A NONMYSTICAL TREATMENT OF TAPE SPEED COMPENSATION FOR FREQUENCY MODULATED SIGNALS
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / September 28-30, 1982 / Sheraton Harbor Island Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California === In this paper, the problem of non-constant tape speed is examined for frequency modulated signals. Frequency modulation and demodulation are brie...
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Language: | en_US |
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International Foundation for Telemetering
1982
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10150/613239 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/613239 |
Summary: | International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / September 28-30, 1982 / Sheraton Harbor Island Hotel and Convention Center, San Diego, California === In this paper, the problem of non-constant tape speed is examined for frequency modulated
signals. Frequency modulation and demodulation are briefly reviewed. Tape speed
variation is modeled as a distortion of the independent variable of a frequency modulated
signal. This distortion produces an additive amplitude error in the demodulated message
which is comprised of two terms. Both depend on the derivative of time base error, which
is the flutter of the analog tape machine. The first term depends on the channel’s center
frequency and frequency deviation constant as well as flutter, while the second depends
solely on the message and flutter. The relationship between the additive amplitude error
and manufacturer’s flutter specification is described. Relative errors and signal-to-noise
ratios are discussed for the case of a constant message to gain insight as to when tape
speed variation will cause significant errors. An algorithm which theoretically achieves full
compensation of tape speed variation is developed. The algorithm is confirmed via spectral
computations on laboratory data. Finally, the algorithm is applied to field data. The
reference is a temperature signal which is a non-zero constant, and the message is a
pressure signal. The spectrum of the uncompensated message is clearly contaminated by
the additive amplitude error, whereas the spectrum of the compensated message is not.
Incorporation of this algorithm into the data-playback/data-reduction procedures is shown
to greatly improve the measurement signal accuracy and quality. The treatment is
nonmystical in that all derivations are directly tied to the fundamental equations describing
frequency modulation and demodulation. |
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