The ham radio receiver of the 21st century is mostly software. It is called a Software Defined Radio or SDR for short.
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SDR RCVR Demo
The small SDR hardware pictured above is an entry-level unit. When paired with free SDR software (running on a PC), it can serve as a beginner's ham radio receiver or as a standby receiver for an amateur radio station.
Out of the many features and advantages of a quality SDR receiver, I especially like its effectiveness in picking extremely weak signals out of the noise and surrounding interference.
One can narrow down the bandpass filter to just enough for the signal one wants to receive. The SDR filters are truly like 'brick walls' that one can erect around the wanted signal. Best of all, there is no annoying 'ringing' on top! Just a pure signal. :)
Simply astounding!
First, as with any other radio receiver, the antenna is connected to the SDR's 'hardware' RF front-end. Its purpose is to...
The departure from a conventional ham radio receiver starts here.
The amplified IF analog signal produced by the RF front-end is fed to an analog-to-digital-converter (ADC).
The digital output of the ADC is then fed to a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA).
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All of the signal demodulation and spectral functions are done by the SDR software on your PC.
Most SDR ham radio receiver implementations will usually (at least) support AM, WFM, USB, LSB, N-FM, DSB and CW with fully adjustable DSP filter bandwidths ... down to below 1 Hz in some cases!
The SDR is hosted by the O/S of your computer, just like any other application. The majority of the SDR implementations run on some flavor of Microsoft Windows®.
However, an increasing number of SDR projects are now turning to the Linux open source operating system which offers...
On top of its higher performance and flexibility, a SDR offers ham radio operators the neat advantage of being able to add new functions and features to their ham radio receiver at no cost!
All you have to do is download and install
the latest version of the SDR software and presto!
You have a brand new ham radio receiver.
Neat! ;-)
Noteworthy SDR implementations, suitable as ham radio receivers are:
I have to mention here...
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Choosing one of the many ham radio receivers on the market can be an intimidating experience, especially if you are an aspiring ham or just beginning.
After all, it's your money that is a stake!
The ham radio receiver you choose should ideally meet your present and future needs .. as well as fit your budget, of course!
As every good ham radio operator does, you will listen a lot more than you will transmit.
As months and years go buy, your listening requirements will become increasingly demanding.
Therefore, your ham radio receiver must be up to the task, and remain so for a long time!
Frankly, I would recommend that your first ... or next amateur radio receiver be a Software Defined Radio (SDR) receiver.
Let me explain.
Your first (or last) communications receiver will have helped you discover what you really want out of a receiver.
Sooner or later, you will end up leafing through online catalogs and roaming the Internet in search of the 'ideal receiver'.
Might as well choose a receiver that can and will
change as your needs and preferences change
with experience.
What kind of receiver can keep up with you? A Software Defined Radio Receiver (SDR)!
When you buy a SDR receiver from a responsible manufacturer, software upgrades will be free of charge.
A SDR receiver kit is a great way to acquire experience and knowledge of Software Defined Radios.
WB5RVZ will give you all the introductory information you need to get started. His website is extremely well done.
The Ensemble RX III SDR Receiver is the latest version in the long line of descendants of the hugely popular SoftRock 40.
You can even go one step beyond ... and build the Ensemble RXTX SDR Transceiver!
To keep the cost down, you might want to limit yourself to a HF SDR. But, like every new technology, prices go down fast and what you could not afford eight months to a year ago ... may well have become affordable since then!
I have seen SDR solutions that cover VLF to SHF for only about double the price of a HF SDR!
Keep in mind that a well designed SDR receiver will give you performance approaching that of hardware-only ham radio receivers that cost thousands of dollars more!
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However, you should be aware that...
Windows was designed to run one application - by one person - at any given time.
Therefore, some of the major ham radio SDR players are working on porting their SDR to true multi-user and multitasking operating systems such as:
Hardware only receivers limit you to what you bought and force you to buy the new models to get the extra features you want!
On the other hand, (and fortunately) SDR lets you upgrade your ham radio receiver to include new features as they become available. It's simple. You just download and install the new software version. In almost all cases these upgrades are free of charge!
