jacks on the back of the cabinet. These can be used for off-air monitoring of the audio signal. Incoming frequency can be monitored from the frequency monitor BNC jack on the back. The stereo buffer U9, stereo decoder U5, and gain stages U6A and U6B have no effect on the signal that goes through the transmitter. This section along with the composite signal coming out of pin 15 of LM1865 (U1) is totally separate from the transmitter section.
Principles of Operation
415
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A muting circuit, consisting of C22, a 1N914 diode, R14, and varible resistor R15 mutes the output when a signal is too weak to be understood. The strength of the signal muted is determined by the adjustment of R15. Any signal below the setting of R15 is shorted to +VCC through C22 by the current drawn through R14 and the diode. The audio signal above this setting goes through C17 to the connector P3. The P3 connector block allows jumpering to either internal circuitry or to external signal processing such as advertisement injection or other forms of altering the signal. If the jumper is installed for internal circuitry, the signal will go through R39 to the input of U2A. This is a buffer that drives the R20 pot located on the top left hand corner of the board. R20 sets signal gain for 100% modulation if adjusted correctly with a full incoming 75 kHz deviation signal. Then the signal goes through R21, R22, and C20 which, along with adjustable pot R24 and C21, forms a compensation network with some phase shifting. This allows the best stereo separation possible by adjusting and compensating for differences in FM exciter boards. The signal is buffered through U2B and finally reaches the output connectors P1 and P2, and on to the transmit circuitry. The power supply is fairly straight forward. The incoming 12 volt supply goes to a 7809, 9 volt regulator (VR1) which supplies all 9volt needs on the board. The 9 volts also supplies a 7805, 5 volt regulator (VR2) which supplies all 5volt needs on the board. Plus and minus 12 volts from the motherboard is filtered and supplies various needs on the board. Finally there is a precision reference voltage supplied through R50 by U7 and U8. These two 2.5 volt reference shunts act very much like a very accurate zenor diode to provide precision 5 volts to the metering board.
416
51
5.1
5.1.1
Select the pre-emphasis curve (75 sec, 50 sec, 25 sec, or Flat) by jumpering the appropriate pins of header JP1 on the audio processor board. (See section 2.9.) If you change the pre-emphasis, change the de-emphasis jumpers, JP203 and JP204 on the Stereo Generator board, to match. (See section 2.8.)
5.1.2
Trim potentiometers, R29 and R65, (for left and right channels, respectively) provide for fine adjustment of the pre-emphasis. Set the potentiometers to bring the de-emphasized gain at 10 kHz equal to that of 400 Hz. (At the proper setting, 15.0 kHz will be down about 0.7 dB.) When making these adjustments, it is important that you keep signal levels below the processor gain-control threshold. A preferred method is to use a precision de-emphasis network in front of the audio input. Then, use the non-de-emphasized (flat) output from the FM modulation monitor for measurements.
52
5.2
5.2.1
Feed a 400 Hz sine wave into one channel for at least 70% modulation. Observe the classic single-channel composite stereo waveform at TP1 on the RF Exciter circuit board. Adjust the Separation control for a straight centerline. Since proper adjustment of this control coincides with best stereo separation, use an FM monitor to make or confirm the adjustment.
5.2.2
Composite Output
Adjust the composite output with a modultion monitor following the steps below: 1. 2. Set the Stereo-Mono switch to Mono. Check that the setting of the Modulation compensation control, R17 on the RF Exciter circuit board, falls within the range specified for the frequency of operation. (See section 2.3.1.) Feed a sine wave signal of about 2.5 kHz into the left channel at a level sufficient to put the wideband gain-reduction indicator somewhere in the middle of its range. Set the Composite level control to produce 90% modulation as indicated on an FM monitor. Apply pink noise or program material to the audio inputs and confirm, on both Mono and Stereo, that modulation peaks are between 95% and 100%.
3.
4. 5.
5.2.3
19 kHz Level
Adjust the 19 kHz pilot for 9% modulation as indicated on an FM modulation monitor. (The composite output should be set first, since it follows the 19 kHz Level control.)
5.2.4
1. 2.
19 kHz Phase
Apply a 400 Hz audio signal to the left channel for at least 70% modulation. Look at the composite stereo signal at TP301 on the RF Exciter circuit board with an oscilloscope, expanding the display to view the 19 kHz component on the horizontal centerline. Switch the audio to the right-channel input. When the 19 kHz Phase is properly adjusted, the amplitude of the 19 kHz will remain constant when switching between left and right. Recheck the separation adjustment as described in section 5.2.1.
3.
4.
53
5.3
5.3.1
5.3.2
Modulation Compensator
5.3.3
Next to the 10.24MHz crystal on the RF Exciter board is a 111 pF piston trimmer capacitor (C3). Use C3 to set the frequency of the 10.24MHz crystal while observing the output frequency of the synthesizer. Use one of these methods for checking frequency: u Use an FM frequency monitor. u Couple a frequency counter of known accuracy to the output of the synthesizer and observe the operating frequency. (Do not connect to the 10.24MHz clock circuit.)
5.3.4
An FSK signal (used for automatic identification of FM repeaters) shifts the frequencies of the 10.24MHz crystal reference oscillator and the VCO. Use an oscilloscope to observe the cathode end of D4. With no program, the pulse will be less than 1 sec wide. With an FSK input (a 20Hz square wave at the FSK input will work), set trim pot R45 for minimum pulse width. The setting will vary slightly with operating frequency.
54
5.4
5.4.1
While looking at RF Power on the digital panel meter, set the Power Calibrate trim potentiometer to agree with an external RF power meter.
5.4.2
Power Set
With the front panel RF Output control fully clockwise, adjust the Power Set trim pot to 10% more than the rated power (33 W for FM30, 110 W for FM100, 275 W for FM250, 550 W for FM500) as indicated on an accurate external watt meter. If the authorized power is less than the maximum watts, you may use the Power Set to limit the range of the RF Output control. Operation below 100 watts is not recommended as instability can occur which could damage the transmitter.
CAUTION
Possible equipment damage! Operation below 100 watts can cause oscillations and other problems that could damage the transmitter.
5.4.3
SWR Calibrate
When the Carrier switch is off, or the RF power is less than about 5 watts, the SWR circuit automatically switches to a calibrate-check mode. (See section 4.5 for more information.) Set the digital panel meter to read SWR. With the Carrier switch off, set the SWR CAL trim pot to read 1.03.
5.4.4
PA Current Limit
Since it may not be practical to increase the PA current to set the PA Current Limit control, you may use this indirect method. With the carrier turned off, look at the DC voltage at the right end of R413 on the Metering board. The current limit, in amperes, will be 0.35 amps higher than ten times this voltage. Set the current limit for 16.5 amps or 1.615 volts at R413.
55
5.5
Motherboard Adjustments
5.6
The Modulation Calibrate trim pot sets the sensitivity of the front panel Modulation bar graph display. This adjustment may be made only after the Output trim pot on the Stereo Generator board has been set. (See section 5.2.4.) 1. 2. Set the Stereo-Mono switch to Mono. Feed a sine wave source of about 2.5 kHz into the left channel at a level sufficient to put the wideband gain-reduction indicator somewhere in the middle of its range. Set the Modulation Calibrate trim pot so that the 90 light on the front panel Modulation display just begins to light.
3.
5.7
JP701, a 10pin header on the Voltage Regulator board, sets the time between program failure and carrier turnoff. Pins 1 and 2 are the two pins closest to the edge of the board. The times are approximate. Sections 2.11, 2.12, and 4.8 contain further information. 1. 2. 3. 4. Short pins 1 and 2 for a 30second delay. Short pins 3 and 4 for a 2minute delay. Short pins 5 and 6 for a 4minute delay. Short pins 7 and 8 for an 8minute delay.
You may select other times by changing the value of R721. The time is proportional to the resistance.
5.8
The Bias Set trim pot is located on the PA module on the input circuit board. Set the trim pot to its midpoint for near-optimum bias.
56
5.9
Performance Verification
Measure the following parameters to receive a comprehensive characterization of transmitter performance: u Carrier frequency u RF output power u RF bandwidth and RF harmonics (see section 5.12) u Pilot frequency, phase, and modulation percentage u Audio frequency response u Audio distortion u Modulation percentage u FM and AM noise u Stereo separation between left and right u Crosstalk between main channel and subcarrier u 38kHz subcarrier suppression In addition to the above tests, which pertain to signal quality, a complete check of the unit will include items listed in section 5.21.
5.9.1
References to 100% modulation assume 9% pilot and 91% for the remainder of the composite stereo signal. Because the audio processing threshold is at 90% modulation, it is not possible to make audio proof-of-performance measurements at 100% modulation through the audio processor. Instead, audio data for 100% modulation is taken from the input of the stereo generator (SW501 on Motherboard set for Bypass). Then, data, including the audio processor (SW501 set for Normal), is taken at a level below the audio processing threshold.
5.9.2
A precision de-emphasis network, connected between the test oscillator and the audio input of the transmitter, can be very helpful when making the audio measurements. Note that the input impedance of the transmitter or the source impedance of the test oscillator can affect network accuracy. With the de-emphasis network, oscillator level adjustments need only accommodate gain errors, instead of the whole pre-emphasis curve.
