Matjaz Vidmar, S53MV
NOAA HRPT Receiver
VHF Communications 3/1997
1. Reception of NOAA HRPT Images
The reception of weather satellite images always attracts
lots of interest among radio amateurs. Of course, after the
initial experiments one always wants to improve the results,
trying to obtain even better pictures with less noise, better
contrast and better geometrical resolution. The current
receiver technology allows us to quickly reach the limits imposed
by the satellite sensors and picture transmission standards.
Almost everyone starts by receiving the simple APT/WEFAX
analogue picture transmissions. After perfecting the APT/WEFAX
receiver, the next logical step is to switch to digital
transmissions. Most weather satellites offer an improved
signal-to-noise ratio and an improved geometrical resolution
on their digital picture transmissions.
The main drawback of the digital picture transmissions is
that they are much less standardised than the simple APT/WEFAX
transmissions. Almost every satellite is using a different
image data format, that requires different hardware for
reception. In addition, the digital transmissions usually
require a larger antenna operating on higher frequencies,
making the ground station much more expensive.
The most popular digital image format is certainly the
NOAA HRPT format, which has been used since the launch of
the TIROS-N satellite in 1978. The NOAA HRPT format offers an
improved geometrical resolution of 1km and an excellent
signal-to-noise ratio (10-bit quantization) when compared to
the analogue APT format with 4km resolution originating from the
same satellites of the NOAA series (1), (2), (3). The same
data transmission standard is still used today by many
weather satellites (5), (6).
At the beginning, NOAA HRPT reception was a rather
difficult technology for radio amateurs. The first amateur
experiments (4) required hand-steering of the antenna and
immediate conversion of the digital data into an
easier-to-handle analogue APT-like format. There were no
suitable computers available and microwave semiconductors
were very expensive (the first GaAsFETs like the famous CFY11
were priced over £80 each).
Today the situation is completely different. Inexpensive
computers can be used both for antenna tracking and for image
storage and display. Parabolic dishes of various sizes and
AZ/EL antenna positioners are easily available too. Microwave
components became inexpensive as well and top performance
low-noise preamplifiers can be readily built (7).
The only missing part is a suitable receiver to
process the NOAA HRPT RF signal and output the data in a
suitable format to a computer. Such a receiver will be
described in this article, based on a design that has been
operating for more than five years in the author's receiving
station and has been successfully duplicated by many other
radio amateurs as well.
2. NOAA HRPT Receiver Block Diagram
The general block diagram of the NOAA HRPT receiver is
shown on figure 1. Using a state-of-the-art LNA (7), a 1m diameter
dish antenna with a RHCP feed will provide an error-free
reception at elevations above 10 degrees. Of course, the
antenna needs to be installed on a computer-controlled
AZ/EL rotator to track the quickly-moving polar-orbiting
NOAA satellites.
A similar antenna/feed/LNA combination for the reception
of amateur satellites in the 2.4GHz band has been described
in (8). The latter can be easily scaled to the lower frequency
band of 1.7GHz. Since the helical feed described and the LNA
are both wideband, even the original 2.4GHz version actually
operates in an excellent way at 1.7GHz as well, making it
possible to use one antenna and one LNA for both weather
satellites at 1.7GHz and amateur radio satellites at 2.4GHz.
To receive NOAA HRPT transmissions, most amateurs usually
use different downconverters and IF strips. Such designs tend
to be unnecessarily complex and the overall receiver
performance is poor due to the unsuitable hardware. Therefore
it was decided to develop a completely new design to avoid
such problems.
The circuit shown In Fig. 1 is a single conversion
receiver with an IF of 36 MHz. The latter is a convenient choice
since widely-available television receiver SAW filters have
just the appropriate bandwidth for the NOAA HRPT signals as
well. Since 36 MHz is a relatively low value when compared
to the input frequency in the 1.7 GHz range, the downconverter
needs to be designed carefully. On the other hand such a design
is still simpler than a double or even multiple conversion
receiver.
