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G8MNY  > TECH     12.07.06 16:34l 289 Lines 13843 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 38003_GB7CIP
Read: DL1LCA GUEST
Subj: FM Stereo Radio Principles
Path: DB0FHN<DB0MRW<DK0WUE<DB0RES<ON0AR<VK6HGR<GB7YFS<GB7CIP
Sent: 060712/1258Z @:GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EU #:38003 [Caterham] $:38003_GB7CIP
From: G8MNY@GB7CIP.#32.GBR.EU
To  : TECH@WW

By G8MNY                                            (Updated Feb 06)
(8 Bit ASCII Graphics use code page 437 or 850) 
Being involved with 28 short term radio stations in UK (RSLs) over the last 12
years, here is part of a talk I do on it on the technical side.

AUDIO
There are 3 main parameters to Audio quality.

  FREQUENCY RANGE
  Here is the approximate frequency plot for some audio sources. Note that the
  old disk system was not really limited & special equipment can do Quad audio
  with high frequency sub-carriers!
    
  ³Sub Sonic³<- - - - - - - Human ear response - - - - - - - ->³Ultra Sonic >
  ³I            BASS                 MID              TREBLE
  ³N   < - - - - - - - - - - - Disk H i F i - - - - - - - - - - - >
  ³F     < - - - - - - - - - C.D. H i F i - - - - - - - - - - ->
  ³R         < - - - - - - - - Broadcast HiFi - - - - - - - ->
  ³A            < - - - - Ä - A.M. Radio - - - - - - ->
  ³ F E E L I N G              <- - - COMMS - - ->
  ÀÄÄÄÂÄÄÂÄÄÄÂÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÂÄÂÄÄÂ>Frequency
 DC  10 20  30  50   100      300       1k       3   5   10  15 20 30kHz 

  The C.D. is the best source most people are familiar with, its frequency
  range is limited by the 44kHz sampling rate & the requirement to filter off
  all the frequencies higher than 22kHz to stop aliasing mixes caused by the
  sampling rate.

  Broadcast FM is limited to 15kHz to stop problems with the stereo pilot
  used. But 15kHz represent a good compromise for the upper limit which is why
  it was chosen.

  Broadcast AM (EU) uses 9kHz ch spacing so in theory 4.5kHz should be the
  upper limit, but in practice 6kHz is the limit (7kHz -40dB) to make it sound
  better.

  Comms Audio is the smallest bandwidth that can easily be understood, but
  not having any treble there is confusion over F & S, B P E G D, M N letters!

  I have not included Digital Broadcast as he quality is quite variable from
  near CD quality down to phone call quality dependent on the datarate assigned
  for that particular programme etc.

  COMMON SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIOS
  This is the measure of unwanted noises below the wanted sound..
  eg. Hiss & Hum, or windage/engine noise, Neighbours/street noises etc.
   
   0dB´ Noisy Conversation
   10 ´ Poor Comms, NORMAL CAR
   20 ´ Fair Comms
   30 ´ VERY QUIET CAR                        AM RADIO
   40 ´ Typical Cassette Tape, Living rooms
   50 ´ Reel-Reel tape, Dolby Cassette
   60 ´ New Vinyl Record                      FM RADIO/TV SOUND
   70 ´ Mini disk (unmasked noise)
   80 ´ Dat tape.                             DAB, TV NICAM
   90 ´ Perfect Digital CD, apparent Minidisk
  100 ´
  110 ´
  120 ´ Ear Threshold Noise/signal pain

  HARMONIC DISTORTION
  This the amount of unwanted signals generated in harmonics of the wanted
  signal in the audio pass band of interest. It is usually very dependent on
  the level, except for digital systems where it is a mathematical design
  feature.

  It is measured as a % of the signal, so 10% = -20dB in harmonics.
    %    dB
   10 Å -20  Cheap AM Radio at high Volume, Comms Audio
    5 Å -26  Film Optical Sound 
    3 Å -30  Cassette & Reel Tapes
    1 Å -40  Quality Valve Amps                    AM BROADCAST
   .5 Å -46  High Quality Disk,                    FM BROADCAST
   .3 Å -50  Most Loudspeakers??
   .1 Å -60  Most AF Amps,                         DAB, NICAM
  0.05Å -66  Good modern AF Amps.
  0.03Å -70  Most Digital AF sources.

  Sometimes the above parameters are joined together in a Signal In Noise
  And Distortion (SINAD) rating for measured RF signal level of a Rx.

FM EMPHASIS
The FM Radio system suffers noise level that rises with frequency. To mask this
the treble is lifted on Tx & cut on Rx, this substantially reduces the hiss, &
top end harmonic distortion, but at the cost of the Treble dynamic range!
eg. with a time constant of 50uS (75 USA) 15kHz is lifted by 14dB, that
    is 14dB less dynamic range at 15kHz or 20% level after de-emphasis.