57
5.10
Carrier Frequency
Carrier frequency is measured at the output frequency with a frequency monitor or suitable frequency counter. To adjust frequency, see section 5.3.3. (FCC tolerance +/ 2000 Hz per FCC Part 73.1540 and 73.1545.)
5.11
Output Power
The output power reading on the front panel display should be 90105% of the actual value. For a more precise measurement, use a watt meter in the RF output line. See sections 5.4.1 and 5.4.2 for setting power.
5.12
You can observe RF bandwidth and spurious emissions with an RF spectrum analyzer. In the Stereo mode, feed a 15.0 kHz audio signal into one channel to provide 85% modulation as indicated on a monitor. Doing so produces 38% main, 38% stereo subcarrier, and 9% pilot per FCC Part 2.989. As an alternative, use pink noise into one channel. Using a spectrum analyzer, verify the following (per FCC 73.317): 1. Emissions more than 600 kHz from the carrier are at least 43 + 10log(power, in watts) dB down (70 dB for 500 watts). The scan should include the tenth harmonic. Emissions between 240 kHz and 600 kHz from the carrier are down at least 35 dB. Emissions between 120 kHz and 240 kHz from the carrier are down at least 25 dB.
2. 3.
5.13
Pilot Frequency
The pilot frequency should be within 2 Hz of 19 kHz. (FCC Part 73.322.) Using a frequency counter, measure 1.9 MHz at pin 1 of U209 on the Stereo Generator board. A 200-Hz error here corresponds to a 2-Hz error at 19 kHz. If the frequency is off by more than 50 Hz, you may change the value of C213. (Changing C213 from 56 pF to 68 pF lowers the 1.9 MHz by about 35 Hz.)
58
5.14
For the response tests, take the readings from an FM modulation monitor. Make audio frequency response measurements for left and right channels at frequencies of 50 Hz, 100 Hz, 400 Hz, 1 kHz, 5 kHz, 10 kHz, and 15 kHz. See sections 5.9.1 and 5.9.2.
5.15
Audio Distortion
Make distortion measurements from the de-emphasized output of an FM modulation monitor. Make audio distortion measurements for left and right channels at frequencies of 50 Hz, 100 Hz, 400 Hz, 1 kHz, 5 kHz, 10 kHz, and 15 kHz. See sections 5.9.1 and 5.9.2.
5.16
Modulation Percentage
While feeding an audio signal into the left channel only, confirm that the total modulation percentage remains constant when switching between Mono and Stereo. Measure modulation percentage with an FM modulation monitor, or by using an HF receiver and Bessel nulls. See section 5.2.2. 19kHz pilot modulation should be 9%.
5.17
FM and AM Noise
5.18
Stereo Separation
Make left-into-right and right-into-left stereo separation measurements with an FM modulation monitor for frequencies of 50 Hz, 100 Hz, 400 Hz, 1 kHz, 5 kHz, 10 kHz, and 15 kHz.
5.19
Crosstalk
For stereo crosstalk measurements, both left and right channels are fed at the same time. For best results, there needs to be a means of correcting small imbalances in levels and phase. The balance is made at 400 Hz.
59
5.19.1
Feed the left and right channels in phase with audio (L+R) at 50 Hz, 100 Hz, 400 Hz, 1 kHz, 5 kHz, 10 kHz, and 15 kHz at 100% modulation, while observing the stereo subcarrier (L-R) level on an FM modulation monitor.
5.19.2
Feed the audio into the left and right channel as above, with the exception of reversing the polarity of the audio of one channel (L-R input). Using the frequencies of 5.19.1 above, observe the main channel (L+R) level with a modulation monitor.
5.20
With no modulation, but in the Stereo mode, the 38 kHz subcarrier, as indicated on an FM modulation monitor, should be down at least 40 dB.
5.21
Additional Checks
In addition to the tests and adjustments mentioned in this section, the following checks ensure a complete performance appraisal of the transmitter: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Perform a physical inspection, looking for visible damage and checking that the chassis hardware and circuit boards are secure. Check the functionality of switches and processing control. Verify that all indicators function. Check the frequency synthesizer lock at 80 MHz and 110 MHz. Measure the AC line current with and without the carrier on. Perform a functional test of the SCA input, Monitor outputs, and the monitor and control function at the 15pin, D-sub connector. Test the functionality of the FSK circuit. Check the operation and timing of the automatic carrier-off circuitry associated with program failure. Check all metering functions. Test ALC action with PA current overload, SWR, and PLL lock.
NOTE: FCC type acceptance procedures call for testing the carrier frequency over the temperature range of 050 degrees centigrade, and at line voltages from 85% to 115% of rating. (See FCC Part 2.995.)
510
Reference Drawings
61
6.1
Gain Reduction/Expansion Indicators
Audio Input
2
Views
Digital Multimeter
Multimeter Select
Fault
Modulation Indicators
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier Switch
Carrier
High Band
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Audio Processor Processing Control Input Level Indicators Input Gain Stereo/Mono Switch Switches
Fault Indicators
Power Switch
RF Output
RF Output Monitor
Ground
SCA IN
Composite Input
Audio Monitors
MONITOR R REMOTE I/O L RIGHT
Audio Inputs
LEFT/MONO
COMPOSITE IN
FUSE
AC Power In
SCA Inputs
Remote I/O
62
Audio Processor
Audio Input
2 10 RF Power Compress SWR 20 ALC PA DC Volts
Modulation
Over 100 90 80 70 60
Carrier
High 2 Expand
Wide Band
-6 -12 +6 dB +12 dB
Power
Stereo
50 40 30
-18 Low
20
Input Gain
Processing
Mono
RF Output
Pilot
FM500
FM BROADCAST TRANSMITTER
Power Transformer
Filter Capacitors
front of transmitter
Reference Drawings
63
6.2
64
L VU C3 1.0 R4 24.9K 1
