Hi all,
I have been thinking about revisiting the classic BFO circuitry which originally used the outputs of two oscillators say, at 100KHz, mixed and detected to produce an audio beat note. One oscillator was the "reference" oscillator, whilst the other, the "search" oscillator had the search coil as part of its frequency-determining circuit.
When the detector was set up and in use, when the search coil found a metal target, the pitch of the audio beat note increased or decreased, depending on which side of the beat note the detector was tuned to.
The electromagnetic field from the coil induced eddy currents in the metal target and changed the inductance of the coil, which had the effect of changing the frequency of the search oscillator and consequently, the beat note.
My idea is this. If the change in inductance at 100KHz was sufficient to effect a beat note change of 10Hz, what would be the result of beating the 100th harmonic of 100KHz with a 10MHz crystal controlled reference oscillator? My reckoning says that for the same change of 10Hz at 100KHz, the result at 10MHz would be 1000Hz change in the beat note.
What do others think? I would be pleased to hear your views.
Duncan
I have been thinking about revisiting the classic BFO circuitry which originally used the outputs of two oscillators say, at 100KHz, mixed and detected to produce an audio beat note. One oscillator was the "reference" oscillator, whilst the other, the "search" oscillator had the search coil as part of its frequency-determining circuit.
When the detector was set up and in use, when the search coil found a metal target, the pitch of the audio beat note increased or decreased, depending on which side of the beat note the detector was tuned to.
The electromagnetic field from the coil induced eddy currents in the metal target and changed the inductance of the coil, which had the effect of changing the frequency of the search oscillator and consequently, the beat note.
My idea is this. If the change in inductance at 100KHz was sufficient to effect a beat note change of 10Hz, what would be the result of beating the 100th harmonic of 100KHz with a 10MHz crystal controlled reference oscillator? My reckoning says that for the same change of 10Hz at 100KHz, the result at 10MHz would be 1000Hz change in the beat note.
What do others think? I would be pleased to hear your views.
Duncan
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