Receiving antenna building » History » Version 13

SCHNEIDER, Joris, 03/23/2017 10:59 PM

1 11 SCHNEIDER, Joris
+*Previous :*+ [[Receiving antenna design]]
2 11 SCHNEIDER, Joris
3 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
h1. Receiving antenna building
4 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
5 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
h2. List of components
6 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
7 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
h2. Assembly
8 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
9 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
p=. 
10 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
!{width:70%}Cables.jpg!
11 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
12 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
13 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
p=. 
14 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
!{width:70%}Connections(2).jpg!
15 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
16 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
p=. 
17 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
!{width:70%}Connections(3).jpg!
18 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
19 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
20 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
p=. 
21 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
!{width:70%}Roof.jpg!
22 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
23 13 SCHNEIDER, Joris
24 5 SCHNEIDER, Joris
h2. Testing
25 2 SCHNEIDER, Joris
26 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
In order to ensure the fact that the antenna is functioning well, we made several tests.
27 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
 
28 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
At first, we had to ensure that the cables will really bring the phase shift of a Pi/2 between opposite dipoles. To do so, we plugged in the cables to a signal generator. We generated a sine signal at 137MHz and observed on an oscilloscope the signal at the output of two cables which have a different length as explained in the design part. Here you can find pictures of the signal generator and the observed signal at the ouput.
29 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
30 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
p=. 
31 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
!{width:60%}PhaseShift2.jpg!
32 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
!{width:60%}PhaseShift.jpg!
33 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
34 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
We see that the phase shift between the two cables is about Pi/2.
35 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
36 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
Then, at each step during the assembly, we tested each connection with a multimeter in order to ensure that all connections are correctly done.
37 5 SCHNEIDER, Joris
38 5 SCHNEIDER, Joris
h2. Validation
39 4 SCHNEIDER, Joris
40 10 SCHNEIDER, Joris
Even if we tested the cables and all the connections, we need to make sure the antenna is really able to receive APT signals. So, we plugged in the coaxial cable of our antenna to a radio receiver. As an APT signal is audible once demodulated in frequency, we can determine easily if the antenna is correctly working or not. To know when a satellite pass above Toulouse, we used a tracker software called WXTrack. Thanks to this software, we are able to know when each NOAA satellite will be visible. 
41 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
42 10 SCHNEIDER, Joris
To validate our antenna, we only had to turn on the radioreceiver to the correct frequency depending on the satellite which is available and listen to the signal directly at the output of the receiver. Here is the radio receiver configured on the NOAA 19 frequency (137.1MHz).
43 10 SCHNEIDER, Joris
44 1 SCHNEIDER, Joris
p=. 
45 10 SCHNEIDER, Joris
!{width:70%}RadioReceiver.PNG!
46 9 SCHNEIDER, Joris
47 9 SCHNEIDER, Joris
48 10 SCHNEIDER, Joris
During our tests, we could correctly hear the specific signal. To have an idea, an example of audible APT signal is available in the files list (florida.wav). You can download it to hear the APT signal.
49 11 SCHNEIDER, Joris
50 12 SCHNEIDER, Joris
+*Next :*+ [[APT images reception]]