R9 1K GAIN REDUCTION THRESHOLD 10DB 20DB VOLTS P-P 1.1 3.5 11 +12V AD632 1 U5 10 11 R17 360K 3 R22 11.3K 1 D2 R24 24.9K 1 D1 C8 1.0 POLY Q1 2N5087 R25 24.9K 1 6 7 5 U7B TL072 +12V C17 .047 R LP2 R LP1 R46 360K R98 100 R49 R48 1K R40 1K C13 100PF R41 1K C16 1.0 R43 24.9K C15 1.0 R42 24.9K R44 24.9K +12V 2 3 4 C14 100PF R45 24.9K -12V 8 1 U2A TL072 R47 30.1K 1 -12V C18 .047 8 2 3 4 7 9 13 12 11 U6 10 3 R58 11.3K 1 R60 24.9K D7 C20 1.0 POLY R61 24.9K +12V R123 50K 8 2 3 U7A 4 U2B TL072 R53 499 1 -12V C50 47PF 1 2 3 SW1A R119 4.7K -5VDC at 0DB GR 4.1V at 20 DB GR C36 .01 2 2 IN U17 REF02 4 GND TRM 5 -12V R118 10.0K 1 VO 6 3 4 8 1 U18A TL072 R120 100 +5V D19 +5.00V VDD +5V C46 0.1 C47 0.1 R78 91K R121 10.0K 1 R79 49.9K 1 Q5 LM394 8 7 6 5 8 C1 7 B2 6 E3 4 5 1 2 3 4 D13 3mV/DB 8 2 1 U13A TL072 D20 R82 120 -12V D15 D14 YEL R75 2.4K C8A OPEN C45 0.1 -12V 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 C20A OPEN R112 49.9K 1 +12V 8 6 7 5 U13B TL072 5 U15B TL072 6 7 R84 49.9K 1 R110 49.9K 1 NOTES : 1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 3. ALL DIODES ARE 1N4148 UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 3 4 -12V U15A TL072 U14B TL072 2 1 R113 100 6 7 5 5 U16B TL072 R102 49.9K 1 R114 49.9K 1 3 4 -12V U16A TL072 C30 1.0 Q3 2N5210 R77 3.3K R76 10K 3 4 +12V R91 10M R92 1K D21 D18 560 R99 3.3K .25V/DB R93 10K R100 120 1 2 3 4 +5V C28 1.0 POLY R86 3.3M R83 10K +12V R89 330K C27 .047 R85 3.3K R88 10M R87 3.3K -5V HEAVY PROC A R109 3.3K R94 20.0K 1 C33 .047 R103 3.3K 1 TL072 R90 1K C29 0.1 D11 C49 47PF +5V Q2 2N5087 R66 49.9K 1 U4A TL072 1 +12V 14 AD632 1 2 D8 R62 100K R64 OPEN PRE-EMP. R65 10K 7 9 13 12 11 U9 R59 100K 1 (+/-5.0V PK) R67 24.9K R70 24.9K C23 220PF C22 .0027 POLY +5V D9 C24 0.1 R74 1K R28 OPEN R26 100K PRE-EMP. R29 10K 7 9 13 12 11 R30 49.9K 1 U8 +12V 1 4 AD632 1 2 10 3 R32 12K R33 10K 2 R31 24.9K 1 C10 .0027 POLY R23 100K FLAT A=0 25uSEC A=0.33 50uSEC A=0.67 75uSEC A=1.0 (+/-5.0V PK)
L IN1
R2 1K C1 100PF R3 1K
R6 24.9K 1 +12V
R8 30.1K 1
C5 .047
R20 75K 1
GAIN: U5, Pin 2 to U8, Pin 2 (No Hi-band gain reduction) +5V
L IN2
R5 24.9K 1 C4 1.0
14 7 9 13 12
R34 24.9K
R38 1K
D3 L OUT
C2 100PF
R7 24.9K 1
C11 220PF
D4
-12V
R39 1K
R12 20K 1
6 5
U12B TL072 7
R56 75K 1
-12V
D5
D6
R16 499 1
R OUT
/+12DB /+6DB
+12V R81 1K -5V 8 2 3 1 U10A 4 TL072 -12V R72 24.9K R73 24.9K +12V 8 2 3 4 -12V D12 U12A TL072 1
R VU
20K
-12V
R IN1
6 7 5
R IN2
R52 499 1
PROC B
R650 100K
PROC C LIGHT POT LOCATED ON DISPLAY PCB FLAT 25uS 50uS 75uS JP1 HEADER 4X2 1 3 5 7 2 4 6 8
R95 20.0K 1
R104 OPEN
C38 1.0
SW1B 5
4 6 C26 100PF
C32 100PF R96 20.0K 1 +12V Q7 LM394 1 C8 2 B7 3 E6 4 5 8 7 6 5 3mV/DB R101 10K 8 D16 1 3 U14A TL072 -12V D17 C35 1.0 4 2 R106 1K R107 10K R105 1M
VEE
C37 .01 6 7 5 U18B TL072 C39 1.0 C48 0.1 R122 100 VSS -5V -5V
TEST
C40 1.0
C42 0.1
C25 100PF J3 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 +12V -12V /+6DB /+12DB L VU R VU +5.00V PROC A PROC B PROC C BR GR HI GR TEST
R111 49.9K 1
C31 100PF
0.25V / DB
HI GR
J1 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 L IN1 L IN2 R IN1 R IN2 L LP1 L LP2 R LP1 R LP2 R OUT L OUT 10 8 6 4 2
J2 9 7 5 3 1
RECEPT 5X2
RECEPT 10X2
RECEPT 13X2
66
EXT RTN
R54 24.9K 1%
R55 24.9K
EXTERNAL COMPOSIT IN (3.5V P-P for 75KHz) R56 24.9K 2 1% R57 24.9K 3
8 1 U6A TL072
R58 3.9K
EXT IN
D3
D4
C5 .0027 POLY 15.2 KHz LOW-PASS FILTER (8th ORDER ELLIPTICAL) LTC1064-1 LPIN L +6V 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 JP1 INPUT L 1 2 -6V R1 330 C1 .0027 POLY LPOUT L R38 1M R6 499 1% R7 3.65K 1% 2 3 4 C6 1030PF -12V 3 +12V 8 1 U3A TL072
-12V
C27 1.0
C4 0 OHM
R5 1K
C3 100PF
R12 10.0K 1% +12V 2 3 3 2 JP3 75 C7 .01 POLY -12V 4 U4A TL072 D5 U5 74HC4053 12 13 2 1 5 3 X0 X1 Y0 Y1 Z0 Z1 INH A B C 8 7 R17 100 8 1 R11 100 R9 2K 1% +6V MON L C28 1.0
U1
R8 4.99K 1% 1
R10 2.49K 1%
OUTPUT
R14 1K
C9 .0027 POLY JP2 LTC1064-1 LPIN R 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 INPUT R 1 2 R19 3.65K 1% R2 330 C2 .0027 POLY LPOUT R R39 1M R18 499 1% 6 7 5 U3B TL072 C10 1030PF R20 4.99K 1% 3
50
D6
U2
R24 100
MON R
6 11 10
C24 1.0
D1 1N5818
C23 1.0
D2 1N5818
SYNC OUT
14 U10A 3
1% 10 8 6 4 2
J3 9 7 5 3 1
C37 OPEN
-12V +12V
4 R26 1K R25 1M Y1 7.6MHZ 1 U7A 74HC04 2 13 U7F 14 7 U8A 74HC390 12 1 4 2 CK CK CLR Q Q QC QD 3 5 6 7 15 12 14 CK CK CLR 8 304 Khz 16 QA QB QC QD 13 11 10 9 U9B 74HC393 13 C L K A C L K B 1.9MHz A 1 74HC86 CLR 2 9 10 U10C 8 R30 243K 1% R36 49.9K 1% 1 1 C29 1.0 R27 100 5 U10B 6 R29 100K 1% 3.8 MHz 1 0 14 A Q Q QC QD 7 U9A 74HC393 CLK 3 4 5 6 QA QB QC QD 11 10 9 8 9 8 7 6 L V V S S D A A H + + / B 5 0 / A 1 V V G 0 D A N 0 - - D 1 1 1 1 2 3 4 5 S 1 A 5 I N V A 4 H P A 3 B P A 2 L P A U11 LMF100 S 1 B 1 6 I N V B 1 7 H P B 1 8 B P B 1 9 L P B 2 0 R34 49.9K 1% 1 C18 .0027 POLY 38 KHz 3.0VP-P 14 7 9 R40 10K 13 12 11 3
RECEPT 5X2 R48 4.3K J1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 RECEPT 12X1 J2 EXT IN EXT RTN SCA IN COMP OUT COMP METER MONO/STEREO /EXT ENABLE GND INPUT L INPUT R
10
SEPARATION
R47 20K
C12 5.518PF
12
CLR
QA
19 KHZ PHASE
R242 1K R35 10.0K 1% R41 510 19 KHz 3.3VP-P
19 KHZ LEVEL
R244 10K R43 33K
QB
QC
C19 0.1
QA XOR QC 3
U7B 74HC04 4 VR1 LM317 +12V C33 1.0UF 1 IN C 2 R49 240 OUT 3 C34 1.0UF EXTERNAL COMPOSITE 8 R50 910 +6V
QB XOR QC
C32 1.0
NOTES : _______ _______ 1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS UNLESSOTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 3. ALL DIODES ARE 1N4148 UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 RECEPT 12X1
MON L MON R GND LPIN L LPOUT L LPIN R LPOUT R +5.00V SYNC OUT
+5.00V
-6V
U205 Connections
QD 9 QB XOR QD
U7D 74HC04
QC XOR QD 11
-6V
103203
R52 910
SEE NOTE 10
M200440PT-A.DOC REV
B
SCALE:
200440-PWA
PROJECT #:
A
SHEET:
N/A
509
1 OF 1
DWG. NO.
200440-SCH
REV.
10
11
12
E . C . N.
REV
1 2
DATE
01-04-02 02-06-02 06-24-02 05-23-03 01-29-04
DWN
DW DW DW DW DW
APPROVALS CHK CM
PE
DW
DP
+8V
88-108 MHZ
+12V
R24 150
2
+12V
A2
1 +5V
MAR-6
3
C7 .001
VU5 /LOCK
R30 10 1
U7A NE5532
5 37
C44 1
+8V
DL1 GREEN
+5V
R25 680
U7B NE5532
C9 .001
R33 100 1%
C8 1 D6 1N4148 REMOTE FREQUENCY CONTROL R5 1.0K 1% R4 100K 1% 10.24MHZ Y1 C3 1-10PF R9 100K 1% R7 10 C11
9
U4F 74HC14
U4E 74HC14
C10 .001
C12 1 .001
VVCO
10 8 6 4 2
LOCK DET.
R22 200K
R23 1M
13 12 11 10 LOCK
D11 1N4148
9 7 5 3 1
POLY
U6
OSC in OSC out 1 2 3 Fin 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9
VDD C4 1
FSK-R
10
MC33284P
R10 100K 1%
C1 33PF NPO
+5V
C2 39PF NPO
C62 220pF
R62 100 1%
+ C61
R67 15
DATA
R64 4.99K 1%
6 7
47/20V
TANT.
U1 74HC165
U2 74HC165
VDD
CLK QH INH SH/LD
U5B MC33284P
SER A B C D E F G H
SER A B C D E F G H
10 8 6 4 2
10 11 12 13 14 3 4 5 6
2 15 1
10 11 12 13 14 3 4 5 6
D1 1N4148
2 15 1
D2 1N4148
LOAD DATA CLK
R2 10.0K 1%
TP
R88 30.1K 1%
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10
R3 150K
D7 1N4148
+ C27
R65 100K 1%
R63 39
QH
QH
+8V
U5C
12
C15 0.01
R61 10.0K 1%
8 6 4 2
C13 3900PF
R11 100K 1%
MC33284P
13
U5D
14
R12 1.0K 1%
VCO61 POS-150
7 5 3 1
C23 .001
1
R66 150
C26 .001
JP1 JUMPER
10/35V
TANT.
C77 0.1
-12V 4
3 2 1 U8A TL072 8
R81 10.0K 1%
R84 5.11K 1%
6 5
R1 10.0K 1%
U3 PIC16C61
C78 0.1
U8B TL072
S D13 3.9V
C28 8 9 R18 68K RP2 100K RPACK D4 1N4148 PB1 RESET R20
4 2 3
1
POLY
+12V
1M
VU5 1
C81 1000pF
U5A
MC33284P
11
499 1%
R90
C29 1
TP1
5 4 3 2 1
5 4 3 2 1
5 4 3 2 1
5 4 3 2 1
5 4 3 2 1
SW1
SW2
SW3
SW4
SW5
10/35V
TANT.