Besides the choice of the IF frequency one also has to
consider the required demodulator(s). The demodulation of a
NOAA HRPT signal can be split into three different steps.
In the first step, a digital signal is obtained from the
modulated RF carrier in a PSK demodulator. The second step
involves bit-rate synchronisation and bit conditioning.
Finally, the third step is the frame synchronisation.
All three demodulation steps are included in the described
receiver that provides a serial data stream, a bit clock and
frame pulses as its output. These signals are usually required
by the computer interfaces used. However, if a computer
interface already includes the frame synchronisation or even
the bit-rate synchronisation, the corresponding circuits can
simply be omitted.
>/P>
A matching HRPT interface to the "DSP computer" was
presented in (11). Of course, there are many different
interfaces available for the "IBM PC compatible" computer
family. Finally, one can also feed the digital data to a
D/A converter and convert the signal to a 2400 Hz
amplitude-modulated subcarrier, but in this way both the
signal-to-noise ratio and the geometrical resolution of the
images are degraded.
3. NOAA HRPT Downconverter
The circuit diagram of the NOAA HRPT downconverter is
shown in figure 2. Since the downconverter is included in the
indoor receiver, it is supposed that an external LNA with a
gain of 25-30dB is used all of the times. Therefore the
downconverter is not optimised for the best noise figure.
At 1.7 GHz one has to consider the cable loss between the
LNA and the indoor receiver. At a typical distance of about
25m it is easy to keep the cable loss below 10dB, for instance
by using the low-loss coax cables developed for satellite TV
IF. Of course the circuit of the downconverter includes the
supply network for the LNA that provides +12Vdc on the
RF input connector.
>/P>
The downconverter includes two RF amplifier stages
(two MRF571s) and a harmonic mixer with two BA481 Schottky
diodes. Due to the low IF of only 36 MHz, filtering the image
frequency, just 72 MHz above the desired frequency, is not easy.
Since high-Q resonators can not be built in microstrip
technology, the downconverter is using band-reject filters
to attenuate the unwanted image response.
>/P>
The downconverter includes three almost identical
filters, each consisting of four microstrip resonators.
The two inner microstrip resonators (for example L4 and L5
in the first filter) operate as a rather wide band-pass filter
with the bandwidth in the range of 200 MHz. Of course L4 and L5
alone are not able to provide any significant attenuation of
the image frequency.
The two outer resonators (for example L3 and L6 in the
first filter) operate as absorption traps for the image
frequency, 72 MHz above the desired reception frequency.
The overall combination is a band-pass/band-reject filter.
Three such filters provide more than 40dB attenuation of
the unwanted image frequency. The main purpose of the
two RF amplifier stages is to compensate for the loss in
these filters.
The mixer uses two antiparallel Schottky diodes (BA481)
and requires a local oscillator signal at half the conversion
frequency (around 870 MHz). The main drawback of this simple
circuit is a higher noise figure, usually around 15dB.
The downconverter is built as a microstrip circuit on
a double-sided FR4 glassfibre-epoxy printed-circuit board
with the dimensions of 80mm x 125mm. The upper side is shown
in figure 3, the lower side is not etched. The component
location is shown in figure 4. The construction of similar
microstrip circuits has been widely discussed in (9) and (10).
An adjustable-frequency signal source is required for the
correct alignment of the image frequency traps. In practice,
L3, L6, L8, L11, L13 and L16 usually need to be shortened by
about 1mm during the alignment procedure. Other microstrip
resonators hardly need any adjustments. L17 may be made
slightly longer for the best mixer noise figure.
Since the mixer includes two antiparallel diodes, no
DC voltage is generated during operation. The local oscillator
chain is therefore adjusted by connecting an ohmmeter to the
IF output and tuning the multiplier stages for the minimum
resistance. The maximum LO drive may not correspond to the
best noise figure, but in this case it is better to have
some safety margin on the LO signal level.
