home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Path: sparky!uunet!infonode!ingr!b30!catbyte!medin
- From: medin@catbyte.NoSubdomain.NoDomain (Dave Medin)
- Subject: Re: Radar Detectors, and Radar Detector Detectors
- Message-ID: <1992Jul27.222258.20211@b30.ingr.com>
- Keywords: Radar
- Sender: medin@catbyte (Dave Medin)
- Reply-To: medin@catbyte.b30.ingr.com
- Organization: Intergraph Corporation, Huntsville AL
- References: <92Jul23.162259edt.176@orasis.vis.toronto.edu> <1992Jul23.204831.28487@news.columbia.edu>
- Date: Mon, 27 Jul 1992 22:22:58 GMT
- Lines: 44
-
- In article <1992Jul23.204831.28487@news.columbia.edu>, gmw1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Gabe M Wiener) writes:
- |> In article <92Jul23.162259edt.176@orasis.vis.toronto.edu> oliverb@vis.toronto.edu (Oliver Bengtsson) writes:
- |> > Could someone out there please tell me how a radar detector detector
- |> >works? I thought that a radar detector was a passive device, nothing more
- |> >than a receiver tuned into detect a certain radio frequency used in radar
- |> >guns. If this is the case, how can they be detected?
- |>
- |> All receivers work by resonance, and this resonance can be detected with
- |> the appropriate equipment.
-
- <BBC stuff deleted>
-
- Well, not quite. "Detector detectors" are designed to look for leakage power
- at common IFs (intermediate frequecies) of the device they're trying
- to detect. This works if the receiver they're trying to detect is
- of "superheterodyne" type, which most TV sets and radar detectors are.
- It has nothing to do with detecting resonance, which can only be done
- efficiently at really close range (like with a grid dip meter in the
- circuit) and generally right on the antenna aperature.
-
- The set or radar detector has an oscillator(s) inside it which is used
- to mix down the incoming carrier frequency of the TV/radar to a lower
- frequency more easily filtered and processed. The IF oscillator(s)
- will have some leakage to the outside world where it can be
- detected by a tuned receiver or spectrum analyzer. Try this
- sometime... common TV IF's are 75 and 10.4 MHz. Listen in on
- your set's IF leakage with a general coverage receiver. The leakage power
- is in the 10's of milliwatts, usually. Try 220 MHz for your radar
- detector...
-
- Incidentally, IF leakage is one of the prime reasons TV sets have
- to receive FCC type-acceptance before sale to the general public...
-
- --
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
- Dave Medin Phone: (205) 730-3169 (w)
- Intergraph Corp. (205) 837-1174 (h)
- M/S GD3004
- Huntsville, AL 35894 Internet: medin@catbyte.b30.ingr.com
- UUCP: ...uunet!ingr!b30!catbyte!medin
-
- ******* Everywhere You Look (at least around my office) *******
-
- * The opinions expressed here are mine (or those of my machine)
-