COMPOSITE IN C
+5V
+12V + C36
IN
OUT
+8V
U4A 74HC14
1 +5V
R28 10.0K 1% R41 10.0K 1% R42 10.0K 1% FSK R40 10.0K 1% R43 1.0K 1%
DL3 AMBER
10/35V
TANT.
+ C38
10/35V
+ C37 TANT.
10/35V
TANT.
NOTES :
UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED:
1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% TOL. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS.
D9 1N4148
U4D 74HC14
U4C 74HC14
C33 33pF
FSK-R 3
VR2 LM78L05
IN C OUT 1 + C39 +5V
REFERENCE DESIGNATORS NOT USED: C40 1 C16, C17, C18, C20, C25, C34, C45-60, C63-75, Q1-71, R29, R31, R32, R34, R36, R37, R49, R50, R53-60, R69-79, VCO1-VCO60.
B
J1
RF OUT COMPOSITE IN -12V +12V Local/Remote /LOCK LOCK FSK-ID-CHAN 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 25 23 21 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 1 2 4 6 8 10 B Local/Remote
R48 1.0K 1%
D10 1N4148
10/35V
2 TANT.
C35 .001
R45 10K D3 1N4148 CH. SEL. DIRECT FSK ID BAND LIMIT AUTO ID
R46 39K
RECEPT 13X2
IREC
TITLE:
SIZE
DW DJ DW DP
INTERNATIONAL RADIO AND ELECTRONICS CORP. 25166 LEER DRIVE ELKHART, IN. 46514 574-262-8900 WWW.IREC1.COM
UNCONTROLLED
UNLESS OTHERWISE MARKED IN RED INK BY CM AS A CONTROLLED COPY, COPIES OF THESE DOCUMENTS INCLUDING ASSOCIATED ELECTRONIC REPRODUCTIONS ARE FOR REFERENCE ONLY.
C_L_SHT1_A.DOT REV. A
THESE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE THE PROPERTY OF INTERNATIONAL RADIO CORP. AND SHALL NOT BE REPRODUCED, COPIED OR USED AS THE BASIS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR SALE OF APPARATUS OR DEVICES WITHOUT PERMISSION.
7 8
DISTRIBUTION
C
SCALE : NONE
200440-SCH
PROJ NO.
11
REV A
SHEET
509
1
12
OF
Illustration 68 RF Metering Board (Add 400 to component designators for schematic reference)
610
D 8169-1
PAV J2-4
+12V C401 .01 R406 100K 1 8 2 3 4 -12V 6 7 (Jumper under board) C406 .01 R405 2.49K 1 5 U402B TL072 R410 100 J4-4 REM PADCA 1.00V = 10.0A U402A TL072
+5.00V
U2
1
D406 R409 100 J4-3 REM PADCV 1.00V = 10VDC R411 15K
J401 10 8 6 4 2 9 7 5 3 1
Parts not loaded: C403, 404 DZ401 R402, 403, 404 Q401, 402 U401 LB401
U5
PAI LIMIT
R414 2.2M R413 33K 13 14 12 U404D TL074 R416 100K R415 120K 1 D402 R429 220K C408 1.0UF R430 100K R431 120K FAN J2-7 /LOCK J4-1 R432 100K +5V D409 2 U405A 74HC14 9 8 U405D 74HC14 D407 C405 .001 +5V D401 13 12 U405F 74HC14
-12V +12V
-12V +12V
RECEPT 5X2 J402 PADC LAMP J3-14 INPUT RF REV RF FWD RFV VOLTMETER FAN TEMP OUT PAV PAI DC SUPPLY /+28V INH 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 RECEPT 12X1
U4
D408
R425 1M
11
10 U405E 74HC14
J2
R408 1.1K 1
U3
1 U403A TL074
C407 .001
C421 .001
50mv per degree C. R422 75k -12V R423 240K R424 100k
3 11 -12V
R420 100K 1
R426 30.1K 1
13 12
U3
14 U403D TL074
R492 10K
HD403 SEL A SEL B SEL C RF LEVEL +5.00V PATEMP LAMP PADC LAMP INPUT LAMP LOCK LAMP SWR LAMP 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19
R418 1K
9 10
U3
8 U403C TL074
+5.00V
R421 100
J3
DPM REF DPM IN
+12V 2 4
R437 1M
C409 .001 D403 R439 100K R438 120K INPUT J2-12 5 6 U405C 74HC14 D412
U4
1 U404A TL074
10mV/Deg. C R435 100K RF LEVEL J3-8 (R435+R436)+R436 ---------------- = ---(R435+R436)-R436 150K = 1.5:1 100K R434 10K POT H R440 33K -12V R436 24.9K 3 11
HEADER 10X2
D405
SWR LIMIT=
R446 10K
GND FAULT SUM REM BATT REM PATEMP REM RFWATTS REM PADCA REM PADCV ALC /LOCK ALC J4-2 R448 100K 1
100K
J4
POWER SET
DC SUPPLY J2-2 R451 100K 1 6 5 C412 0.1 R452 10K 1 U403B TL074
9 10
U4
8 U404C TL074
C410 0.1
6 R444 200K 5
U4
7 U404B TL074
R447 1K
U3
7
R454 100
R449 11K 1 +5V FULL SCALE 16 (1.999V reads "1999") 13 14 15 12 1 5 2 4 6 11 10 9 X0 X1 X2 X3 X4 X5 X6 X7 INH A B C 8 R468 1K X 3 C422 0.1 DPM IN J3-19
R453 1.1K 1 10mV/Volt 100mV/Amp 1mV/Degree C 10mV/Volt 10mV/Volt R456 1K 1 U406A TL074 R457 10K RF REV J2-11 C414 .01 +12V 4 2 3 C413 0.1
VOLTMETER J2-8
R455 100K 1
1999 WATTS 19.99 19.99V 199.9V 19.99A 199.9 Deg. C 199.9V 199.9V
U8
U408 74HC4051
R467 1K POTH
(VFWD+VREFL)/40
U6
1
D413 1N6263
R460
R465 56K
R466 56K
SWR CAL
U6
14 U406D TL074 1.00V
C423 0.1
R458 22K R484 10K U406B TL074 R461 10K RF FWD J2-10 C416 .01 6 5 D418 Q403 2N5210
100K R487
R489 24.9K R491 2.49K 1 +5.00V J3-9,10 J4-12 J3-2 J3-4 J3-6
U9
U409 74HC4051
U6
7 C417 .001
D414 1N6263 R464 1K D417 +5V R462 22K C420 .01 LM394 1 C1 8C 2 B2 7B 3 6E E3 4 5 4 Q405 LM394 1 8C 2 C1 7B B 3 2 6E E3 4 4 5 Q406 8 7 6 5 R481 39K R476 49.9K R485 100K C424 1.0UF
+5.00V
R463 100K
VDD +12V 1 C425 1.0UF IN VR401 78L05 OUT C 2 3 C426 1.0UF VSS -12V C427 1.0UF C428 1.0UF VEE -12V VCC +5V C429 1.0UF DZ402 LM329DZ U8,9 pin 7 R417 3.3K -6.9V
R483 1M
+12V -12V
+12V 2 3 11 4
POWER CAL
D416 8 7 6 5 9 10
U7
1 C419 .001
D415 1N6263
U7
8 U407C TL074 R477 7.5K (2.5VDC at 100W) (.135V) R479 1.1K 1 R482 1K
9 10
U6
8 U406C TL074
RFV J2-9
C418 .01
6 5
U7
7 U407B TL074 R474 3.3K
-12V
R470 22K
R475 49.9K
R478 10.0K 1 13 12
U7
14 U407D TL074
R480 100
-6.9V
6 - 12
DWG. NO. 1 2 3 4
REV.
201207-SCH
10
11
12
E . C . N.