4. NOAA HRPT receiver Local Oscillator Multiplier
NOAA HRPT transmissions are usually encountered on two
different frequencies: 1698.000 MHz and 1707.000 MHz. The
1698.000 MHz channel is usually assigned to the morning/evening
satellites while the afternoon/midnight satellites transmit on
1707.000 MHz. All NOAA satellites carry onboard three 1.7 GHz
transmitters and in addition may transmit HRPT signals on
1702.500 MHz in the case of failure of both primary
transmitters.
However, the transmitter on 1702.500 MHz is connected to
a LHCP antenna and requires a polarisation switching capability
at the ground station. Maybe this is the main reason why the
1702.500 MHz transmitter has never been used for HRPT
transmissions although it has been used for other data
transmissions. A NOAA HRPT receiving station therefore only
requires two channels, 1698.000 MHz and 1707.000 MHz, both
with RHCP antenna polarisation.
Other satellites may transmit on different frequencies.
For example, the Chinese FENG-YUN satellites were transmitting
fully NOAA HRPT compatible images on 1695.500 MHz and
1704.500 MHz. Although this receiver is not suitable
for the digital transmissions originating from geostationary
weather satellites, due to the different data rates and
modulation techniques, it is nevertheless useful to have the
reception capability of at least the main WEFAX channel at
1691.000 MHz. The reception of the latter is convenient for
antenna rotator calibration and LNA/RF front-end checkout.
Since a NOAA HRPT receiver only needs to be tuned to
three or four different frequencies, the local oscillator
can be crystal-controlled, followed by a multiplier chain.
The crystal-controlled local oscillator is shown in figure 5.
Each crystal has its own oscillator and channel selection
is performed by turning on the desired oscillator.
The following multiplier chain is shown in figure 6.
The overall multiplication factor is 64, but the last
frequency doubling is performed by the harmonic mixer itself.
The oscillator transistors are already able to provide the
second harmonic at around 54 MHz. This frequency is then
multiplied by four to about 217 MHz, then doubled to 435 MHz
and finally doubled to 870 MHz.
The NOAA HRPT receiver local oscillator multiplier is
built on a single-sided printed-circuit board with the
dimensions of 80mm x 100mm, as shown in figure 7. The
corresponding component location is shown in figure 8.
L1, L2, L3 and L4 have an inductance of about 1.2uH and
their main purpose is to force the crystals to oscillate
on the desired third overtone at 27 MHz. In addition these
adjustable coils allow some fine frequency tuning to
compensate for the crystal tolerances. L5 and L6 have about
0.3uH each. In practice L1, L2, L3 and L4 have 10 turns each
on a miniature TV IF transformer core while L5 and L6 have
5 turns each on the same type of core.
L7, L8 and L9 are self-supporting coils with three turns
of 1mm copper enamelled wire each, closely wound on a 5mm
internal diameter. All three coils should have the same
orientation to obtain the proper magnetic coupling. L12 is a
self-supporting coil with three turns of 0.5mm copper enamelled
wire, closely wound on a 3mm internal diameter. Finally, L10, L11, L13 and L14 are etched on the printed circuit board.
The oscillators should operate immediately without any
alignment. The multiplier chain however requires alignment.
The latter should be performed stage by stage by checking
the corresponding signal level on the base of the following
multiplier transistor. In fact it is enough to check the DC
voltages, since the BE junction operates as a rectifier.
If the operation of the last multiplier stage is found
unstable, the wire leads of the BFY90 transistor should be
shortened. If this does not suppress parasitic oscillations,
the spacing of the turns of L12 should be modified.
5. NOAA HRPT Receiver IF Amplifier
The NOAA HRPT receiver IF amplifier is shown in figure 9.
The design of the IF amplifier is based on the available 36 MHz
SAW filters. The overall bandwidth of NOAA HRPT transmissions
is around 3 MHz, so a PAL television receiver SAW filter with
a bandwidth of about 4-5 MHz is a very convenient choice. SAW
filters have a flat passband and very steep edges, but most
important of all they have a flat group delay so that they do
not distort fast digital signals.
