Please try this:
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The “AM Blocking filter is simply the Hi Pass filter enabled by Bit 7 in the Setup->General->OC Control J16 RX pins. It is normally off for 160M and TX. Tick the N2ADR Filter button to set the default values correctly for most users.
From: herme...@googlegroups.com <herme...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Wayne Roth
Sent: Sunday, April 14, 2024 9:33 PM
To: Hermes-Lite <herme...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: Spur on 160m new Hermes Lite 2
Steve I understand and agree with your assessment on the HL2 160m spur issue. Unfortunately Thetis 2.10.3.5 Beta2 does not turn on the HSYNC clock, you have to manually go into options and toggle the Disable PS Sync checkbox on (to disable) and then off each time the program is started. I don't know whether it's writing a disable off state at initialization and ignoring the options setting, or doing nothing at all and the FPGA defaults to let the regulators free-run.
I've not tried quisk yet, just Thetis. I'm unable to find the "AM Block" filter setting. Is there a setting for this in Thetis and where?
Wayne
On Sunday, April 14, 2024 at 7:42:30 PM UTC-4 softerh...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Wayne,
As discussed already in this thread, the 160M spur is expected and is from the cost-saving switching power supply on the HL2. The HL2 philosophy is that it is easier and more cost effective to move the spurs. It looks like your spurs are about 20dB above the noise floor if antenna is grounded or has a dummy load attached, so I don't think there is any problem with your build. This is what is expected. Quisk with bandscope view provides a nice view of any spurs. Here is a HL2 with dummy load on the antenna and LNA gain set to +20dB. This is without moving the spurs. Note that there are two for two of the regulators in the HL2. The regulator internal oscillator will not be the same from regulator to regulator. You can see that the worse spurs are about 20dB above the noise floor. There are the spurs at ~950kHz, which is the native frequency of the regulators, and then the first and second harmonics.
If you turn on the regulator clock provided by the FPGA (which is or should be the default in all software), then you see that all regulator frequencies align and none of the spur harmonics are in an amateur radio band.
When I connect a real antenna and disable the AM block filter (as it can affect 160M), I have to lower my LNA to +12dB to avoid ADC clipping. The noise floor is now well above any of the spurs. As a side note, when skimming 10 bands, I often keep the very helpful AM blocking filter on even if it attenuates some 160M signals. I don't think this matters as at the +18db LNA gain I usually operate there is still enough gain for 160M.
73,
Steve
kf7o
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