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FX919B Datasheet, PDF (10/47 Pages) CML Microcircuits – Excellent Radio Fading Performance
4-Level FSK Modem Data Pump
FX919B
Rx Level/Clock Extraction
These circuits, which operate only in receive mode, derive a symbol rate clock from the received signal and
measure the received signal amplitude and dc offset. This information is then used to extract the received 4-
level symbols and also to provide an input to the received Data Quality measuring circuit. The external
capacitors C6 and C7 form part of the received signal level measuring circuit.
The capacitors C6 and C7 are driven from a very high impedance source so any measurement of the voltages
on the DOC pins must be made via high input impedance (MOS input) voltage followers to avoid disturbance of
the level measurement circuits.
Further details of the level and clock extraction functions are given in section 1.6.3.
Clock Oscillator and Dividers
These circuits derive the transmit symbol rate (and the nominal receive symbol rate) by frequency division of a
reference frequency which may be generated by the on-chip Xtal oscillator or applied from an external source.
Note: If the on-chip xtal oscillator is to be used, then the external components X1, C3, C4 and R3 are
required. If an external clock source is to be used, then it should be connected to the XTAL/CLOCK input pin,
the XTALN pin should be left unconnected, and X1, C3, C4 and R3 not fitted.
1.5.2 Modem - µC Interaction
In general, data is transmitted over-air in the form of messages, or 'Frames', consisting of a 'Frame Preamble'
followed by one or more formatted data blocks. The Frame Preamble includes a Frame Synchronisation pattern
designed to allow the receiving modem to identify the start of a frame. The following data blocks are
constructed from the 'raw' data using a combination of CRC (cyclic redundancy checksum) generation, Forward
Error Correction coding and Interleaving. Details of the message formats handled by the modem are given in
Section 1.5.3 and Figures 7 and 7a.
To reduce the processing load on the associated µC, the FX919B modem has been designed to perform as
much as possible of the computationally intensive work involved in Frame formatting and de-formatting and -
when in receive mode - in searching for and synchronising onto the Frame Preamble. In normal operation the
modem will only require servicing by the µC once per received or transmitted block.
Thus, to transmit a block, the controlling µC has only to load the - unformatted - 'raw' binary data into the
modem's Data Block Buffer then instruct the modem to format and transmit that data. The modem will then
calculate and add the CRC bits as required, encode the result as 4-level symbols (with Forward Error
Correction coding) and interleave the symbols before transmission.
In receive mode, the modem can be instructed to assemble a block's worth of received symbols, de-interleave
the symbols, translate them to binary - using the FEC coding to correct as many errors as possible - and check
the resulting CRC before placing the received binary data into the Data Block Buffer for the µC to read.
The modem can also transmit and receive un-formatted data using the T4S, T24S and R4S tasks described in
sections 1.5.3 and 1.5.5.2. These are normally used for the transmission of Symbol and Frame Synchronisation
sequences. They may also be used for the transmission and reception of special test patterns or even for
special data formats - although in this case care should be taken to ensure that the transmitted signal contains
enough level and timing information for the receiving modem's level and clock extraction circuits to function
correctly (see section 1.6.3).
© 1997 Consumer Microcircuits Limited
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D/919B/1