The remaining circuit of the IF amplifier is also based
on available components for television receivers. The first
low-noise amplifier stage with the BFR90 transistor is followed
by yet another amplifier stage (BFY90) to compensate for the
high insertion loss (15-20dB) of the SAW filter. The SAW filter
is followed by an integrated IF amplifier TDA440. The latter
also includes an AGC circuit.
In addition to the SAW filter, some selectivity is also
provided by the tuned circuit with L1. On the other hand,
there is a wideband transformer L2 on the output of the TDA440.
The video demodulator inside the TDA440 is not used except for
steering the AGC. Although the NOAA HRPT PSK signals can be
limited, operating the IF amplifier in the linear region
makes the bandwidth of the filters much less critical.
The NOAA HRPT receiver IF amplifier is built on a
single-sided printed-circuit board with the dimensions of
40mm x 100mm, as shown in figure 10. The corresponding component
location is shown in figure 11.
L1 has about 0.3uH or 5 turns on a miniature TV IF
transformer core. L2 is a wideband transformer with the primary
inductance of about 2uH and the turns ratio of 5:1, in
practice 10 turns and 2 turns on a miniature 10.7 MHz IF
transformer core. Of course, L1 needs adjustment while the
core of L2 can simply be adjusted for the maximum inductance.
Any 36 MHz SAW filter with a single input and output
should be suitable for the IF amplifier. These filters are
available in two different packages: TO-8 metal can and
plastic single-in-line. The printed-circuit board has holes for
both types of packages. A slight offset of the SAW filter
centre frequency or local oscillator crystals can always be
corrected with L1.
The 10kohm trimmer sets the AGC threshold or the output
signal level. Warning! The circuit does not work with some
integrated circuits, in particular with the TDA440S. Therefore
be careful to obtain a TDA440 without any suffix letters!
6. NOAA HRPT Receiver PSK Demodulator
The 665.4kbit/s NOAA HRPT serial data stream is first
Manchester (split-phase) encoded. The Manchester-encoded
signal then modulates the phase of the RF carrier. The
phase modulation amounts to +/-67.5 degrees nominally.
The RF spectrum of such a signal includes an unmodulated
carrier at the centre frequency and two symmetrical sidebands
with the maximum offset +/-655.4 kHz from the centre frequency.
The unmodulated carrier level is about 8dB weaker than the
overall signal strength. In other words, about 0.7dB of the
transmitter power is lost in the residual carrier and the
remaining power goes to the information-carrying sidebands.
In spite of the rather wide signal spectrum and power
loss in the residual carrier, such a transmission standard was
probably selected to keep both the satellite transmitters and
the ground station demodulators as simple as possible. A
coherent demodulator only requires filtering out the residual
carrier, phase-shifting it by 90 degrees and multiplying the
regenerated carrier by the raw RF signal. All of these
functions can be performed by a single, simple phase-locked
loop.
The phase-locked loop NOAA HRPT receiver PSK demodulator
is shown in figure 12. The VCO and multiplier are included in
the integrated circuit S042P. The same multiplier is used both
as the PLL phase detector and as the PSK data demodulator.
The PLL loop filter includes a 358 dual Op-amp, while the
output data is converted to TTL level by a 311 voltage
comparator.
The locking range of the PLL should allow for VCO drift
and for the Doppler shift, which amounts to about 100kHz for
a polar-orbiting NOAA satellite at 1.7 GHz. From this point
of view, the choice of 36 MHz as an intermediate frequency is a
fortunate coincidence. Finally, the described PLL PSK
demodulator is also an efficient FM demodulator that can be
used to receive the analogue WEFAX transmissions from
geostationary weather satellites.
