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- SCA
- Additional Thoughts on SCA Reception:
-
- As I recall, the setup described by Bob Parnass (I think that was who it
- was) was to hook a VLF receiver to the output of an ordinary FM receiver
- to pick up SCCA (sic - I always call it that, Sports Car Club of
- America, when it should really be SCA - Subsidiary Communications
- Authorization or something!) transmissions multiplexed on ordinary FM
- broadcasts.
-
- To understand what is going on, you need to know what the FM station
- actually transmits.
-
- Let's do it in "top down" fashion. All you computer jocks out there
- should relate nicely to that.
-
- First of all, the FM station has a "composite audio" input - this is
- just the input on which SOMETHING (consider it a stub subroutine to
- written later) is fed in to the modulator.
-
- From the FM modulator's point of view, what you put on this input is
- just the MODULATING SIGNAL which you want to Frequency Modulate (FM) the
- station's carrier. Intuitively, you can think of the station as putting
- out a "pure" carrier at frequency F when this modulating signal is zero.
- When it is NONZERO, however, the instantaneous frequency of the
- transmitter is changed. Say the modulating signal value, in volts, or
- whatever, is M. Then the transmitter output frequency is set to F + K*M
- where K is a sensitivity constant which is unimportant except that
- whatever maximum value of M is applied to the FM modulator input should
- result in a maximum "frequency deviation" K*M which is just about the
- maximum that the FCC allows.
- CONTINUED IN FILE SCA.1