Preselector
A preselector is a name for an electronic device that connects between a radio antenna and a radio receiver. The preselector is a band-pass filter that blocks troublesome out-of-tune frequencies from passing through from the antenna into the radio receiver (or preamplifier) that otherwise would be directly connected to the antenna.
Purpose
A preselector improves the performance of nearly any receiver, but is especially helpful to receivers with broadband front-ends that are prone to overload, such as scanners and ordinary consumer-market shortwave and AM broadcast receivers. However, a preselector is of no benefit for receivers or preamps if they are fed from a narrow-band source, such as a tuned small loop antenna.
A preselector typically is tuned to have a narrow bandwidth, centered on the receiver’s operating frequency. The preselector passes through the signal on the frequency it is tuned to unchanged, or only slightly diminished, but it reduces or removes off-frequency signals, cutting down or eliminating unwanted interference. However, a preselector does not remove interference on the same frequency that it and the receiver are both tuned to.
Extra filtering can be useful because the first input stage (“front end”) of receivers contains at least one RF amplifier, which has power limits (dynamic range). Most radios’ front ends amplify all radio frequencies delivered to the antenna connection. So off-frequency signals constitute a load on the RF amplifier, using part of its dynamic range for unused signals. “Limited dynamic range” means that the amplifier circuits have a limit to the total amount of incoming RF signal they can amplify without overloading, symptoms of which are nonlinearity and ultimately clipping.
When the front-end overloads, the performance of the receiver is severely reduced, and in extreme cases can damage the receiver.[1] In situations with noisy and crowded bands, or where there are strong local stations, the dynamic range of the receiver can quickly be exceeded. Extra filtering by the preselector limits frequency range and power demands that are applied to all later stages of the receiver, only loading it with signals within the preselected band.
Multifunction preselectors
A preselector can be engineered so that in addition to attenuating interference from unwanted frequencies, it will perform other services which may be helpful for a receiver: It can limit input signal voltage to protect a sensitive receiver from damage caused by static discharge, nearby voltage spikes, and overload from nearby transmitters’ signals. It can also incorporate a small radio frequency amplifier stage to boost the filtered signal. None of these extra conveniences are necessary for the function of preselection, and for typical use, an amplifier in the preselector serves no helpful purpose.
Antenna preamplifiers (preamps) can be made “tunable” by incorporating a front-end preselector circuit to improve their performance. The integrated device is both a preamplifier and a preselector, and either name is correct. This ambiguity sometimes leads to confusion – conflating preselection with amplification. An ordinary preselector is called a “passive” preselector to clearly specify that it requires no power supply and has no internal amplifier. “Passive” preselectors typically work quite well with modern receivers, with no noticeable signal-loss.
Bandwidth vs. signal strength trade-off
With all preselectors there is some loss at the tuned frequency; usually, most of the loss is in the inductor (the tuning coil). Tuning the preselector for narrower bandwidth (or higher Q, or greater selectivity) increases this loss.
Most preselectors have separate settings for an inductor and (at least) one capacitor. So with at least two adjustments available to tune to just one frequency, there are often a variety of settings that will tune the preselector to a frequency in its middle-range.
For the narrowest bandwidth (highest Q), the preselector is tuned using the highest inductance and lowest capacitance for the desired frequency, but this produces the greatest loss. It also requires retuning the preselector more often while searching for faint signals, to keep the preselector’s pass-through frequency close to the receiver’s working frequency.
For lowest loss (and widest bandwidth), the preselector is tuned using the lowest inductance and highest capacitance (and the lowest Q, or least selectivity) for the desired frequency. The wider bandwidth allows more interference through from nearby frequencies, but reduces the need to retune the preselector while tuning the receiver, since any one low-inductance setting for the preselector will pass a wide range of nearby frequencies.
Different from an antenna tuner
Although a preselector is placed in the same location as an antenna tuner, it serves a different purpose: An antenna tuner or “transmatch” connects two signal lines with different signal impedances and only blocks out-of-tune frequencies incidentally (if it blocks any at all).
A transmatch matches transmitter impedance to feedline impedance, so that signal power from the radio transmitter smoothly transfers into the antenna’s feed cable; a properly adjusted transmatch prevents transmitted power from being reflected back into the transmitter (called ‘backlash current’). Some antenna tuner circuits can both impedance match and preselect[2], for example the Series Parallel Capacitor (SPC) tuner, and many circuits used in balanced line (BLT) tuners can be adjusted to also function as band-pass filters.
Some simpler types of antenna tuners that are not band-pass circuits can also provide limited preselection. The now-common ‘T’-network is a high-pass circuit which always essentially eliminates frequencies below the operating frequency, and can be adjusted for high operating Q that might attenuate noise by as much as 20 dB above the operating frequency.[3] The complementary ‘π’-network, customarily incorporated in the final stage of ‘vintage’ tube transmitters and amplifiers, is low-pass and always essentially eliminates frequencies above the tuned frequency; it can be similarly adjusted to provide as much as 20 dB attenuation below the tuned frequency.
See also
Footnotes
References
- ^ Cutsogeorge, George (2014) [2009]. Managing Interstation Interference with Coaxial Stubs and Filters (2nd ed.). Aptos, CA: International Radio Corporation.
- ^ Stanley, John, K4ERO (1999). "The Filtuner". ARRL Antenna Compendium. Vol. 6. Newington, CT: American Radio Relay League.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Stanley, John, K4ERO (September 2015). "Antenna tuners as preselectors". Technical Correspondence. QST Magazine. Newington, CT: American Radio Relay League. p. 61.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)