GB2113493A - Frequency synthesizer with F.M. capability - Google Patents

Frequency synthesizer with F.M. capability Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2113493A
GB2113493A GB08301150A GB8301150A GB2113493A GB 2113493 A GB2113493 A GB 2113493A GB 08301150 A GB08301150 A GB 08301150A GB 8301150 A GB8301150 A GB 8301150A GB 2113493 A GB2113493 A GB 2113493A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
frequency
output
signal
value
predetermined
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Granted
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GB08301150A
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GB2113493B (en
GB8301150D0 (en
Inventor
David Brewerton
Peter Patrick Raymond Connell
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Racal Dana Instruments Ltd
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Racal Dana Instruments Ltd
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Priority claimed from GB7907795A external-priority patent/GB2045556B/en
Application filed by Racal Dana Instruments Ltd filed Critical Racal Dana Instruments Ltd
Priority to GB08301150A priority Critical patent/GB2113493B/en
Publication of GB8301150D0 publication Critical patent/GB8301150D0/en
Publication of GB2113493A publication Critical patent/GB2113493A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2113493B publication Critical patent/GB2113493B/en
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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03CMODULATION
    • H03C3/00Angle modulation
    • H03C3/02Details
    • H03C3/09Modifications of modulator for regulating the mean frequency
    • H03C3/0908Modifications of modulator for regulating the mean frequency using a phase locked loop
    • H03C3/0958Modifications of modulator for regulating the mean frequency using a phase locked loop applying frequency modulation by varying the characteristics of the voltage controlled oscillator
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03LAUTOMATIC CONTROL, STARTING, SYNCHRONISATION, OR STABILISATION OF GENERATORS OF ELECTRONIC OSCILLATIONS OR PULSES
    • H03L7/00Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation
    • H03L7/06Automatic control of frequency or phase; Synchronisation using a reference signal applied to a frequency- or phase-locked loop
    • H03L7/16Indirect frequency synthesis, i.e. generating a desired one of a number of predetermined frequencies using a frequency- or phase-locked loop
    • H03L7/22Indirect frequency synthesis, i.e. generating a desired one of a number of predetermined frequencies using a frequency- or phase-locked loop using more than one loop
    • H03L7/23Indirect frequency synthesis, i.e. generating a desired one of a number of predetermined frequencies using a frequency- or phase-locked loop using more than one loop with pulse counters or frequency dividers

Abstract

A synthesizer is disclosed as in patent application 2045556, with a low frequency section 20 producing an output F3, a comb loop (24), Figs. 1B, 1C (not shown) producing an output (F4), a combining section (28) which combines F3 and (F4), an output section (32) and a frequency modulation loop 38. Loop 38 has a VCO 260 producting a 100 MHz carrier which can be frequency-modulated by means of line 258. The output on line 263 is combined in a mixer 266 with the output of a VCO 84 which is l.f. output F3 and is variable step-wise. A frequency divider 280 with a division factor of 10 can be selectively interposed in the output of VCO 260 by a switch 262 and the divided output summed 282 with a fixed frequency of 90 MHz so as to bring the output back to the 100 MHz carrier frequency. In this way, not only is the FM reduced by a factor of 10 but so is the noise. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Improvements in and relating to electrical circuit arrangements The invention relates to electrical circuit arrangements and more particularly to electrical frequency synthesising circuits.
Various novel features of the invention will be apparent from the following description, given by way of example only, of an electrical frequency synthesising arrangement embodying the invention, reference being made to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings in which: Figures 1A, 1 B and 1 C, when joined as shown in Fig. 1, together form a block circuit diagram of the circuit arrangement; and Figure 2 is a block circuit diagram showing part of the circuit arrangement in greater detail.