HD7 FAN
FAN+12V
H 1 2 +12V
REV
1
DATE
02-05-05
DWN
DW
APPROVALS CHK CM
DW
PE
HEADER 2 .156
ALC / METERING
RF EXCITER
C54 1.0
R42 4.7K
+12V
HD2
1 2 3 4 5 6 HEADER 6X1 .156 1 2 3 4 NC Vin
U2
NC NC 8 7 6 5 2 3
+12V
C50 1.0
H +5.00V
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
C25 .01
C26 .01
C27 .01
J2
J1
J1
1.0
REF02 J5 MCX
+12V
HEADER 12 +5.00V
HD42
HEADER 12
HD41
HEADER 5 x 2 +12V
HD31
26 HEADER
J6 MCX
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
6 5
TL072 7 U3B
/LOCK ALC METER PAV METER PAI METER RFW METER PATEMP METER BATT FAULT SUM
NC
FSK IN
-12V
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 HEADER 5 x 2
ALC
HD4
/LOCK
NC
Z31 OPEN
ADD FOR M2HD-S MOTHERBOARD ONLY
AUDIO PROCESSOR
HD12
COMP OUT +12V
NC
HEADER 3X1 F
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 HEADER 5 x 2
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
J2 HD13
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 HEADER 13 x 2 +12V -12V /+6DB /+12DB L VU R VU +5.00V PROC A PROC B PROC C BR GR HI GR
NC
+5.00V
+12V
HD61
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 HEADER 10 x 2
C43 .001
METER RFW ALC METER PAV METER PAI
METER BATT
FAULT SUM
HD11
L IN1 L IN2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 HEADER 10 x 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
J3 J1
HD3
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 HEADER 10 x 2 LPIN L
NC NC
C17 .01
COMP METER
Z32 OPEN
COMP METER
Z33
E
NC NC NC NC ALC
Z29
OPEN
-12V
C19 .01 C20 .01 C21 .01 C22 .01 C23 .01 C24 .01
COMP OUT +5.00V MON L MON R
NC
STEREO/MON +12V
Z15
Z16
Z17
Z18
Z19
Z20
Z21
Z22
C40 OPEN C39 OPEN C38 OPEN C36 .01 C35 .01 C34 .01 C33 .01 C32 .01 C30 .01 C31 .01 C29 .001 C28 .001
ALC
TP2 +12V
STEREO GENERATOR
HD22
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 HEADER 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
TP3 -12V
+12V +5.00V D
LPIN L LPOUT L LPIN R LPOUT R 38KHZ COMP METER /EXT ENABLE OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN COMP METER RIGHT LEFT /EXT ENABLE 38KHZ
J2
+12V
TP4 +12V
HD23
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 HEADER 5 x 2 -12V
TP5 GND
R24 220
R23 220
R22 220
R21 220
R20 220
R19 220
R18 220
R17 220
STEREO/MON
J3
HD21
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
D1 1N4148
R IN1 R IN2 L IN1 L IN2 EXT RTN EXT IN SCA IN
J4
8 15 7 14 6 13 5 12 4 11 3 B 10 2 9 1 _/EXT ENABLE _METER PAV _METER PAI _METER RFW _METER PA TEMP _METER BATT _FAULT SUM _/AUTO CAR. OFF _/CARRIER OFF _FSK IN _ALC _COMPOSITE OUT _38 KHZ OUT
J1
Z6 R1 1K Z4 R2 R16 220 R15 100 R14 390 R13 390 JMP1 OPEN R12 1K R11 220 C11 .01 C12 OPEN C13 .001 C14 .001 C15 .01 C16 .01 OPEN JMP2 OPEN
/EXT ENABLE COMP METER
OPEN
R IN1
COMP METER
R3 1K
C9 220pF C8 220pF
COMP OUT
HEADER 12
NOTES: UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED: 1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% TOL. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS.
OPEN
L IN2
1K
FSK IN
Z2 JUMPER C1 220pF
C3 220pF
C4 220pF
R9 1K
R8 1K
R5 1K
R6 1K
R7 1K R10 240
SCA IN
OPEN Z11
EXT RTN
DB15
R33 24.9K 1%
2 +12V
OPEN
OPEN
R38 4.02K 1%
R35 24.9K 1%
R37 3.9K
6 5
OPEN
TL072 7 U1B
APPROVALS DWN CHK CM PE DISTRIBUTION
DW 11-23-04
-12V
NON-OMNIA BOARD INPUT IMPEDENCE 50 KOHM Z1, Z2 ON Z3, Z5, Z7, Z8 OFF Z4, Z6 OFF 600 OHM Z1, Z2 ON Z3, Z5, Z7, Z8 ON Z4, Z6 OFF
HI LO GND
R36 24.9K 1%
IREC
Error : logo3A.jpg file not found. 574-262-8900
3 2 1
1 2 3
INTERNATIONAL RADIO AND ELECTRONICS CORP. 25166 LEER DRIVE ELKHART, IN. 46514 WWW.IREC1.COM
A
Z1, Z2 OFF Z3, Z5, Z7, Z8 OFF Z4, Z6 ON ANALOG LEFT/RIGHT LEFT IN 1 LEFT IN 2
DW
11-23-04
TITLE:
SIZE DWG . NO .
UNCONTROLLED
UNLESS OTHERWISE MARKED IN RED INK BY CM AS A CONTROLLED COPY, COPIES OF THESE DOCUMENTS INCLUDING ASSOCIATED ELECTRONIC REPRODUCTIONS ARE FOR REFERENCE ONLY.
6 7 8
THESE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE THE PROPERTY OF INTERNATIONAL RADIO AND ELECTRONICS CORP. AND SHALL NOT BE REPRODUCED, COPIED OR USED AS THE BASIS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR SALE OF APPARATUS OR DEVICES WITHOUT PERMISSION.
9 10
K
FILENAME:
D
SCALE : NONE
11
201207-SCH
PROJ NO.
12
1
SHEET 1 OF 1
Reference Drawings
6 - 13
Jumper FMA "E" Z1 Z2 Z3 Z4 Z5 Z6 Z7 Z8 Z9 Z10 Z11 Z12 Z13 Z14 Z15 Z16 Z17 Z18 Z19 Z20 Z21 Z22 Z23 Z24 Z25 Z26 Z27 Z28 Z29 Z30 Z31 Z32 Z33 JMP1 JMP2 Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Short Short Open Open
FMA "T" 50K input Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMA"T" 600 input Short Short Short Open Short Open Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMA "R" Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMA "Omnia" Analog input Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMA "Omnia" AES input Open Open Open Short Open Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMX "E" FMX "T" 50K input Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Open Short Open Short Open Short Open Short Open Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Short Open Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMX "T" 600 input Short Short Short Open Short Open Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMX "R" FMX "Omnia" Analog input Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open
FMX "Omnia" AES input Open Open Open Short Open Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open
FMX RMS
Short Short Short Short Short Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Open Short Short Short
Open Open
6-14
D 8167-5
Illustration 610 Display Board (Add 600 to component designators for schematic reference)
614
R27
JP601 +12V +12V R602 100K D601 1N4148 1 C601 1.0UF 3 4 U601A TL072 D602 1N4148 R604 1.2K 5.00V 9 8 7 6 5 C602 1.0UF +12V -12V 4 3 2 1
DL601-610 +5V RED YEL GRN GRN 50mA GRN GRN GRN GRN GRN R606 R605 1K RED 330 Q601 MPS-A56 HI GR R613 1K C605 .001 +12V 5.00V +5V -12V RED YEL GRN GRN 50mA GRN GRN GRN GRN GRN C607 0.1 BR GR R617 1K C608 .001 R618 1.2K LOCK LAMP PROC A 5.00V R650 100K BECKMAN INPUT DL646 RED PA DC PADC LAMP 2 3 8 1 4 -12V U606A TL072 R632 620 R631 5.6K R633 33K 6 7 5 D616 D617 U606B TL072 DP10 R634 5.1K DECIMAL POINT DP100 R656 220 F.S. DL636-643 GRN DP10 DP100 +12V C631 1.0UF VR601 7805 1 C623 1.0UF IN OUT C 2 3 C624 1.0UF C629 1.0UF 14 U9 7 8 16 PA DC VOLTS U10 U11 PA DC AMPS VEE VSS 19.99 GRN PA TEMPERATURE 199.9 GRN SUPPLY DC VOLTS 199.9 GRN VOLTMETER 199.9 13 14 15 12 1 5 2 4 6 11 10 9 U610 74HC193 U609B 74HC14 3 C633 .001 R642 10K +5V
NOTES :
R645 100
Q604 2N5087
6 C611 0.1 5
+5V
L VU
R601 68K
R603 1K
C628 1.0UF
1 8 L 2 +5V L 1 1 L 3
1 7 L 4
1 6 L 5
1 5 L 6
1 4 L 7
1 3 L 8
1 2 L 9
1 1 L 1 0
1 0 D605 COMPOSITE R622 10.0K 1N6263 R623 10.0K +12V 2 3 4 R624 1M C612 .001 D607 C610 0.1 8 1 D606 1N6263 R653 1K 6 5 U607B TL072 7 -12V R643 3.3M U613A TL072 +12V D618 Q603 2N5210 2 3 4 -12V R626 33K DL626-635 R649 10K POT H R625 10K MOD. CAL. DITHER C625 0.1 8 1 R647 1K 5.00V R627 2.7K
R652 5.6K
"110" RED YEL GRN GRN GRN GRN GRN GRN GRN GRN GRN "PILOT" R629 680
8 7 6 5
U604 V 2 V + 3
R648 1K +12V
4 3 2 1
U607A TL072
JP602 R608 100K C603 1.0UF R VU +12V R610 1.2K 5.00V 9 8 7 6 5 C604 1.0UF +12V 4 3 2 1
R607 68K
6 7 5 U601B TL072
D603 1N4148
R609 1K
1 8 L 3
1 7 L 4
1 6 L 5
1 5 L 6
1 4 L 7
1 3 L 8
1 2 L 9
1 1 L 1 0
1 0
SW603 R655 4.7K DL644-647, 659 SWR SWR LAMP DL644 RED C634 1.0UF 5.00V +5V
D604 1N4148
U605 L 1 1 V 2 V + 3
LM3914 D L O 4 I N 5 D H I 6 R O U T 7 R A D J 8 M O D E 9
+5V
R616 33K
R657 1K BECKMAN
RF LEVEL
RED R611 1K
+12V
LOCK
SW601
/+6DB
PROC B
/+12DB
R619 510
R620 220K
+5V
DL659 RED
C609 1.0UF
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 +5V
Pin 1, upper left from front of unit. J601 +12V -12V L VU R VU 5.00V PROC A PROC B PROC C BR GR HI GR U611 74HC4051 X0 X1 X2 X3 X4 X5 X6 X7 INH A B C X 3 R630 150 J602 SEL A SEL B SEL C RF LEVEL 5.00V PATEMP LAMP PADC LAMP INPUT LOCK LAMP SWR LAMP 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 +12V -12V /+12DB /+6DB 5.00V +12V -12V
+12V
ALC
HEADER 10X2
+5V 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
U612
ICL7107
5.00V
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 C627 1.0UF R651 2.2K -12V DZ601 6.2V 5 +5V U609C 74HC14 6
UP SW605
R628 1K
U609A 74HC14 2
C618 0.1
R638 100K
15 1 10 9 4 5 4 11 14
A B C D UP DN LOAD CLR
QA QB QC QD CO BO
C616 0.1 POLY DPM IN R635 100K C614 0.1 R637 470K
C617 0.1
C619 100PF
SCM, FM DISPLAY
1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED.