+14dB_³ TX Response    _        ³ Rx Response         ³Overall Response³
      ³              ,/³    0dB_³  ________       0dB_³  ____________  ³_100%
      ³            ,/           ³ /  Flat  `\         ³ /       `.   | ³ 
  0dB_³  ________./ 6dB/O       ³       6dB/O`\       ³/          `. ³ ³`.Level
      ³ /Flat       Lift   14dB_³         Cut  `\     ³             `. ³
      ÀÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄ       ÀÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄ    ÀÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÁ 0%
        30Hz   1kHz   15kHz      30Hz   1kHz   15kHz    30Hz  1kHz  15kHz

15kHz WALL FILTER
As the treble is lifted & there is a requirement the audio does not interfere
with the 19kHz stereo pilot tone & higher frequencies the stereo system, a
matched pair of sharp audio cut off filters are needed. The time delay through
these filters MUST be the same, as the stereo image positioning you hear is all
about treble timings.

Other audio tailoring may reduce the subsonic audio as well.

  0dB_³           ___________________________________________
      ³        ,/"                                           `\
      ³     ,/'                                                ³
      ³  ,/'                                                    ³  _
-70dB_³/'                                                        V' `\.__
      ÀÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ
      10Hz      30Hz     100Hz     300Hz      1kHz      10  15  19kHz

LIMITING
As FM must not be over deviated to keep the bandwidth down, a limiter is used,
this is unlike a simple clipper used on comms Tx that lets the signal distort.

Broadcast limiters have fast attack to cope with the spikiest peak, & several
decay time constants are used to mask the limiter's breathing effects. Complex
limiters may also treat the treble separately with separate faster time
constants, as the treble content will be a more prominent part of the pre-
emphasised signal.

To maintain the stereo image both left & right gains must be tracked together!

The result is a signal that has it's ñ peak value accurately limited, but
sounds perfect! With a good limiter you should not be able to tell the
difference between a live studio feed & off air with limiting of around 12-
20dB.

The peak values result in the actual FM deviation, which ensures the correct
overall bandwidth.

       ³  ³ Peaky pulse
      +³  ³³   
       ³_.³ ³    /'\
      0ÅÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÁÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄ.
       ³           '|,^| ³
      -³              U\/

           Multiple CR
    0dB³-.  Recovery        .
       ³  ³  ..-'\/\  _  _.'
GAIN   ³  ³|'       `' \| 
  -20dB³  ' Fast attack 
       ÀÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄ>Time
           2    4    8   10s
  
BAD LF RESPONSE AFTER LIMITER
It is also important that there is no phase distortion between the limiter &
the Tx over the frequencies to be transmitted. If there is the limited signal
can actually get larger....

       No Phase error @ 20Hz          +110kHz_³   ._ With Poor LF Phase
+100%_³ _  __________  _ _ _ _ _         140%_³_ _³ `-._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _³ _
+75kHz³   ³          ³                   100% ³   ³     `-._          ³
      ³   ³          ³                        ³   ³         ³         ³
      ³   ³          ³                        ³   ³         ³         ³
      ³   ³          ³                        ³-._³         ³        _³
-100%_³___³ _ _ _ _ _³__________³ _     -100%_³_ _ _ _ _ _ _³    _.-'_ _
-75kHz³                                 -140%_³             ³_.-'
       Audio with large 20Hz           -110kHz³             '
     content limited to just fit                   -3dB @ 20Hz
     inside this 20Hz envelope.         Tx Peaks now seriously over modulated

The same problem occurs in an AM Tx, where the poor LF phase response on high
level Modulation Transformers cause unexpected hard clipping on certain
waveforms!

Poor LF phase causes over modulation on some programme material containing deep
LF. This is one reason why loud LF is often cut on input of broadcast limiters.

In practice an FM Tx may have another hard limiter (clipper) to protect it from
accidental over modulation.

STEREO MULTIPLEX
The system is designed to be fully compatible with Mono FM radio Rx & without
too much increase in bandwidth.

To make stereo radio signal a sample of the left & right channels is
transmitted every 38kHz. A switch samples the left or right channels @ 76kHz,
to keep the Rx in step a locked 19kHz pilot tone is sent at -20dB (10%) below
peak level.

          76kHz
Left ÄÄo  Switch
        \,_______________________ÚÄÄÄÄÄ¿    ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿    ÚÄÄÄÄÄ¿
RightÄÄo  /|\                    ³ Add ÃÄÄ>Ä´ 53kHz  ÃÄ>ÄÄ´ Add ÃÄÄ> to Tx
           ³   ÚÄÄ¿   ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿  ÀÄÄÂÄÄÙ    ³Low Pass³    ÀÄÄÂÄÄÙ
  76kHz >ÄÄÁÄÄÄ´ö4ÃÄÄÄ´ 19kHz ÃÄÄÄÄÄ´-20dB  ³ Filter ³       ³-30dB
               ÀÄÄÙ   ³Filter ³     ³       ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ  ÚÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄ¿
                      ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ     ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ>Ä´RDS 57kHz³
                                                    PLL ³   UNIT  ³
                                                        ÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ
Left_             Right                MUX    _
  /' `\           ÄÄÄÄ¿     ÚÄÄÄÄÄ     - -/-'- ¿` \    Ú - - - - - -
 ³     ³              ³     ³           ³      ³    ³  ³
³ - - - ³ - - - ³   - ³ - - ³         ³        ³      ³³              ³
         ³     ³      ³     ³                  ³       ³³           ³
          \,_,/       ÀÄÄÄÄÄÙ                  À Ä Ä Ä Ù  \ , _ , /
                                           O/P after switch
                                        (Expanded for diagram)

The low pass filter @ 53kHz used must have now phase shift (group delay) so
that the timings of the stereo samples are no affected. In some designs digital
tricks are used to null out the 2 & 3rd order harmonics of the switching
process (76kHz & 114kHz) so that a less aggressive filter can be used.