More specifically to be described below is an electrical circuit arrangement for producing a variable output frequency lying within a predetermined range and variable in frequency steps each of predetermined size, comprising adjustable frequency generating means connected to produce a variable frequency, frequency combining means for algebraically combining the variable frequency with a first reference frequency variable stepwise so as to produce outputs corresponding to the sum and difference of the two frequencies combined, frequency dividing means having a variable frequency division factor, comparing means selectively opera tire to compare either the sum or the difference output, after division by the variable division factor, with a second, fixed, reference frequency so as to produce a control signal dependent on the value of any error between the two frequencies compared, means responsive to the control signal to adjust the variable frequency so as to reduce the error to zero, and control means for rendering the comparing means responsive either to the sum or to the difference output, and for determining the value of the first reference frequency, in accordance with the position in the said predetermined range where the desired value of the output frequency lies and for adjusting the division factor by the minimum possible amount in order to change the value of the output frequency by one step of the predetermined size.
Advantageously, the first reference frequency is derived by means producing a plurality of harmonics of a fixed frequency and means controlled by the control means for selecting a predetermined one of the harmonics.
Preferably, the comparing means comprises a phase-sensitive detector.
The circuit arrangement may include means responsive to the control means for setting the adjustable frequency generating means to produce a variable frequency output approximately at the desired value.
The output frequency produced by the circuit arrangement may advantageously be combined with a second variable output frequency which is variable in steps each of a second predetermined size which is smaller than the first-mentioned predetermined step size, whereby to produce an overall output frequency which is variable over the said predetermined range of the first-mentioned variable output frequency in step sizes each of the second predetermined size.
The second variable output frequency may be variable (in the steps each of the second predetermined size) over a predetermined frequency range which is less than the first-mentioned predetermined step size. In such a case, there may be provided control means operative to select a desired value for the overall output frequency by either adding together particular values of the two variable output frequencies or subtracting a particular value of the second variable output frequency from a particular value of the first-mentioned variable output frequency, according to whether the desired value of the overall output frequency is less than halfway between two successive values of the first-mentioned variable output frequency or greater than halfway, respectively.
Also to be more specifically disclosed below is an electrical circuit arrangement for producing a variable output frequency which is variable to have any one of pre-selected values lying within a predetermined frequency range, each pair of successive pre-selected values being separated by the same frequency step of predetermined size, comprising adjustable frequency generating means for producing a first frequency signal having a predetermined nominal value, frequency modulating means for adjusting the first frequency signal over a predetermined range which is a small fraction of the nominal value, and combining means for combining the first frequency signal with a second frequency signal which is variable over the said predetermined range in steps each of the said predetermined size.
Advantageously, there may be selectively interposed between the frequency modulating means and the combining means a frequency divider connected to divide the first frequency signal, after frequency modulation, by a predetermined factor, and adding means for adding to the divided first frequency signal a fixed frequency signal having a frequency value such that the sum of the nominal frequency divided by the fixed division factor and the value of the fixed frequency is the same as the nominal frequency.
The foregoing are exemplary, not exhaustive, of the various features of the circuir arrangement now to be specifically described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The circuit arrangement to be described is for producing an electrical output in the range 10 KHz to 1300 MHz variable in 1 Hz steps.
The circuit arrangement incorporates an accurate frequency standard unit 10 which controls a reference generator 12. The reference generator pro ducts six accurately controlled outputs on lines A !400 Hz), B (1 KHz), C (1 MHz), D MHz), E (90MHz) and F (100 MHz). The lines A to E are connected to various points in the circuit arrangement as will be described. In the Figures, the actual connections are omitted but are indicated by the relevant letters A to F.
The circuit arrangement also includes a power supply 14. The lines connecting this to the various parts of the circuit arrangement are omitted from Figure 1.