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Software defined radio (SDR) has all the potential of revolutionizing ham radio because...
This last statement is very significant because, let's face it, the Web had been eroding the ranks of ham radio for years by diverting the attention of potential new recruits away from amateur radio.
But that was before the advent of SDR!
Most ham radio operators love to 'play' with electronic equipment. I am definitely one of them!
One piece of electronic equipment that certainly has earned its place in the shack is the personal computer (PC). Most amateur radio use PCs under the Windows operating system (O/S).
An increasing number of hams are using the much more efficient and versatile Linux O/S. Some, like me, also use Macs and its OS X operating system for its ease of use - not to mention
But I digress. ;)
One of the most successful uses of a PC in the shack has been to use one as graphical interface (GUI) to control the the operating functions of our beloved transceiver!
Rig control software, such as 'Ham Radio Deluxe' and others, was the first step toward morphing RCVR and XCVR hardware into software.
But the receiver performance remained bound by the limits of the hardware.
Fact is, few of us could afford receivers equipped with Collins filters and other such sophisticated - and expensive - components. Even those expensive Collins filters could have a 'nice' annoying ring to them under some circumstances ;-)
Now a software defined radio does all signal processing in - you guessed it - software, specially optimized to use the awesome power of modern CPUs in modern PCs.
What an amazing difference in performance that made! And, to top it all, most SDR software is free!
The performance of a SDR receiver is truly as big a revolution as when the transistor replaced vacuum tubes! (Tubes were more appropriately called 'valves' when they were first invented).
To believe SDR performance, you have to hear one. You have to experience the 'cliff walled' bandpass filtering and 'scalpel sharp' notch filtering of a sophisticated software defined radio to really grasp the extent of the power of a SDR receiver.
SDR has literally opened up new horizons to those making full use of it. A SDR receiver can make your trusted dipole sound like a multi-element beam! Well, ok, not quite, but ...
At least, better enough to bring a 'beaming' smile to your face! :-)
Nowadays, a ham radio operator or club - with access to broadband Internet bandwidth - can give access to their SDR receiver to anyone on the Web! That goes a long way toward introducing ham radio to individuals who are curious about amateur radio.
A very good example of this is the WebSDR server software running under the Linux operating system. The true multiuser/multitasking capability of Linux allows hundreds of Internet users/listeners to listen and tune the SDR receiver simultaneously on the Web in real time.
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I own a SDR receiver and I use it as my primary ham radio receiver. It works wonders to pull weak signals out of the noise - be it QRN or QRM!
With the (GUI graphical user interface) of the SDRMAX software, I can see at a glance what activity there is on any portion of the radio spectrum between 10 KHz and 62 MHz. The software lets me zoom in on any portion of the big chunk of spectrum - or view the entire 62 MHz portion at once. See the video demo below.
No more blindly hunting around for weak signals during poor propagation conditions! I can see the tiniest flicker of life.
In its own way, the QS1R makes up for the fact that I do not have high gain directional antennas, yet! I only have a general purpose Carolina Windom for 160M-10M HF operations and a homemade folded dipole for 6 meters.
There are three main 'components' to the QS1R SDR receiver (as well as most others).
The hardware part which physically interfaces with the antenna system.
The firmware programs the logic components of the SDR. Its role is to extract I/Q signals from the RF energy received by the antenna. No signal processing done here, yet.
The software - called 'SDRMAX' - that transforms the I/Q signals from the SDR into useful outputs: digital, audio and the graphical user interface (GUI) (a.k.a.visual display).
The SDRMAX software runs on a PC. It takes care of all the signal processing otherwise normally done by electronic circuitry in a ham radioreceiver.
When I produced the video demo, the software version at the time was SDRMAX 3. The present version is SDRMAX 5.
Among the QS1R's many unique features, the ones that sold me are (for the RevD that I own):
Note: The QS1R is no longer manufactured :(
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73 de VE2DPE
Claude Jollet
7, Rue de la Rive, Notre-Dame-des-Prairies, Québec, Canada J6E 1M9
QTH Locator: FN36gb