The Radio Transmitter
The Radio Transmitter
Harmonics and Parasitics
A harmonic of a signal transmitted at 3525 kHz would be expected to occur at
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Excessive harmonic output may be produced in a transmitter by
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Harmonics may be produced in the RF power amplifier of a transmitter if
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Harmonics produced in an early stage of a transmitter may be reduced in a later stage by
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Harmonics are produced when
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Harmonic frequencies are
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An interfering signal from a transmitter has a frequency of 57 MHz. This signal could be the
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To minimise the radiation of one particular harmonic, one can use a
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A low-pass filter is used in the antenna lead from a transmitter
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The following is installed in the transmission line as close as possible to a HF transmitter to reduce harmonic output
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A low pass filter will
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A spurious transmission from a transmitter is
A spurious transmission from a transmitter is an unwanted emission unrelated to the output signal frequency
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A parasitic oscillation
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Parasitic oscillations in a RF power amplifier can be suppressed by
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Parasitic oscillations in the RF power amplifier stage of a transmitter may occur
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Transmitter power amplifiers can generate parasitic oscillations on
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Parasitic oscillations tend to occur in
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Parasitic oscillations can cause interference. They are
With parasitic signals there is no simple mathematical relationship between the operating frequency and the interfering frequency. The effects may be the same as with harmonics - a VHF receiver being interfered with by a HF transmission. The cause is an additional and undesired oscillation from an oscillator or amplifier for which it was not designed. The circuit functions normally but the parasitic oscillation occurs simultaneously. Parasitics are suppressed by adding additional components to the circuit to suppress the undesired oscillation without affecting the primary function of the circuit. A typical solution is to add a VHF choke (an inductor) or a small-value resistor (a "stopper") somewhere close to the active component in the offending circuit.
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