User:Duggabe: Difference between revisions

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The first section of this tutorial explains how an Amplitude Modulated (AM) signal can be created. Rather than using any real hardware for transmission, the signal is sent via a socket to the second section of the tutorial which explains how to demodulate the received signal. The only actual hardware involved is the computer's microphone input and speaker output. In the case of a Raspberry Pi computer, which has no microphone input, an alternative is presented.
Barry Duggan is a graduate of Georgia Tech in Electrical Engineering and is a career computer programmer specializing in real-time control, data communication systems, and email security. He has been an amateur radio operator since 1953.


This tutorial can be performed with either GNU Radio (GR) version 3.7 or 3.8 (and later). The Graphical User Interface gnuradio-companion (GRC) is used to create a flowgraph for each section.
Barry started working on the GNU Radio project in 2019 and now devotes most of his time doing Wiki documentation, and development of amateur radio applications. He is a member of the GRCon24 Organizing Committee.


== Prerequisites ==
Summary of programming languages used (roughly in chronological order):
 
* FORTRAN
* [[Guided_Tutorial_GRC|'''Intro to GR usage: GRC and flowgraphs''']]
* assembly languages of various computers
* [[Sample_Rate_Tutorial|'''Understanding sample rate''']]
* COBOL
 
* C
== AM transmitter ==
* Pascal
 
* HTML5
Using gnuradio-companion (GRC), build this flowgraph of the transmitter section:
* CSS3
 
* XML
[[File:AM_transmit_fg.png|800px]]
* JavaScript
 
* JSON
=== Block descriptions ===
* node.js
 
* PHP
* The Options block identifies the filename for the flowgraph, a title, author, etc.
* Python
* The microphone input is defined by an Audio Source block. The parameters are:
** Sample rate - set to 48khz
** Device name - for most microphone jacks built into the computer, the Device name can be left blank; for other cases, see [[Audio_Source#Device_Name]]
* For the remainder of the flowgraph, a sample_rate of 768khz is used. This value is set in the Variable block. This value was chosen to give the 48khz carrier frequency 16 samples per cycle (48000 x 16 = 768000).
* To boost the 48khz sample rate of the audio input to the 768khz sample rate, a Repeat block with a value of 16 is used.
* The QT GUI Range block defines an Audio gain (volume) control with a range of 0 to 10. The default (starting) value is 1.
* The value of the volume control is used as a multiplier in the Multiply Const block.
* To create an AM signal, the carrier signal is multiplied by the audio signal plus one. The constant 1 creates the carrier when no audio is present.
* The carrier signal (in this example is 48khz) is generated by the Signal Source block.
* For a real radio transmitter, the output of the Multiply block would be fed to band-pass filters and then to Radio Frequency (RF) hardware. For this tutorial, we are sending the transmit signal to a data socket connected to the receiver section.
 
=== Note for Raspberry Pi ===
 
Since a Raspberry Pi has no audio input jack, there are two alternatives:
 
# use a USB audio dongle as is shown in the flowgraph.
# replace the Audio Source block with a Signal Source block and a Throttle block.
 
=== Test transmitter section ===
 
== AM receiver ==
 
=== Block descriptions ===
 
=== Testing ===

Latest revision as of 16:37, 26 October 2023

Barry Duggan is a graduate of Georgia Tech in Electrical Engineering and is a career computer programmer specializing in real-time control, data communication systems, and email security. He has been an amateur radio operator since 1953.

Barry started working on the GNU Radio project in 2019 and now devotes most of his time doing Wiki documentation, and development of amateur radio applications. He is a member of the GRCon24 Organizing Committee.

Summary of programming languages used (roughly in chronological order):

  • FORTRAN
  • assembly languages of various computers
  • COBOL
  • C
  • Pascal
  • HTML5
  • CSS3
  • XML
  • JavaScript
  • JSON
  • node.js
  • PHP
  • Python