The circuit arrangement comprises a lowfrequency section 20 which can be controlled to produce a frequency on a li le 22 in the range 10 to 15 MHz variable in 1 Hz steps, a comb loop 24 which can be controlled to produce a frequency on a line 26 in the range 390 MHzto 1310 MHzvariable in 10 MHz steps, 3 combining section 28 which combines the outputs of the low frequency section 20 and the comb loop 24 to produce an output on a line 30 in the range 400 MHz to 1300 MHz variable in 1 Hz steps, and an output section 32 which modifies and controls the outpt from the combining loop 28 and feeds it to an output terminal 34.In addition, the circuit arrangement includes audio circuits 36 which generate audio signals for amplitude and frequency modulation, an FM section 38 which applies the FM to the circuit arrangement, front panel controls 40 for setting up the desired frequency, a display unit 42 for displaying the output, and a microprocessor controller 44 which responds to the front panel controls 40 and sets up the various parts of the circuit arrangement (as will be explained) in order to produce the required output The microprocessor controller 44 may also be connected by means of a line 46 to a General Purpose Interface Bus 28 (or other suitable means) to enable itto be controlled automatically andlor remotely or as part of some system.
The low frequency synthesising section 20 comprises a first phase-lock loop 50 having a voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 52 operating in the range 9 to 10 MHz. The output of the VCO 52 is fed to a phase sensitive detector 54 via a divider 56 having a division factor of Nl. The second input of the phase sensitive detector 54 is fed with a 1 KHz signal from the output line B of the reference generator 12.
The phase sensitive detector 54 responds to any phase difference detected between its two inputs and produces a control output on a control line 56 which adjusts the frequency, Fa, of the VCO 52 so as to bring the two inputs of the phase sensitive detector 54 into phase. Therefore, the VCO 52 produces an output frequency F" where F1=103xN1 (1) on lines 60 and 61.
Line 60 feeds F1 to one input of a phase sensitive detector 62 via a divider 63 having a division factor of N2. The detector 62 forms part of a second phase-locked loop 64. This loop includes a VCO 66 operating at approximately 1 MHz which feeds its output to the second input of the phase sensitive detector 62 via a mixer 68 which receives a 1 MHz reference signal on the line C of the reference generator 12.
The phase sensitive detector 62 responds to any phase difference between its two inputs and produces a control output on a line 70 which adjusts the VCO 66 until its output frequency, F2, brings the two inputs to the detector 62 into phase equality. At phase equality, therefore,
But F1 = 103 x N, from Equation (1).
Therefore,
The signal is then fed via a divder 74 having a fixed division factor of 1000 to one input of a phase sensitive detector 80 in a third phase-locked loop 82.
This loop includes a VCO 84 operating in the range 10 to 15 MHz and producing an output frequency F3 which is fed to the second input of the phase sensitive detector 80 through a divider 86 having a division factor of N2.
The phase sensitive detector 80 responds to any phase error between its two inputs to produce a control output on a control line 88 which adjusts the frequency of the VCO 84 until the two inputs to the detector are brought into phase equality.
At phase equality, therefore,
Therefore,
Substituting from Equation (3),
Thus, F3 N1+ 103.N2 Therefore, if N1 is arranged to vary between 9000 and 10000 and N2 is arranged to vary between 9991 and 14990, F3 will vary between 10 and 15MHz. A unit change in N1 will vary F3 by 1 Hz, while a unit change in N2 will vary 4 buy 1 KHz.
The division factors of the dividers 56 (N,), (N2) and 86 (N2) are controlled by the microprocessor controller 44 by means of a control channel 100.
The output frequency F3 from the VCO 84 is fed via the line 22 and a switch 102 to the combining loop 28 where it is combined (in a manner to be described) with the output from the comb loop 24.
The comb loop 24 comprises a phase-locked loop 104 having a VCO unit 106 operating in the range 390 MHzto 1310 MHz and producing an output F4. This output is fed via a mixer 107 and a divider 108 having a variable division factor N3 to one input of a phase sensitive detector 110.
The second input of the phase sensitive detector 110 is fed with a reference of 10 MHz via the line D from the reference generator 12.