103206
DISPLAY 615
DPM REF
R636 100K
11
C615 0.1
Reference Drawings
Reference Drawings
6 - 17
CARR SW R701 4.7K /CARRIER OFF R733 4.7K R702 10K U703C 5 6 +12V
74HC14 D701 1N4148 U703A 1 2 3 U703B 4 DZ701 1N4735 6.2V D702 1N4148
FM VOLTAGE REGULATOR
VDD VCC DRAWN CHECKED SCALE PROJ # NONE MLOWCMO 10.SCM JFL 8-25-97 APPROVED BY : ME EE PE NEXT ASM: DO NOT SCALE PRINT SUPERSEDES E.C. DWG. NO. REV
/AUTO CARRIER
74HC14
R707 180K
+12V
U702 74HC4060 D706 1N4148 7 U701B TL074 R716 10K 11 12 PI Q4 Q5 Q6 RST Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 Q12 Q13 Q14 PO PO 7 5 4 6 14 13 15 1 2 3 9 10
FILENAME:
103207
THESE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE THE PROPERTY OF CROWN INTERNATIONAL, INC. AND SHALL NOT BE REPRODUCED, COPIED, OR USED AS THE BASIS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR SALE OF APPARATUS OR DEVICES WITHOUT PERMISSION.
D703 1N6263
R708 100K
6 5
TIME-OUT SELECT MINUTES 0.5 2 4 8 JP701 2 4 6 8 10 1 3 5 7 9 D708 1N4148 U703D 9 8 28V ENABLE
NOTES : _______ _______ 1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED.
C701 .01
R714 220
HEADER 5X2
R710 75K 1
D704 1N6263
R711 100K
DL702 RED
R721 24.9K 1
PROGRAM DETECT
R720 10K
R724 100
Change:
R732 100K to 49.9K D714 1N5822 to MUR110 DZ703 1.5KE36A to ICTE-12 C721, C722 3300UF to 220UF/50V 1UF/100V between L701 and L703 under board. 7912 regulator, using "L704" pads. Jumper "U706" pads 1 and 2. DZ705
D710 1N4148
1 -IN 2 +IN
V+
VB OUT
8 7
CS 7 C 6 E 5
8 7 6 5
8 7 6 5
C714 0.1
R735 51
Q701 IRF540
3 OSC 4 GND
CS 6 VS 5
C715 0.1
R736 2K
R737 4.3K
VDD
R728 68K
(+12.5V)
DRVR V+
D711 MUR110
DZ703 ICTE-12
R739 510
12 C708 220 Pf
11
10 U703E 74HC14
R749 1.5K
R732 82.5K 1
R741 1K
R727 620
R729 4.12K 1
CARR SW DRVR V+
-12V +12V
METER UNREG
R750 100
R742 1K
+12V +12V
6 5 4 3 2 1
+12V
6 5 4 3 2 1
HD704
DZ704 ICTE-12
L701
L702-703
D715 1N4004
C724 47 20V
L Wire Turns
380uH #22 80
D714 1N5822
L704 960UH
-12V -12V
Reference Drawings
618
ON CHASSIS
E . C . N.
BATTERY
REV
A B C
DATE
10-31-03 01-29-04 08-10-04
DWN
DW DW DW
APPROVALS CHK CM
DW DW DW
PE
DP DP DP
~
F
+
C1001 0.015F 110V
DC INPUT
D804 BYV72EW-150
274 323
P803 FASTON TAB CIRCUIT BREAKER P804 + UNREG IN FASTON TAB P805 FASTON TAB P807 FASTON TAB
E
C817 330/100V
R801A 27.4K 2
E 1
* Z2
R801B 24.9K
2 1
* Z3
1 2
HD1
1N4735 6.2V
1 2 3 1
V+ CS C E
8 7 6 5
* R828 30K
R809 51.0 R811 Q801 IRF540 R821 10.0K Q804 MPSA06 DZ803 1N4735 6.2V R819 .04 OHM 15W 3%
+
U2
1 2 3 VCC IN ERR ESS VB OUT CS VS 8 7 6 5
C809 .1
2200PF POLY
82K
56PF
R803
R807 2.2K
C805 100PF
C808
2
.0027 IR2125
R810 2.0K
R812A 0.1 5W
L803 30UH
+
R817B 1 2K 2W
TP2
* Z5
P808
PA-DC OUT
* Z7 * Z6
R806B 200K
* DZ807
1N966B 16V
3 1
D803 BYV72EW-150
330/100V
FASTON TAB R818A 2.0K 2W R818B 2.0K 2W C813 .01UF R815 100.0 R813 1.0K
TP1
R816 1.0K 1%
1 1
R805A 330K 2
C806
+
* Z9 * Z8
R805B 200K
D805 1N4148
R804 10.0K 1%
2 3
U803 OP-27GNB
6
*
JUMPER
Z1 Z2 Z3 Z8 Z7 Z6 Z4 Z5 Z9
NOTES:
4 1
FM1
OPEN SHORT SHORT SHORT OPEN SHORT SHORT OPEN OPEN H43608-1 3.3K OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN
FM30
OPEN SHORT SHORT SHORT OPEN SHORT SHORT OPEN OPEN H43395-5 3.3K OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN
FM100
OPEN SHORT SHORT OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT H43533-1 3.3K OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN
FM250
OPEN SHORT SHORT OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT H43533-1 3.3K OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN
EURO
OPEN SHORT SHORT OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT H43533-1 5.11K 1% OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN
HARRIS M1
OPEN SHORT OPEN OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT OPEN SHORT H43533-1 3.3K INSTALLED INSTALLED INSTALLED INSTALLED
HARRIS M2
SHORT OPEN OPEN SHORT OPEN OPEN SHORT SHORT H43533-1 3.3K INSTALLED INSTALLED INSTALLED INSTALLED
UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED: 1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% TOL. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS.
R814 22.0K
Q802 MPSA56
REF DES
L802 R811 R827 R828 DZ806 DZ807
INTERNATIONAL RADIO AND ELECTRONICS CORP. 25166 LEER DRIVE ELKHART, IN. 46514 574-262-8900 Error : logo3A.jpg file not found. WWW.IREC1.COM
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09-30-03 09-30-03
TITLE:
SIZE
UNCONTROLLED UNLESS OTHERWISE MARKED IN RED INK BY CM AS A CONTROLLED COPY, COPIES OF THESE DOCUMENTS INCLUDING ASSOCIATED ELECTRONIC REPRODUCTIONS ARE FOR REFERENCE ONLY.
2 3
THESE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE THE PROPERTY OF INTERNATIONAL RADIO AND ELECTRONICS CORP. AND ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED, COPIED OR USED AS THE BASIS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR SALE OF APPARATUS OR DEVICES WITHOUT PERMISSION.
4 5
DISTRIBUTION
FILENAME:
200915-SCH
PROJ NO. 533
8
C
SHEET
200915-SCH
6
1 OF 1
6 - 20
R817A 100 1
* Z4
REV.
U801
DZ801
C812 1/50V
D802 1N4148
C 7527-2_6 HDR
1.0K
1N966B 16V
* Z1
*DZ806
* R827
R808 1.0K
1 2 3 4 5 6
R20
R19
Illustration 613 Power Amplifier (Add 1100 to component designators for schematic reference)
620
C909
L904 23.2uH
U900
9 8
THESE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE THE PROPERTY OF CROWN INTERNATIONAL, INC. AND SHALL NOT BE REPRODUCED, COPIED, OR USED AS THE BASIS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR SALE OF APPARATUS OR DEVICES WITHOUT PERMISSION.
C903 0.01
CA2832 7 5 3
T900 J2
FM500 P.A.
R900 51 DRAWN CHECKED JFL 7-12-96 ME NONE R103 1001771A.SCM EE PE NEXT ASM: APPROVED BY : SUPERSEDES E.C. DWG. NO. PROJ # FILENAME: REV DO NOT SCALE PRINT
C900 R903 4.7K 0.01 L900 33uH R904 51 R905 10K C904 0.01 R902 2.7 5W C901 0.01 R901 51
SCALE
RF DRIVER BD
C902 0.01 D900 1N753A 6.2V
100177
NOTES : _______ _______ 1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED.
