Difference between revisions of "PHOENIX"

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(GENERAL DESCRIPTION)
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=== GENERAL DESCRIPTION ===
 
=== GENERAL DESCRIPTION ===
  
The initial project leader is Ray Anderson, WB6TPU
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The initial project leader was Ray Anderson, WB6TPU
  
 
The Phoenix board is envisioned to contain a receiver, a transmitter and a synthesizer on a single HPSDR (High Performance software Defined Radio) plug-in module. One of the goals is to develop a board that will enable a user to get 'on the air' with a minimal amount of extra add-ons. Currently the plan is to realize the receiver as a QSD based device and the transmitter as a similar QSE. The local oscillator will be supplied by an on-board synthesizer with an onboard reference oscillator (but with provisions for accepting an external reference if desired).
 
The Phoenix board is envisioned to contain a receiver, a transmitter and a synthesizer on a single HPSDR (High Performance software Defined Radio) plug-in module. One of the goals is to develop a board that will enable a user to get 'on the air' with a minimal amount of extra add-ons. Currently the plan is to realize the receiver as a QSD based device and the transmitter as a similar QSE. The local oscillator will be supplied by an on-board synthesizer with an onboard reference oscillator (but with provisions for accepting an external reference if desired).

Revision as of 08:51, 17 May 2009

PHOENIX - is a ISD/QSE Receiver/Transmitter Module

Update 16 November 2008: A variant of the original Phoenix idea has been produced by Richard VK6BRO. This is based in the original concept by Ray, WB6TPU, and includes a QSD based receiver, QSE based exciter and AD9912 DDS local oscillator.

A number of Alpha builders are currently constructing boards; these include Al, N0TVJ, Bill, KD5TFD, Kevin, M0KHZ and Phil, VK6APH.

The builders are indebted to VK6BRO for donating the PCBs and in particular N0TVJ for the donation of components and the fantastic job he did of kitting them.

VK6APH's partly completed Phoenix board, November 2008

This has the QSD receiver and QSE exciter both built and working plus the AD9912 DDS chip and associated components ready for testing. Preliminary CPLD code has been written by Phil, VK6APH, that enables testing of the major sections of the PCB.

Relevant files for the Phoenix project can be found under SVN at the following location:

svn://206.216.146.154/svn/repos_sdr_hpsdr/trunk/Phoenix

VK6APH's Alpha Phoenix board feeding a Janus sound card and running with PowerSDR, November 2008

More test results to follow - Phil....VK6APH

The Phoenix PCB contains a ISD (Integrating Sampling Detector) based HF Receiver, a QSE (Quadrature Sampling Exciter) based HF Exciter and a supporting synthesizer.


GENERAL DESCRIPTION

The initial project leader was Ray Anderson, WB6TPU

The Phoenix board is envisioned to contain a receiver, a transmitter and a synthesizer on a single HPSDR (High Performance software Defined Radio) plug-in module. One of the goals is to develop a board that will enable a user to get 'on the air' with a minimal amount of extra add-ons. Currently the plan is to realize the receiver as a QSD based device and the transmitter as a similar QSE. The local oscillator will be supplied by an on-board synthesizer with an onboard reference oscillator (but with provisions for accepting an external reference if desired).

Phoenix will leverage a lot of the lessons learned in SDR (Software Defined Radio) hardware from thoughout the SDR community, hence the name 'Phoenix'. It will be a re-birth of proven circuit concepts in the HPSDR format. The Phoenix board will be an alternative choice to Horton and Mercury as a means of implementing the RF receive and transmit functions. Compared to those projects it will be 'low-end' as far as complexity goes, but definitely not low-performance. Further details will be provided as they emerge....

Inital Block diagram for discussion:

The following diagram illustrates a concept where the AK5394a A/D is colocated on the same PCB physically adjacent to the ISD as suggested by Bob N4HY to minimize the spurious pickup between the ISD and the A/D: This approach has been discarded (i.e. having the AK5394a A/D on the Phoenix board. It makes more sense to utilize the full functionality of the Janus board)

Phoenix simplified block2.jpg

The following diagram illustrates an alternate architecture proposed by Phil VK6APH where the output from the ISD is converted to a low impedance balanced signal for transport to the balanced inputs on the Janus board. This would have the advantage of minimizing the complexity on the Phoenix board by not requiring the majority of the Janus parts to reside on Phoenix. This is somewhat like the initial Phoenix concept. After further study it appears that this is the basic architecture that will be pursued for the Phoenix board.

Phoenix simplified block4.jpg

Aug. 11, 2006The following simplified schematic illustrates the architecture being pursued. Details on front-end filtering, switching, the pre-amp and the LO synthesizer are not shown at this time. Many component values are not shown and those that are are subject to change.

Phoenix rx 1.jpg

Feature List for Discussion:

There have already been a number of good suggestions made on the reflector since this project was proposed related to various aspects of the design. The following is a list (in no particular order) of some of the suggested features/circuits:

Synthesizer:

 Utilize AD9951 with a divide by 4 to generate quadrature LO signals
 Utilize 2 AD9951 with phase offset
 Microwave PLL divided down to HF

(as a general thing, suggestions are running towards avoiding 10-bit DDS circuits due to spurious considerations)

Preamp:

A robust high dynamic range low noise preamp has been suggested to precede the detector. Suggestions include:

 Norton amplifier (noiseless feedback) amplifier using BFG591
 Makhinson amplifier (push-pull version of Norton amp)

Rx Filters:

 Switched BPF filters
 Broadband (0-30 MHz) frontend with external BPF

QSD: It is looking like either a 74auc2g53 with OPA1632 or LT1127 amps may end up being the ISD (integrating sampling detector).

The OPA1632 variant is being evaluated by Ahti OH2RZ and the LT1127 variant is being looked at by Phil N8VB.

This is a critical part of the circuit as far as overall performance is concerned.

Jan 2008 (Richard Hosking VK6BRO)

I have been working over the last 2 months or so on a schematic and PCB layout for Phoenix broadly based on the comments above. I have used the AD9912 DDS, a CPLD to allow flexibility and mapping to the Atlas Bus and QSD/QSE based on the 74auc2g53 mixer and OPA1632 differential output opamp. Drafting has been done using the Kicad Open Source package running on Kubuntu Linux. Note that this work is copyright to me (Richard Hosking VK6BRO) until I sort out the process of assigning it for Open Source Use - this is my intention.

Look at the various schematics at

Schematics


and the current PCB layouts are at

Layouts

Please contact me if you want to play with Kicad for the various libraries