The loop 24 also includes a multiplier 112 which receives a reference of 100 MHz on the line Ffrom the reference generator 12 and therefore produces an output comprising a range of harmonics of 100 MHz which are fed to an adjustable bandpass filter 114 which can be set to select any of these harmonics, the selected harmonic being the (N4)th harmonic, where N4 is variable. The selected harmonic is then fed to the mixer 107 which feeds the sum and difference outputs to the divider 108 and thence to the phase sensitive detector 110.
Therefore,
Thus, F4 = 107.N3+ 108.N4 Therefore, a unit change in the value of N3 would change F4 by 10 MHz. At the lower end of the range of F4, the phase detector 110 is switched to lock the difference output from the mixer 107 (via divider 108) to the 10 MHz reference, while at the higher end of the range of F4, the phase detector is switched to lock the sum output of the mixer (via divider 108) to the 10 MHz reference. Switching of the phase detector 110 between its two settings is carried out by the microprocessor controller 44 by means of a control channel 114. The microprocessor controller 44 also controls the values of N3 and N4 by means of control channels 116 and 118.
Because of the range to be covered by N4, the VCO unit 106 comprises two VCO's each covering part, only, of the range, and the controller 44 selects one or other of these VCO's, according to the required value of F4, by means of a control channel 119.
The phase-locked loop 104 will not be able to lock up unless F4 is at approximately the right value, say within 50 MHz. Therefore, the controller 44 is arranged to set the VCO unit 106 to approximately the correct frequency by means of a control channel 120 which feeds a digital signal representing the desired frequency to a digital to analogue converter 122 whose analogue output sets F4 to approximately the correct value.
The output F4 of the comb loop 24 is fed to one input of a mixer 130 forming part of the combining loop 28. The combining loop 28 is in the form of a phase-locked loop incorporating a phase-sensitive detector 132 one of whose inputs is fed from the output of the mixer 130 and the other of whose inputs is fed with the frequency F3 from the low frequency section 20 via switch 102.
The combining loop also incorporates a VCO unit 134 adjustable over the range 400 to 1300 MHz and its output frequency F5 is fed to a second input of the mixer 130, as well as being output on the line 30.
Therefore, F4iF5=F3, and thus F5=F4iF3 F4 is variable in steps of 10 MHz, as explained above. Therefore, in order to cover the first half of each decade of MHz in the value of F5, F4 is set to the value at the beginning of that decade, and F3 is then stepped through its 5 MHz range in 1 Hz steps and the phase detector 132 selects the sum output from the mixer 130. In order to cover the second half of each such decade of MHz, F4 is increased by 10 MHz to the frequency at the end of that decade and the value of F3 is reduced over its 5 MHz range in 1 Hz steps, and the phase detector 132 is switched to select the difference output from the mixer 130.
Switching of the phase detector 132 is controlled by the microprocessor controller 44 by means of a channel 136.
Again, in orderto cover the necessary range, the VCO unit 134 in fact consists of two VCO's each covering part, only, of the range, and the microprocessor controller 44 selects the appropriate VCO by means of a control channel 138. In addition, the output from the digital to analogue converter 122 is used to set the value of F5 to approximately the correct value.
The frequency F5 is fed to the output section 32 on line 30. The output section 32 includes a divider and combiner unit 150 which can be set to divide F5 by 1, 2 or 4 as will be explained in more detail below, and the output is then amplified in an amplifier 152 and passed to a modulating unit 143 for applying amplitude modulation and for controlling the level of the signal. The output of the modulator is then fed through a bank of selectable half-octave filters 156 to a selecting switch 158. The switch 158 can be set to combine the signal with outputs from two mixers 160 and 162 each of which also receives the signal from the bank of filters 156.
The mixer 160 has its second input fed with a 500 MHz signal on a line 164. This signal is derived by multiplying the 100 MHz reference signal (received on line F from the reference generator 12) in a multiplier 166 and selecting the fifth harmonic by means of a bandpass filter 168.
