FCC Exam Question: 6A476
In a tuned RF receiver the heterodyne method, over the autodyne reception, has:
Explanation: The heterodyne method, particularly the superheterodyne receiver, offers significant advantages over autodyne reception. A) **Great sensitivity:** In a superheterodyne receiver, a dedicated RF amplifier stage can boost weak incoming signals before they are mixed down. This improves the signal-to-noise ratio and overall sensitivity, allowing for the reception of fainter signals. Autodyne circuits often struggle with optimal gain distribution because a single device performs multiple functions. B) **More stable operation of the circuit:** The local oscillator (LO) in a heterodyne receiver is a separate circuit, isolated from the incoming RF signal. This allows it to be designed for high frequency stability, often using crystal control or highly stable LC circuits. Autodyne circuits, where the oscillator is also part of the RF amplification and mixing, are prone to frequency pulling and instability due to changes in input signal or tuning. C) **Wider control of the beat-frequency:** In a superheterodyne receiver, the incoming RF signal is converted to a fixed intermediate frequency (IF). This allows for highly selective and high-gain IF amplifier stages that operate at a constant, well-controlled frequency. If "beat-frequency" refers to a beat frequency oscillator (BFO) used for CW/SSB reception, a dedicated BFO in a heterodyne receiver offers precise and stable control without affecting the main tuning or stability, unlike the inherent instability of self-oscillating autodyne designs. Therefore, the heterodyne method provides superior performance in all these aspects.
6A51
6A303
6A438
6A519
6A76
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Includes Elements 1, 3, 6, 7R, 8, and 9.