Understanding how the Superhet / Superheterodyne Radio Works
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I'm Ian Poole editor and owner of the Electronics Notes website and accompanying YouTube channel. My mission on YouTube is to provide understandable videos about mainly electronic components with a few other videos about general analogue electronics and RF technology. Electronic components are the key building blocks for any electronics design and that is why I've chosen to select the as my focus. In the videos I try to draw on my experience as an electronics engineer, giving some practical hints and tips and the pitfalls to avoid. I also hope to help engineers and hobbyists and hopefully encourage more to become electronics engineers. Please don't forget to watch more of my videos and to subscribe for more invaluable information about electronic and radio engineering. #electroniccomponents #electronics #resistors #capacitors #semiconductors #circuits
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Video Description
The superhet or superheterodyne radio is over 100 years old - the first superhet receiver was made in 1918 and since then it has developed to become one of the most widespread types or formats of radio receiver ever. The superhet or superheterodyne radio gains its name from the fact that it uses heterodynes above the audio radio - the word means supersonic, or above the audible range, and heterodyne, being mixed together. In other words the superhet radio concept is based around radio frequency mixers which are used to convert the frequency of an incoming radio signal to a fixed intermediate frequency. This gives advantages in terms of filtering as fixed frequency filters are much easier to design and give much better performance. There are also advantages in terms of having the filtering at a lower frequency - particularly in the past it was possible to achieve a much better performance at lower frequencies. This is still true to some degree, but not to the same extent. As the IF is where there is most of the gain, having a fixed frequency amplifier has a number of advantages. Also in the early days of vacuum tubes / valves, it was necessary to have a low frequency otherwise the amplifiers would burst into oscillation. One major issue with the superhet radio is the image signal where there are two frequencies that can enter a mixer and provide an output at the intermediate frequency. The unwanted one is called the image signal and this is attenuated to a sufficient degree by adding tuning before the mixer. More information about the superhet or superheterodyne radio can be found here: https://www.electronics-notes.com/articles/radio/superheterodyne-receiver/basics.php Check out the Electronics Notes website: https://www.electronics-notes.com Please don't forget to subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/electronicsnotes?sub_confirmation=1
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