The mixer 162 has a second input of 100 MHz which is obtained directly from the line F.
The purpose of the divider and combiner unit 150, the half-octave filter 156, the switch 158 and the mixers 160 and 162 is to produce from the 400 to 1300 MHz output, F5, a signal Fe covering the range 10 KHz to 1300 MHz as will be explained in detail.
The signal F6 is fed via an output amplifier and AGC unit 172 and a programmable attenuator 174 to the output terminal 34. A reverse power protection unit 176 may be provided, to protect the circuit arrangement against the accidental application of a power signal to the output terminal 34.
The output unit 32 will be described in more detail with reference to Figure 2 in which items corresponding to those in Figure 1 are correspondingly referenced.
When the desired value of F6 lies in the range 650 to 1300 MHz, the unit 150 is selected to divide by unity, and a switch 180 in the unit 150 is set so that the signal F5 is fed directly to the amplifier 152 and thence to the modulator 154. The bank of filters 156 includes a buffer 1982 and eight low pass filters 184, 186, 188, 190,192,194, 196 and 198 whose upper frequency limits are as shown in Fig. 2. If, therefore, as in this example, F6 lies in the range 650 to 1300 MHz, then one or other of the filters 196 and 198 will be selected according to the actual value of F6, and this selection is achieved by means of switches 158 and 200.
If the desired value of F6 lies in the range 325 to 650 MHz, switch 180 is set to pass F5 through a divide-by-2 divider 204 in the unit 150, and in this case one or other of the filters 192 and 194 in the filter bank 156 would be selected by the switches 158 and 200 according to the actual value of the output frequency.
If the desired value of the signal F6 lies in the range 100 to 325 MHz, then the switch 180 would be selected so as to cause the signal F5 to pass through the divider 204 and then through a second seriesconnected divide-by-2 divider 206. In this case, one of the filters 184, 186, 188 and 190 would be selected by the switches 158 and 200 according to the actual value of the output frequency.
The mixers 160 and 162 are used when the value of F6 is below 100 MHz.
To cover the range 5 MHz to 100 MHz, the mixer 160 used. Its second input is fed via a line 220, a switch 222 and a buffer 223 from the output of the 650 MHz low pass filter 194. Therefore, the value of F6 is selected (in the range 505 to 600 MHz) so that the difference output from the mixer 160 has there quired value to produce, by substraction from 500 MHz, the correct value for F6. The mixer output is passed via a low pass filter 224 (to reject the sum output) to the switch 158.
The mixer 162 is used when the desired value F6 lies in the range 10 KHz to 5 MHz. In this case, the second input of the mixer 162 is fed via a line 226, a switch 228 and a buffer 229 from the output of the 130 MHz low pass filter 184. In this case, the value of F5 is selected to lie in the range 100.01 MHz to 105 MHz according to the desired value of F6, and a low pass filter 230 selects the difference output from the mixer and passes it to the switch 158.
In order to obtain the desired value for F6, the switches 158, 180,200,222 and 228 are appropriately controlled by the microprocessor controller 44 by means of channels 232, 234 and 236.
The level of the output signal at the output terminal 34 is controlled by the programmable attenuator 174 and the AGC unit 172, and this is set by means of the microprocessor controller 44 by means of channels 240 and 242, line 240 controlling a digital to analogue converter 224 (see Fig. 1) which produces an analogue control signal on the line 246 for the AGC unit 172. The AGC unit has a feedback line 248 to the modulator 154 for controlling the level of the desired value. The arrangement of the AGC loop, including the unit 172 and the modulator 154, may be as disclosed in our co-pending Patent Application No.7901643.
The output at the terminal 34 may be amplitude or frequency modulated as required. Modulation is generated by the circuit section 36 (Fig. 1). This circuit section includes an audio signal generating unit 250 which is fed with 400 Hz and 1 KHz reference signals on lines A and B from the reference generator 12. If the output is to be amplitude-modulated, the modulating signal is fed through a programmable attenuator 252 to the modulating unit 154 on a line 254 via the unit 172.