J3
J5
C1126 0.1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 J1 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72
R1101 15K DZ1110 1N4735 6.2V R1110 10K R1120 2.7K C1110 0.01 C1121 0.01 DISC
R1111 10K POT V C1111 0.01 R1112 5.6 2W R1116 10K T1111P C1112 0.01 R1117 24 3W T11S C1114 0.01 C1115 0.01 C1138 0.068 C1123 0.01 C1124 0.01 C1113 0.01 C1125 60PF R1113 5.6 2W L1122 50NH
0.1
Q1101 BLF278
C1127 0.1
C1128 0.1
C1133 0.1
C1134 0.1
C1135 0.1
C1136 0.1
C1137 0.1
R1119 200 3W
C1116 27PF
T1121
R1114 5.6 2W
R1115 5.6 2W
PA INPUT BD
L1124A
PA OUTPUT BD
L1125A
C1129 L1123 L1124B DZ1110 1N4735 6.2V ZENER R1111 10K POT V C1111 0.01 R1112 5.6 2W R1116 10K T1111P C1112 0.01 R1117 24 3W T11S C1114 0.01 C1115 0.01 C1138 0.068 C1123 0.01 C1124 0.01 T1121 R1113 5.6 2W Q1101 BLF278 L1122 50NH R1110 10K R1120 2.7K C1110 0.01 R1101 15K C1121 0.01 DISC L1121 50NH C1122 0.01 DISC 0.1 L1125B J2 L1126
C1131 0.1
C1130 0.1
_ _ _
B1
+
B2
R1119 200 3W
C1116 27PF
+
B3
R1114 5.6 2W
R1115 5.6 2W
PA INPUT BD
PA OUTPUT BD
Illustration 614 RF Output Filter (Add 1200 to component designators for schematic reference)
622 FM500 User's Manual
P10421-9
(455MHz)
(195MHz)
(176MHz)
(252MHz)
C1204 7.1PF
C1206 9.3PF
C1208 5.13PF
R1202 * 75
R1203 10
RF OUT
L1201 250NH
C1201A 10PF
C1217 3.5PF
HD1201 1 2 3 Approx. 7V RMS with 200W RF in. D1201 1N6263 R1206 1K C1213 .001
D1202 1N6263
C1218 47PF SM
R1201 100
RF MONITOR
R1207 100K
C1214 .01
R1208 20K
C1216 .001
TURNS 14 3 3 3 3
* IF NECESSARY, SELECT R1202 FOR SWR READING OF 1.1 OR BETTER WITH 50-OHM LOAD. R1205 = R1202 R1202,R1203,C1211,D1202,C1216 ON UNDERSIDE OF CIRCUIT BOARD.
NOTES : _______ _______ 1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4W, 5% UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. 3. C1201-1209A,1217 are circuit board pads.
103209
Reference Drawings
623
Reference Drawings
6 - 25
E . C . N.
264
F
REV
M N O P
DATE
12-10-03 01-29-04 06-14-04 03-22-05
DWN
DW DW DW DW
APPROVALS CHK CM
DW DW DW DW
PE
DP MH DP DP
F
C23 .01
C24 .01 R5
L6 OPEN
C4 OPEN
OPEN
XU1 MHW6342T
IN GND GND N/C VCC N/C GND GND OUT
R18 0
C7 0.01
R7 OPEN
C8 OPEN
L4 10.4uH Q1 BLF245 T1
G S D
L5 23.2uH
C15 680pF
J2 RF OUT
J1 RF IN
D1 OPEN C1
1 3 2
D2 OPEN
1 2
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
.01
R2 OPEN C2 OPEN
R4 OPEN R3 OPEN
R1 OPEN
C3 .01
L2 OPEN
L3
C10 10pF
C11 36pF
C12 36pF
C13 5pF
C14 27pF P
VR1 OPEN
1 D GND Vin Vout 3 +5V
FOR FM100 AND FM250: 18V FOR FM500: 20V FOR FM30: FEED POINT FROM PWR. REGULATOR PWB.
J3
1
R11 4.7K R12 OPEN R10 10K C20 OPEN D3 1N753A 6.2V
T
U2A
1
5 6
U2B
7
C19 OPEN
B
OPEN
4
1. ALL RESISTORS ARE IN OHMS, 1/4 WATT +/- 5% TOL. 2. ALL CAPACITORS ARE IN MICROFARADS.
APPROVALS
J5
1 A
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1 2 3
THESE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS ARE THE PROPERTY OF INTERNATIONAL RADIO AND ELECTRONICS CORP. AND ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED, COPIED OR USED AS THE BASIS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OR SALE OF APPARATUS OR DEVICES WITHOUT PERMISSION.
4 5
DWN CHK CM PE
DW DW DP
INTERNATIONAL RADIO AND ELECTRONICS CORP. 25166 LEER DRIVE ELKHART, IN. 46514 574-262-8900 WWW.IREC1.COM
FM RF DRIVER
DWG . NO . REV.
A
DISTRIBUTION
FILENAME: 6
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SCALE : NONE
7
Q43310-4
PROJ NO. 533
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SHEET
1 OF 1
B_L_SHT1_A.DOT REV. A
6 - 26
L1 33uH
C21 OPEN
REV.
C22 OPEN
Mother Board
Metering Board
HD504 J 403
Ribbon
P1 Unreg
6 5 4 3 2 1
HD505
HD 502
Ribbon Cable
HD561
Ribbon
6 5 4 3 2 1
3 2 1
HD503
HD701
6 5 4 3 2 1
HD702
J 602
J 601
Display Board
Reflectometer Feed-Thru
HD1202
RF Out
RF In
P807
1 2 3 4 5 6
P803
P802
P801
P806
P804
P808
P805
J1 Back view
1 2 4 5 6 8 9 37 38 40 41 42 44 45 46 47
Ribbon Cable
P1
BNC
P3
P3
Header
DC Bus
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Socket
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 1 2 3 4 5 6
12 13 14 15
Temp Sensor
Power Transformer
RED / WHT BLU / WHT
17 18 19 20 22 23 24 25
52 53 54 55 56 57
PA 2 DC Input
DC Bus
62 63 64 65 67 68 69 71 72
120 VAC
57 VAC
28 29
P806
P804 P805
P803
P802
P801
P807
Bridge Rectifier
PA RF Output
P2
BNC
31 32 33 35 36
P808
100 VAC
BLK
BRN
Carrier Switch
Off
A
Gnd
D
A
Gnd
Red
Blk P5
Red/Wht
Wht
S1A
S1B
On
Red Blk
P4
100V 220V
P1
Fan
D
P7
AC Power Switch
Off
P6
AC Distribution Board
Reference Drawings
627
Receiver
628
71
7.1 Service
The product warranty (see opposite page) outlines our responsibility for defective products. Before returning a product for repair or replacement (our choice), call our Customer Service department using the following telephone number: (866) 262-8917 Our Customer Service Representative will give you further instructions regarding the return of your product. Use the original shipping carton or a new one obtained from Crown. Place shipping spacers between the slide-out power amplifier assembly and the back panel. Please fill out the Factory Service Instructions sheet (page 75) and include it with your returned product.
72
73
Notes:
74
For units in warranty (within 3 years of purchase from any authorized Crown Dealer): We pay for ground UPS shipments from anywhere in the continental U.S. and Federal Express Second Day service from Hawaii and Alaska to the factory and back to you. Expedited service/shipment is available for an additional charge. You may ship freight collect (COD for cost of freight) or forward your receipt for shipping charges which we will reimburse. We do not cover any charges for shipping outside the U.S. or any of the expenses involved in clearing customs. If you have any questions about your Crown Broadcast product, please contact Crown Broadcast Customer Service at: Telecphon: (574) 262-8900 Fax: (574) 262-5399 Name: Shipping Address: Phone Number: Model: Serial Number: Fax: Purchase Date: Nature of the Problem
(Describe the conditions that existed when the problem occurred and what attempts were made to correct it.)
Company:
Other equipment in your system: If warranty has expired, payment will be: Card Number: Cash/Check VISA Please Quote before servicing Exp. Date: Signature: Mastercard COD
75
Appendix1
PADC Volts 51.3 48.3 45.5 42.7 39.4 36.0 33.0 29.6 25.4 21.1
PADC Amps 13.91 13.29 12.74 12.14 11.46 10.68 10.00 9.25 8.28 7.29
RF Power 550 500 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100
Efficiency 77% 78% 77% 77% 78% 78% 76% 73% 71% 65%
Power measurements were made at 97.1 MHz. Voltage and current measurements were taken from the unit's built-in metering. The accuracy of the internal metering is better than 2%. Return loss of the RF load was greater than -34dB at test frequency.
Appendix2
A B C
Glossary
The following pages define terms and abbreviations used throughout this manual.
Glossary
G1
A B C
AF Audio Frequency; the frequencies between 20 Hz and 20 kHz in the electromagnetic spectrum. Automatic Level Control Amplitude Modulation; the process of impressing information on a radio-frequency signal by varying its amplitude. The range of frequencies available for signalling. Binary-Coded Decimal; a digital system that uses binary codes to represent decimal digits. Beat Frequency Oscillator A bayonet locking connector for miniature coax; said to be short for Bayonet-Neill-Concelman. As used in the FM transmitter, refers to the entire audio spectrum as opposed to the spectrum influenced by the pre-emphasis; also called "Wideband." A continuous signal which is modulated with a second, information-carrying signal. In FM broadcasting, this term generally refers to the interaction between the main (L+R) and the subcarrier (LR) signals as opposed to "separation" which generally refers to leakage between left (L) and right (R) channels. A high average of modulation over time. The amount by which the carrier frequency changes either side of the center frequency. Dual In-line Pins; term used to describe a pin arrangement. The unwanted changes in signal wave shape that occur during transmission between two points. Digital Panel Meter Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory Electrostatic Discharge; a discharge that is potentially destructive to sensitive electronic components.
