View attachment 3954
Here is a scope display of an AM carrier overmodulated by a continuous tone. If, as you claim, under these conditions the final collector voltage is reduced to zero, and the carrier is cutoff, then explain to me HOW THE UNIT CONTINUES TO TRANSMIT, AND HOW THAT TRANSMISSION CAN BE DETECTED BY A STANDARD AM RECEIVER IF NO CARRIER IS PRESENT. Common sense and logic tells me that the carrier is there.
The misunderstanding comes from the way a scope displays a modulated AM signal. There are three components to an AM signal: the carrier, the upper sideband, and the lower sideband. However, a scope cannot display these components seperately in a single trace. What the scope does is to ADD THE THREE SIGNALS TOGETHER AND DISPLAY THE VECTOR SUM. What happens is that as modultion % increases, the negative modulation peaks are subtracted making it APPEAR that the carrier is varying in amplitude. When modulation exceeds 100%, it APPEARS as if the carrier is cutoff, but this is not the case. If it was cutoff, transmission would cease.
If you look the conditions in the scope trace shown above on a spectrum analyzer, it will show that the carrier is present when overmodulated, and does not change in amplitude.
BTW, I posted the AMwindow link because I thought Steve did a good job of explaining how the circuit works, and that members might like to look at the additional info on the site.
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Sorry, but I bet you don't have a spectrum analyzer. Because you would see, with a transformer or other high level modulated AM signal, the carrier DOES drop when overmodulated with a NON NPC or other type of assymetrical limiter in it. As I stated, I HAVE one, and have actually WATCHED it. Nor are you taking into account that NUMEROUS types of transmitters exist in both the CB / HAM and the commercial world that have controlled carrier, which is what BDW and Eitner mistakenly call NPC. For it to be TRUE npc, the cap would also need a resistor and a diode, so that it ONLY worked on the negative peaks....
See the little flat lines in between the "overmodulated" waveform? That's NO RF, COMPLETELY CUT OFF, ETC. 0 volts is 0 volts, my friend. PLEASE tell me HOW much current your little final transistor can sink to put power out at 0 collector volts (0 RF volts MEANS 0 collector volts. That little line in between the modulated peaks positive and negative is 0 volts). These whole laws of physics get in the way of Channel 19 speak a LOT, but if you do the math, or look at it GRAPHICALLY, then you would see how it really pans out, pun intended...
ALSO, you would see with the spec an that as SOON as the carrier level starts to waver, the AM bandwith (what is really called IMD, what a LOT of CBers confuse with "loudness") REALLY gets wide in high level systems. It's not AS bad with low level, as either the balanced modulator will phase invert the 0 carrier condition, or if you are modulating a driver stage typically you still pass the entire modulated signal through an IF filter of one kind of another... This is one reason why even when you overmodulate the HELL out of a 'ham rig', typically you'll only sound like shit on frequency and within the passband of the IF filter.... They run the tx 'backwards' through the receiver filters. This is another reason the ham radios sound 'pinched'.... This, and ALC issues on AM.
It's a hard subject to grasp, unless you actually HAVE the equipment there, or can take a look with the scope at the modulated DC being fed to the final and driver in the 29 style transmitters. Again, HOW can your transmitter be putting out ANY power when the modulated stage(s) see 0 volts?
(and to answer your question as to WHY you can still hear someone when this condition happens, the reason is this: The RF has AUDIO superimposed on it. 27 million times a second is a LOT more often than the typical 2400 times a second (2.4 kc, typical AM or SSB passband, or narrower in a good TX, and typical of the peakiness in the D104 or other power type mics) If you take a look at the RF, and not the AF, on the oscope, you'll also see this..... However, it takes a scope a LOT faster than 30 mhz to be able to actually WATCH what is happening to the carrier. A scope with at LEAST double the passband of the actual circuit being monitored is what most people say to use. BUT, if you DO have a scope fast enough, you'll see that you can actually COUNT the individual rf cycles, and see that if you vary the modulated tone, you can figure out the tone frequency by the amount of RF pulses that get "swallowed". Simple division. As long as you know the CARRIER frequency. You can also do this with multiplication, if you know the modulating frequency, but it isn't NEAR as accurate. In other words, if you adjust your scope to look at the actual CARRIER frequency, instead of the modulated signal, then you'll see individual pieces of the RF carrier 'disappear' on the scope trace.... And those pulses will CHANGE depending on the frequency of the modulated signal, as well as the carrier).
This is pretty complicated, and a LOT of people DON'T get it.... BUT, if you can find the equipment to actually test it out, you'll see what I'm saying is actually true. A 100 mhz digi hold scope would be adequate, but not cheap.... And spec-ans ain't cheap regardless. I'm lucky to have an IFR, which has a Spec An built into it, as well as just about EVERYTHING else needed to adjust and align a radio, transmit or receive.
--Toll_Free