The audio-frequency monitor is however mainly intended
to check the proper operation of the receiver and detect any
interference. The PLL demodulator also includes a fine tuning
control. When the latter is set correctly and the demodulator
locks on a valid NOAA HRPT signal, the audio frequency noise
simply disappears.
The NOAA HRPT receiver PSK demodulator is built on a
single-sided printed-circuit board with the dimensions of
60mmX60mm, as shown in figure 13. The corresponding component
location is shown on figure 14. L1 has an inductance of about
0.3uH or 5 turns on a miniature TV IF transformer core.
The alignment of the PSK demodulator consists in tuning
the VCO to the desired frequency. In practice this means
setting the inductance of L1 so that locking occurs in the
middle of the fine-tune control. The fine tune potentiometer
should supply a voltage up to about 9V and this power supply
should be well filtered and stabilised. On the other hand,
a single-turn potentiometer (100kohm lin) is sufficient for
the fine-tune function.
7. NOAA HRPT Receiver Monitor AF Amplifier
A simple audio-frequency amplifier is required as an AF
monitor in a NOAA HRPT receiver. The circuit diagram is shown
on figure 15. The TAA611 may be an obsolete type, but it has
a low power drain and does not generate much interference to
the other circuits.
The single-sided printed-circuit board measures 40mm x 60mm
and is shown in figure 16. The corresponding component
location is shown in figure 17. A practical value for the
volume potentiometer is 100kohm log.
8. NOAA HRPT Receiver Bit-Rate Synchroniser
The PSK demodulator supplies a Manchester-encoded serial
data stream at 665.4kbit/s. The main function of the bit-rate
synchroniser is bit-clock recovery. In addition, the bit-rate
synchroniser also removes the Manchester encoding and supplies
the original NRZ data stream.
A Manchester-encoded signal always includes a signal-level
transition in the middle of a data bit. Additional signal-level
transitions may be present at the beginning and/or end of one
bit period. All of these transitions may be used for bit-clock
recovery.
The circuit diagram of the NOAA HRPT receiver bit-rate
synchroniser is shown in figure 18. The bit clock recovery
includes a transition detector with a delay line (74LS164
shift register) and an EXOR gate. The output of the transition
detector is fed to a PLL with the VCXO operating at 16 times
the bit rate (10.6464MHz).
The PLL includes two phase detectors, implemented with
EXOR gates. The in-phase detector is used to indicate the lock
condition while the quadrature detector feeds the feedback
amplifier. The polarity of the obtained 665.4 kHz clock is still
ambiguous, since the PLL may lock on the beginning/end
transitions or on the middle-bit transitions. An additional
circuit is therefore required to resolve the correct clock
phase.
The Manchester decoding is performed by a simple EXOR
operation between the encoded data and the synchronised,
square-wave clock. Since there are two possible clock phases,
two identical bit-conditioning circuits are required. The
latter use one 74LS161 synchronous counter each as an
integrator. Both integrators count for 15 CLK*16 periods
and dump the result to a buffer in the 16th CLK*16 period.
In addition, the result of the first integrator is
intentionally delayed by one-half bit period with an
additional buffer to be available at the same time as the
result from the second integrator.
The final decision is simple: a count between 0 an 7
indicates a logical zero, while a count between 8 and 15
indicates a logical one. In addition, one can assume that
a count between 0 and 3 and between 12 and 15 indicates a
"good" bit, while a count between 4 and 11 indicates a
corrupted bit. A corrupted bit may be generated by noise,
but it may also indicate a wrong clock phase.
Corrupted bits from both bit conditioners are integrated
the corresponding RC networks and then fed to the decision circuit with the 339 comparators. The final decision is
stored in the RS flip-flop with the two 74LS02 gates. The
output of this flip-flop drives the 74LS157 to select the
the bit conditioner driven by the correct clock phase.
The 74LS157 also drives three LED’s. The green LED
indicates the bit-rate lock. The yellow LED indicates the
missing transitions at the beginning/end of single bits and
therefore signals the Manchester mid-bit transitions.