FM500 User's Manual
ALC AM
bandwidth BCD
BFO BNC
broadband
carrier
crosstalk
DIP
distortion
G2
exciter
(1) A circuit that supplies the initial oscillator used in the driver stage. (2) A transmitter configuration which excludes stereo generation and audio processing. Field-Effect Transistor A circuit that generates precise frequency signals by means of a single crystal oscillator in conjunction with frequency dividers and multipliers. Frequency Modulation; the process of impressing information on a radio signal by varying its frequency.
FM
FSK
Frequency Shift Keying; an FM technique for shifting the frequency of the main carrier at a Morse code rate. Used in the on-air identification of frequencies. The process of reducing the gain of a given amplifier. Undesirable energy at integral multiples of a desired, fundamental frequency. Hight Frequency; Frequencies in the 3.0 to 30.0 MHz range. Frequencies affected by the pre-emphasis. Input/Output Light-Emitting Diode The process by which a carrier is varied to represent an information-carrying signal. Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor; a voltage-controlled device with high input impedance due to its electrically isolated gate. A transmission within a localized geographic area (ranging from a single room to a several kilometers). Power Amplifier
gain reduction
harmonics
HF
MOSFET
nearcast
PA
Glossary
G3
A B C
PAI PAV pilot pre-emphasis Power Amplifier Current Power Amplifier Voltage A 19kHz signal used for stereo transmissions. The deliberate accentuation of the higher audio frequencies; made possible by a high-pass filter. The procedure and/or circuits used to modify incoming audio to make it suitable for transmission. An option which adds incoming RF capability to an existing transmitter. See also "Translator." Radio Frequency; (1) A specific portion of the electromagnetic spectrum between audiofrequency and the infrared portion. (2) A frequency useful for radio transmission (roughly 10 kHz and 100,000 MHz). Subsidiary Communications Authorization; see "subcarrier." Signal to Noise Unintended signals present on the transmission output terminal. A tolerance or measure of how well a component, circuit, or system maintains constant operating conditions over a period of time. See "pilot." The amount of left-channel information that bleeds into the right channel (or vice versa). A carrier signal which operates at a lower frequency than the main carrier frequency and which modulates the main carrier. The process used to hold back or stop certain frequencies.
processing
receiver
RF
SCA
stability
subcarrier
suppression
G4
SWR
Standing-Wave Ratio; on a transmission line, the ratio of the maximum voltage to the minimum voltage or maximum current to the minimum current; also the ratio of load impedance to intended (50 ohms) load impedance. Total Harmonic Distortion A transmitter designed to internally change an FM signal from one frequency to another for retransmission. Used in conjunction with terrestrial-fed networks. A transmitter equipped with an FSK ID option for rebroadcasting a satellite-fed signal. Voltage Standing-Wave Ratio; see "SWR." See "broadband." Voltage-Controlled Oscillator
THD translator
satellator
Glossary
G5
Index
Symbols
19kHz level adjustment 53 phase adjustment 53 bias set 56 booster transmitter use 14 broadband. See audio: broadband bypass audio processor 212, 49
A
AC. See power: input ALC 33, 38, 48 altitude operating range 18 amperes PA DC 33, 38 amplifier reference drawings 20 RF 413 bias set 56 antenna 29 mismatch 33 applications 13 audio broadband 35 distortion 59 frequency 59 high 35 input connectors 43 input level 35 monitor connections 212, 45 performance 57 pre-emphasized 35 processing 35, 49 wide 35 audio processor 36 adjustments 52 board location 43 bypass 211, 212, 49 circuit description 43 indicators 35 input 35 reference drawings 64
C
cables audio input 210 carrier 49, 58 automatic turnoff 213, 38, 56, 5 10 frequency 58, 510 carrier switch 34, 55 Channel. See frequency channel. See frequency main 510 main into sub 510 sub into main 510 chassis circuit 413 circuit boards audio processor 43, 64 display 14 metering 10 motherboard 12 power regulator 18 RF exciter 8 stereo generator 45, 6 voltage regulator 16 circuits chassis 413 display 410 metering 48 motherboard 49 part numbering 42 power regulator 412 RF exciter 46 stereo generator 44 voltage regulator 411 components numbering 42 composite input 211 input connection 211 output
B
backup transmitter use 14 bandwidth RF 58 battery. See power: input Bessel nulls 59
Index1
adjustment 53 connectors audio input 210 audio monitoring 212 composite in 211 remote I/O 211, 213 RF input 29 RF output 29 RF output monitoring 29 SCA In 211 XLR 211, 43 cooling fan 32 control 49 coverage area 14 crosstalk 17 measurements 59 current limit PA 55
D
DC. See power: input de-emphasis 212, 52, 57 jumpers 212 delay program failure to carrier turnoff 2 13, 56 dimensions 18 DIP socket 210, 49 display circuit description 410 front panel 32, 35, 37 modulation calibration 56 display board reference drawings 14 distortion 17 audio 59 harmonic 45
temperature 38 FCC guidelines 18, 58, 510 filter RF output 22 frequency carrier 58, 510 measurement 54 pilot 58 receiver 27 response 59 selection 25, 54 receiver 27 samples 26 synthesizer 510 frequency synthesizer. See RF exciter adjustments 54 front panel display modulation calibration 56 FSK 15, 16 measurement 54
G
gain control 35 gain reduction 44 gain switches input 36
H
harmonic distortion 45 harmonics 58 heatsink 38 highband 35 processing 44 humidity operating range 18
I
I/O connector 12, 213 pinout 213 indicators audio processor 35 fault 38, 410 highband 35 LED 35, 37, 410 pilot 35 wideband 35, 56 input audio connections 210 composite 211 fault 38 gain switches 35 program fault 213 SCA connection 211
E
emissions 58 exciter. See RF exciter configuration 14
F
fan control 49 fault indicators 410 input 38 lock 38 power 38 servicing 38 SWR 38
Index2
L
labels 110 LEDs 35, 410 line voltage 23 lock status 47 lock fault 38
M
metering 12 circuit description 48 metering board adjustments 55 location 48, 415 reference drawings 10 modulation 211, 35, 53, 57, 58 calibration 56 compensator 26 display 35 percentage 35, 59 monitor audio 212, 45 mono operation 211, 36 motherboard circuit description 49 reference drawings 12 multimeter 37 front panel 33
N
networks satellite-fed 16 terrestrial-fed 15 noise 17, 38 measurements 59
pilot indicator 35 power AC supply 413 AC voltage selection 23 amplifier reference drawings 20 fault 38 input 18, 23 FCC guidelines 510 output 13, 17, 58 display 37 output filter 414 regulator circuit description 412 RF 33, 37 RF amplifier 413 transformer 413 power regulator board reference drawings 18 power switch 34 pre-emphasis 17, 44, 52, 57 curve 212 networks 43 processing audio 212, 35 control 36 control setting 32 highband 35, 44 processor audio bypass 212 program failure 213, 510 program source 210, 36
R
receiver frequency selection 27 option 15 specifications 19 reflectometer 414, 22 regulatory approvals 18 remote control 12 remote I/O connector 213 pinout 213 remote operation 213 repair warranty 73
O
operating environment 18, 22 options 13, 14, 16 output power 17, 37 display 37 output filter 414
P
part numbering 42 parts spares 72 performance checklist 57 tests 510 pilot frequency 58
Index3
R (continued)
RF amplifier 413 bias set 56 bandwidth 18, 58 exciter 25, 211 board location 25, 46 circuit description 46 reference drawings 8 input 15, 29 output 12, 15, 17, 33, 37 impedance 17 output filter 414, 22 tuning 27
SWR 37 calibrate 55 fault 38 SWR fault 49 synchronization 411 synthesizer. See RF exciter
T
temperature fault 38, 49 operating range 18, 510 PA 33, 38 test point voltage 38 tests performance 57, 510 time-out program input failure 213 transformer 413 translator transmitter use 15
S
safety 110 satellator transmitter use 16 SCA 15 input connection 211 sensitivity monaural 19 stereo 19 separation stereo 17 stereo generator 53 service warranty 73 Service Instructions 75 specifications receiver 19 transmitter 17 stand-alone transmitter use 14 stereo separation 17, 59 stereo generator 12, 212 adjustments 53 board location 45 bypassing 211 circuit description 44 reference drawings 6 subcarrier 510 38kHz 510 suppression subcarrier 17 switches carrier 32, 34, 55 input gain 35, 36 Normal-Bypass 212, 49 power 34 receiver 27 stereo-mono 32, 36
V
VCO 46 voltage AC selection 23 voltage regulator 38 adjustments 56 circuit description 411 reference drawings 16 voltage selection 23 voltmeter display 38 volts PA DC 33, 38 VSWR 12, 29
W
Warranty 73 weight 18 wideband 35, 56
X
XLR connectors 210
Index4