RDS (Radio Data System, similar to ARI system in Germany)
This is data phase modulated on to a 57kHz carrier that is phase locked to the
19kHz so that it reduces the modulation & added at 2-3% to the MUX O/P.
The data is actually QPSK @ 1187.5Hz (76kHz/64) which only occupies about 1kHz
bandwidth. It contains many features not many features supported by station,
the common ones are..
PS = Station Service Name
PI = Tx ID code, up to 256 station in a network
AF = Alternative Frequency list (radio searches this on weak signal)
CT = Time
TA & TP = Traffic Flags, allows radio to change AF source.
PTY= Programme Type 16 types, eg. Jazz, News, Pop. etc.
RT = Radio Text, eg. current song title

MUX SPECTRUM
                   Baseband spectrum
                      __         __                               __
  0dB_³ _____...---'''  ³   P   ³  ```---..._____   _____...---'''  ³
      ³³                ³   I   ³                ³ ³                ³
      ³³                ³   L   ³   Difference   ³ ³   Difference   ³
      ³³      L+R       ³   O   ³     Signal     ³ ³     Signal     ³
-20dB_³³      MONO      ³   T   ³    DSB L-R     ³ ³    DSB L-R     ³  RDS
-30dB_³³                ³   ³   ³                ³ ³                ³
      ÀÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÂÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÐÄÄ
      30Hz             15  19  23kHz            38kHz              53  57kHz

The increase in baseband bandwidth from 15kHz for mono to 53kHz for stereo
causes about a 20dB loss in signal to noise, as it adds in not just the noise
from 3x the bandwidth (9dB), but the very poor signal to noise of the high
frequency stereo difference signal that you Rx on FM systems. The resultant
noise in stereo image appears as noise from behind you.

TX SPECTRUM
The Bessel Functions shows the FM sideband harmonic levels, for any particular
modulation index. For mono the modulation index is peak Dev/Mod 
75kHz/15kHz = 5, but this analysis is less useful for very complex signals.

This is where Carson's rule for minimum bandwidth needed can give clearer
indication.
             Bandwidth = 2x Peak Dev + 2x Highest Mod Freq

This gives the bandwidth of sidebands needed for NO distortion. But it does not
take into account that the levels of the highest modulation frequency are only
3% (-30dB) of the peak deviation, with resultantly weak sidebands.

             Deviation
     Mod   <-2x 75kHz ->  Mod           0dB_³         _         ³_100%
    <57.5>ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿<57.5>              ³       /' `\       ³
    ______³            ³______        -20dB-³      ³     ³      ³Ä10%
   ³                          ³            _³    /'       `\    ³_
   ³                          ³       -40dB ³  /'           `\  ³ 1%
ÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÅÄÄÄ         ÄÁÄÁÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÁÄÁÄ
   < - - - - - 265kHz - - - - >       -60dB         100kHz        0.1%
    Theoretical Full Bandwidth              More Typical bandwidth
  of RDS Stereo Broadcast signal          as seen on spectrum analyser
       for ZERO distortion.                 under heavy modulation.

TX RF Harmonics & Mixes
These should all be > -60dBc, so added filters are normal. On multiple Tx sites
there is a risk of PA mixing, where RF from a nearby Tx can be Rx at the Tx PA
at enough strength to cause a Mix. A narrow resonant channel filter or
directional coupler (Circulator/isolator) in the Tx feed can protect the Tx
from these.

\³/             TYPICAL  TX  SITE  LINE  UP
 ³    ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ÚÄÄ¿ ÚÄÄ¿ ÚÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿ ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿
 ÀÄ><Ä´CIRCULATORÃÄ´PAÃÄ´FMÃÄ´ RDS ÃÄ´STEREOÃÄ´PRE EMPHASISEDÃÄo-oÄ<L STUDIO
 Rx+Tx³OR FILTER ³ ³  ³ ³Tx³ ³CODER³ ³CODER ÃÄ´STEREO LIMITERÃÄo-oÄ<R FEED
SignalÀÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ ÀÂÄÙ ÀÄÂÙ ÀÄÄÂÄÄÙ ÀÄÄÂÄÄÄÙ ÀÄÄÄÄÂÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÙ ³ ³
                   \³/   \³/   Data    Mono       \³/         Backup
                  Power  Mod   flags             Levels       Source


Why Don't U send an interesting bul?

73 de John G8MNY @ GB7CIP


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