If the output is to be frequency modulated, the modulating signal is fed via a programmable attenuator 256 and a line 258 to the FM section 38 which will now be described.
The FM section 38 comprises a VCO 260 having a nominal frequency F7 of 100 MHz which is fed to a switch 262 via a line 263 and also to one input of a phase-sensitive detector 264. The second input of the detector 264 receives a 100 MHz reference signal on line Ffrom the reference generator 12. Before any FM signal is applied to the VCO 260 on the line 258, theVCO is accurately set to 100 MHZ by means of a narrow bandwidth phase-locked loop including the phase-sensitive detector 264. The FM signal is applied to vary the frequency of the VCO 260 over a maximum range oft 1.2 MHZ. The resultant frequency-modulated signal is applied via the switch 262 to one input of a mixer 266 whose second input receives the output F3 on the line 22 from the VCO 84 of the low frequency section 20.The sum output from the mixer 270, lying in the range 110 MHz to 115 MHz, is selected by a band-pass filter 272 and passed to a further mixer 274. Mixer 274 has a second input receiving the 100 MHz reference signal on the line F from the reference generator 12, and the result is to produce a signal F3' on a line 276, the signal F3' corresponding to the signal F3 in that it lies in the range 10 to 15 MHz and is variable in 1 Hz steps by the low frequency section 20, but in addition it carries frequency modulation. The signal F3, is selected by the switch 102 under control of the microprocessor controller 44 by means of a control channel 278, and applied to the combining loop 28.
Instead of feeding the frequency-modulated signal F7 directly to the switch 272, it can be fed through a divide-by-1 0 divider 280 and thence to one input of a mixer 282 whose second input receives a reference signal of 90 MHz on the line E from the reference generator 12. The sum output, of 100 MHz, is selected by a band-pass filter 284 and can then be fed to the switch 272 on a line 286. In this way, the frequency modulation is reduced by a factor of 10.
The frequency modulation can be reduced by a factor of 100 by feeding the output from the mixer 284 into a further divide-by-l0 divider 288 and thence to one input of a further mixer 290 whose second input receives the 90 MHz reference signal on the line E. The 100 MHz sum output is selected by a band-pass filter 292 and fed to the switch 272 on a line 294. Switch 272 is therefore set to select line 294 instead of line 286, and the frequency modulation has now been reduced by a factor of 100 compared with the signal on the line 263.
The use of the dividers 280 and 288 for reducing the amount of frequency modulation is advantageous because not only does it reduce the frequency modulation by a factor of 10, or 100, but the value of any noise present is reduced bythe same proportion.
The switch 72 is controlled by a control channel 296 from the microprocessor controller 44.
If desired, the audio signal generator 260 can be controlled by externally applying audio signals on control lines 298 and 300 respectively.
Because the maximum range of FM (+ 1.2 MHz) applied to the VCO 260 is only a very small proportion of the total adjustment range of the VCO, open-loop control of the VCO gives more than sufficient accuracy and linearity.
DC frequency modulation can also be applied, by means of a DC control line 302, phase detector 264 being rendered inoperative.

