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Basic modulation theory – Elenco FM Wireless Microphone Kit User Manual

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BASIC MODULATION THEORY

There are many different methods for modulating
information onto a radio wave.

The two most

popular methods are Amplitude Modulation (AM)
and Frequency Modulation (FM). Figure 1 shows
the basic difference between these two methods. In
an amplitude modulated radio wave, the audio
information (voice) varies the amplitude of the RF
carrier.

To recover this information, all that is

needed is a peak detector that follows the carrier
peaks.

This is fairly easy to understand.

In a

frequency modulated radio wave, the information
changes the frequency of the carrier as shown in
Figure 1.

The amplitude of the radio frequency carrier wave
remains constant.

The loudness of the audio

determines how far the frequency is moved from the
unmodulated carrier frequency.

In a normal FM

radio broadcast, the maximum deviation from center
frequency is set at +150kHz for the loudest sound.
A soft sound may move the carrier only +10kHz.
The number of times the carrier deviates from the
center frequency, each second depends on the
frequency of the audio. For example, if the carrier is
moved to +75kHz, then –75kHz 1,000 times each
second, the carrier is 50% modulated for loudness
with a 1,000 cycle audio tone.

One advantage of FM modulation over AM
modulation is the carrier amplitude is not important
since the information is carried by the frequency.
This means that any amplitude noise added to the
signal after transmission (such as lightning, spark or
ignition noise in cars, etc.) can be reduced by
allowing the amplifiers before detection to limit or
saturate. This principle is shown in Figure 2.

The standard broadcast band for FM was also
designed to have an audio range up to 25,000 Hertz
(Hertz = cycles per second).

The standard AM

broadcast band has only 7,000 Hertz band width
(Figure 3). The FM band is therefore considered to
be “High Fidelity” compared to the older AM band.

Another big advantage that FM has over AM is the
“Capture” effect in FM broadcast. If two different
broadcasts are very close in frequency or on the
same frequency in AM, they will produce an audio
tweet or beat. In FM, the receiver will “Capture” the
strongest signal and ignore the weaker one.

In

other words, if a local transmitter and another
distant transmitter are on the same frequency, the
FM receiver will lock in on the strong local station
and reject the weak one. In an AM radio, if the same
conditions exist, you will hear a beat (a whistle)
between the two stations, which is very annoying.

Capture works because the receiver “sees” radio
waves as the sum of each frequency present. Since
FM only looks at frequency, the weaker signal can
be eliminated by the limiter as shown in Figure 4.
The detector “sees” only the strong signal after the
limiting amplifier has stripped the weak one away.

Amplitude Modulation

Frequency Modulation

Figure 1

Figure 2

Original Transmitted

Signal

Received Signal with

Noise and Fading

Received Signal

After Limiting

Amplifier

Figure 3

Narrow Band

Wide

Bandwidth

7kHz

25kHz

AM Broadcast Band

FM Broadcast Band

Audio Bandwidth for AM & FM

Figure 4

Two Frequencies

Transmitted

What Limiter “sees”

Capture Effect

Output from limiter
F1 only . . . F2 removed

F1

F2

F1 + F2

Limiter Levels