Finally, the red LED indicates the missing mid-bit transitions
and is an early indication of poor signal quality or increasing
bit-error rate.
Without a valid input signal or when just noise is present
at the receiver input, the green LED is off and both red and
yellow LED’s are on. When a signal is applied, the green LED
will go on. As the signal strength increases and the
signal-to-noise ratio improves, the red LED will slowly go
off. The yellow LED should stay on all of the times. If the
yellow LED goes off or starts flashing, there is something
wrong with the satellite transmission like long sequences of
logical ones or zeroes. During normal HRPT reception the
yellow LED makes just perceptible intensity variations,
synchronised to the 6Hz HRPT frame period.
Since the NOAA HRPT modulation format includes a residual
carrier, the polarity of the demodulated data stream is not
ambiguous. However, if the RF signal is converted to a
different frequency, the polarity of the phase modulation will
be reversed if the signal spectrum is reversed in the
frequency-conversion process. The bit-rate synchroniser
therefore includes a polarity switch right at the input of
the circuit. This polarity switch is only needed if the
downconversion scheme is changed. If the bit-rate synchroniser
is only used in the described receiver, the above mentioned
polarity switch should be left open all of the time!
The NOAA HRPT receiver bit-rate synchroniser is built
on a double-sided printed-circuit board with the dimensions
of 80mm x 100mm. The upper side is shown in figure 19 while
the lower side is shown in figure 20. The corresponding
component location is shown in figure 21.
The alignment of the bit-rate synchroniser should start
by bringing the VCXO to the desired frequency range with a
frequency counter. The VCXO is using a crystal with a higher
nominal frequency of about 10.68 MHz, so that the pulling
range with the BB109 varicap diode may be made wider with
the aid of L1. The exact value of L1 depends on the crystal
used and may be as large as 30uH (40 turns on a 10.7 MHz IF
transformer core) to pull the crystal down to 10.4646 MHz.
The function of L2 (1.2uH or 10 turns on a TV IF transformer
core) is to prevent the oscillator to jump on the overtone
crystal resonances.
Without any input signal one should first obtain 2.5V
on the varicap diode by the corresponding 10kohm trimmer
and then tune L1 for 10.4646 MHz. The bit-rate lock threshold
trimmer (10kohm) should be set so that the green LED just goes
off. When a valid NOAA HRPT signal is applied and the green
LED goes on, one should finally check that the voltage
on the varicap diode is close to 2.5V and eventually correct
the setting of L1.
9. NOAA HRPT Receiver Aux Frame Synchroniser
The HRPT transmission includes the data originating from
all of the sensors onboard a NOAA satellite (2), (3). The
serial data is organised into words and frames. Words are 10
bits long and the MSB is transmitted first. One frame includes
11090 words or 110900 bits so that exactly 6 frames are
transmitted in one second at a speed of 665.4kbit/s.
The frame rate is also synchronised to the main
radiometer (AVHRR) mirror rotation, so that one frame contains
the data of one AVHRR scan line. The AVHRR image data takes
most of the frame and consists of 10240 words, starting with
word 751 and ending with word 10990. The first five words of
the AVHRR data correspond to the first pixel data in five
spectral channels. The following five words correspond to
the second pixel. Finally, the last five words of AVHRR data
correspond to the last, 2048th pixel.
Frame synchronisation is achieved by detecting known
patterns in the frame structure. In the NOAA HRPT frames there
are two such patterns: a 6 words (60 bits) long frame sync at
the beginning of a frame and a 100 words (1000 bits) long
auxiliary frame sync the end of a frame. Both patterns are not
arbitrary, but are generated by mathematical algorithms,
known as binary polynomial division. Besides interesting
mathematical properties, these patterns are also easy to
generate with shift registers and EXOR gates.
However, in real receiving conditions, some bits may get
corrupted due to a poor signal-to-noise ratio. This is
especially true in an amateur receiving station with a small
antenna. Of course, bit sync and frame sync should not be lost
with moderate bit-error rates. Therefore the frame sync circuit
should not just be able to detect the sync pattern but should
also tolerate a certain amount of errors in the sync pattern.
