Traditional Analogue And An FPGA Make This Junkbox HF Receiver A Bit Special

We will have all at some point seen a fascinating project online, only to find not enough information to really appreciate and understand it. Such a project came [Bill Meara]’s way over at the SolderSmoke podcast, and he was fortunately able to glean more from its creator. What [Tom] had made from junkbox parts was a fairly traditional analogue receiver for the 20m amateur band which would be quite an achievement in itself, but what makes it special is its use of an FPGA to augment the analogue tuning.

A traditional analogue radio has a local oscillator which is mixed with the signal from the antenna, and an intermediate frequency of the difference between oscillator and desired signal is filtered from the result and amplified. The oscillator on older receivers would have used a free running tuned circuit, while a newer device might use a phase-locked loop to derive a stable frequency from a crystal.

What [Tom]’s receiver does is take a free-running traditional receiver and use the FPGA as a helper. It has a frequency meter that drives the display, but it also uses the measured figure to adjust the oscillator and keep it on frequency. It has two modes; while tuning it’s a traditional analogue receiver, but when left alone the FPGA stops it drifting. We like it, it’s definitely a special project.

We’ve featured a lot of radio receivers over the years, and this certainly isn’t the only one that’s a bit unconventional.

2 thoughts on “Traditional Analogue And An FPGA Make This Junkbox HF Receiver A Bit Special

    1. It’s more like a FLL, which is not exactly a Huff and Puff, which actually is a design from Klaas Spaargaren PA0KSB. Huff and Puff would lock the oscillator on one any of the many harmonics of the reference signal (e.g 10Hz) preventing drift, we are looking here at a FFL which really tries to reach a single target frequency. FFL prevent drift too but are not phase locked and hence are always a bit tuning around the target frequency, causing more phase noise compared to PLL or HP.

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