Claims (4)

CLAIMS 1. An electrical circuit arrangement for producing a variable output frequency which is variable to have any one of pre-selected values lying within a predetermined frequency range, each pair of successive preselected values being separated by the same frequency step of predetermined size, comprising adjustable frequency generating means for producing a first frequency signal having a predetermined nominal value, frequency modulating means for adjusting the first frequency signal over a predetermined range which is a small fraction of the nominal value, and combining means for combining the first frequency signal with a second frequency signal which is variable over the said predetermined range in steps each of the said predetermined size. 2. A circuit arrangement according to claim 8, in which there is selectively interposed between the frequency modulating means and the combining means a frequency divider connected to divide the first frequency signal, after frequency modulation, by a predetermined factor, and adding means for adding to the divided first frequency signal a fixed frequency signal having a frequency value such that the sum of the nominal frequency divided by the fixed division factor and the value of the fixed frequency is the same as the nominal frequency. 3. An electrical circuit arrangement substantially as described with reference to the accompanying drawings. New claims filed on 11 March 1983 Superseded claims 1-3
1. An electrical frequency synthesising circuit arrangement for producing a variable outputfrequency which is variable to have any one of a number of values lying within a predetermined frequency range, each pair of successive values being separated by the same frequency step of predetermined size, comprising adjustable frequency generating means for producing a first frequency signal at a predetermined carrier frequency, frequen cy modulating means for frequency-modulating the firstfrequencysignal over a predetermined bandwidth which is a small fraction of the carrier frequency, combining means for combining the modulated first frequency signal with a second frequency signal which is variable over the said predetermined range in steps each of the said predetermined size, whereby to produce the said variable output frequency, means for selectively interposing between the frequency generating means and the combining means a frequency divid er connected to divide the frequency of the first frequency signal, after the said frequency modulation, by a predetermined factor, and adding means for adding to the divided and frequency-modulated first frequency signal a fixed frequency signal having a fixed frequency value such that the sum of the said carrier frequency divided by the said fixed division factor and the value of the fixed frequency is the same as the carrier frequency.
2. A circuit arrangement according to claim 1, including means selectively operable to temporarily disable the said frequency modulating means, and control means operative to adjust the adjustable frequency generating means so as to apply d.c.
frequency modulation to the said first frequency signal.
3. A circuit arrangement according to claim 1 or 2, including means producing a second fixed frequency signal having a fixed frequency value such that the sum of its value and the value of the carrier frequency divided by a second division factor is the same as the carrier frequency, a second frequency divider having the second fixed division factor, means for selectively interposing the second divider between the said adding means and the said combining means, and second adding means for adding the second fixed frequency signal to the output of the second divider.
4. An electrical frequency synthensising circuit arrangement according to claim 1 and substantially as described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB08301150A 1979-03-06 1983-01-17 Frequency synthesizer with f.m. capability Expired GB2113493B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08301150A GB2113493B (en) 1979-03-06 1983-01-17 Frequency synthesizer with f.m. capability

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB7907795A GB2045556B (en) 1979-03-06 1979-03-06 Frequency synthesizers
GB08301150A GB2113493B (en) 1979-03-06 1983-01-17 Frequency synthesizer with f.m. capability

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GB8301150D0 GB8301150D0 (en) 1983-02-16
GB2113493A true GB2113493A (en) 1983-08-03
GB2113493B GB2113493B (en) 1983-12-21

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0296311A2 (en) 1987-06-23 1988-12-28 Hagenuk Gmbh Device for the generation of at least two different frequencies
DE3837246A1 (en) * 1988-10-28 1990-05-03 Siemens Ag Frequency generator
GB2256983A (en) * 1991-06-19 1992-12-23 Marconi Instruments Ltd Microwave synthesisers

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0296311A2 (en) 1987-06-23 1988-12-28 Hagenuk Gmbh Device for the generation of at least two different frequencies
EP0296311A3 (en) * 1987-06-23 1989-03-22 Hagenuk Gmbh Device for the generation of at least two different frequencies
DE3837246A1 (en) * 1988-10-28 1990-05-03 Siemens Ag Frequency generator
GB2256983A (en) * 1991-06-19 1992-12-23 Marconi Instruments Ltd Microwave synthesisers
US5237291A (en) * 1991-06-19 1993-08-17 Marconi Instruments Limited Microwave frequency synthesizer having selectable oscillator sources and output power control
GB2256983B (en) * 1991-06-19 1995-03-08 Marconi Instruments Ltd Microwave synthesisers

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GB8301150D0 (en) 1983-02-16

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