Simply speaking, the frame synchroniser should lock on a signal
even if just an arbitrary part of the sync pattern is received
correctly.
The circuit presented in figure 22 is designed to look
for the auxiliary sync pattern in a NOAA HRPT transmission.
The auxiliary sync pattern is generated by a 10th degree
polynomial (10 stage shift register) X**10+X**5+X**2+X+1.
The frame synchroniser includes an identical shift register
with an identical EXOR network. The incoming data is fed to
the shift register and compared with the locally computed
result at the same time. If the two results match, the
incoming sequence corresponds to the given polynomial.
If a match is found for 64 consecutive bits, the 4520
counter will signal that frame sync has been achieved.
However, the exact position of the detected sync sequence
inside the 1000 sync bits is not known yet. Therefore the
4011 gates switch the EXOR network back to the shift register
input and the circuit is clocked on until the shift register
reaches the all-ones state.
The all-ones event is detected by AND gates and is finally
signalled out a valid frame-sync pulse. The frame pulse also
triggers a timer (4017 and 4020) that inhibits the aux
frame-sync circuits until the next expected aux frame-sync
pattern. The timer output also drives the frame-sync LED.
The described auxiliary sync pattern detector is also
sensitive to a long sequence of zeroes. Since the latter do not represent a valid sync signal, the circuit is inhibited
by the 4029 counter as soon as 12 consecutive zeroes are
detected. In a valid aux sync pattern there are at most
9 consecutive zeroes, since the 10-stage shift register
pattern generator never goes through the all-zeroes state.
The described frame synchroniser checks 64 consecutive
bits. Since the shift register needs to be filled with 10
valid sync bits first, a correct reception of 74 sync bits
is required to trigger the described frame synchroniser.
These 74 bits may occur anywhere in the available 1000
aux sync bits. Therefore the described frame synchroniser
will lock reliably even at bit-error rates as poor as 10**-2.
The NOAA HRPT receiver aux frame synchroniser is built
on a double-sided printed-circuit board with the dimensions
of 60mm x 120mm. The upper side is shown in figure 23 while
the lower side is shown in figure 24. The corresponding
component location is shown in figure 25.
Being a completely digital circuit, the described aux
frame synchroniser should not require any alignment. It is
however necessary to understand its principle of operation in
the case when troubleshooting is required.
Warning! The circuit includes a "difficult" component:
the 4068 AND/NAND gates. These devices should be supplied
by the companies RCA or SGS. The 4068 devices from other
manufacturers are only NAND gates with the output on pin-13,
while pin 1 is not connected. If the latter are used, two
additional CMOS inverters are required to perform the AND
function on pin-1. 74HC4068 devices were not tested yet, so
these may be AND/NAND devices.
10. NOAA HRPT Receiver Construction Notes
In the above description, the operation and construction
of the various parts of the NOAA HRPT receiver was discussed.
When assembling the complete receiver, one should however
notice that the overall gain is rather large and the signal
levels range from the noise floor up to TTL levels.
To avoid harmful interaction it is recommended that the
downconverter, local oscillator multiplier and IF amplifier
are located in one shielded container. The PSK demodulator,
bit synchroniser and frame synchroniser may be located in
a separated shielded container, maybe together with the
computer interface. More information about the installation
and shielding of microstrip and other RF circuits can
be found in (9), (10).
Before building the described circuits one should first
check what kind of signals are required by the computer
interface. If the latter requires the frame-sync pulse,
some variable delay may be required using shift registers
and/or counters. The polarity of the bit clock may also
be reversed. Even if the receiver is not used with the
"DSP computer", it is recommended to check (11) to understand
the operation of NOAA HRPT computer interfaces in general.
Of course it is hoped that everyone is able to reproduce
high-quality pictures like the one shown in figure 26.