hi all
I just want to know how to send digital data let's say "1Byte" and how to rescieve it using FSK way any schematic for fsk transmitter and resciever will be helpfull
hi again
thank u very much every one , actually ur links & info are very helpfull
But i have remote car switch , iam trying to understand the way it operates, It uses HT12E as digital data Encoder & one transistor as transmitter
is that FSK technique , if so how the transmitted data rescieved & decoded.
any help will be appreciated
hi again
thank u very much every one , actually ur links & info are very helpfull
But i have remote car switch , iam trying to understand the way it operates, It uses HT12E as digital data Encoder & one transistor as transmitter
is that FSK technique , if so how the transmitted data rescieved & decoded.
any help will be appreciated
Its hard to say from your description. My first guess is that your remote uses PPM (pulse position modulation) which is a simple form of AM where the encoding chip output is turning the transistor oscillator on and off according to a serial string of bits. This is quite common in North America for garage door opening remotes, for example. If the device uses FM, then the single transistor would still be an oscillator but its frequency may be easily shifted using a varactor diode on its tank circuit fed from a digital serial string of bits from the encoder. Hard to know unless you can spot a varactor diode near the transistor.
Remember using a modem on a telephone line to access the internet?
An old modem used FSK between two or more audio frequencies.
My first modem was 14.4kB/sec and I could hear it alternate between two frequencies. A 56k modem sounds like a lot of noise.
That's about the roughest schematic I've ever seen here on the boards, but damned if it isn't good enough. I would say that based on this, you have a pulse transmitter which is where the RF carrier is turned on and off according to a sequence from the encoder chip. The fact that the encoder controls the DC flow throught the transistor emitter is the best clue showing the encoder is turning the oscillator on and off.
Remember using a modem on a telephone line to access the internet?
An old modem used FSK between two or more audio frequencies.
My first modem was 14.4kB/sec and I could hear it alternate between two frequencies. A 56k modem sounds like a lot of noise.
My first modem was using the old Bell103 tone standard at 300 baud. At about that same time, I learned about RTTY on HF radio using audio FSK. A different signalling standard, but the same general idea.
If you think about it, the 56K modem has to be very spectrum efficient to send so much data on a land line. What you hear is indeed very spectrum efficient since it sounds as if it is filling the entire "audio" spectrum with an equal distribution of energy, which is the definition of white noise.