The "Wadley-drift-canceling-loop" , also known as a "Wadley loop", is a system of two oscillators, a frequency synthesizer, and two in the radio-frequency signal path. The system was designed by Dr. Trevor Wadley in the 1940s in South Africa. The circuit was first used for a stable wavemeter. (A wavemeter is used for measuring the wavelength and therefore also the frequency of a signal).
There is no regulation loop in a "Wadley-loop", which is why the term is in quotation marks. However, the circuit configuration is not known by more accurate names.
The "Wadley loop" was used in from the 1950s to approximately 1980. The "Wadley loop" was mostly used in more expensive stationary radio receivers, but the "Wadley loop" was also used in a portable radio receiver (Barlow-Wadley XCR-30 Mark II). radiomuseum.org: Barlow-Wadley XCR-30 Mark IIBarlow-Wadley XCR-30 Mark II
Unlike other drift-reducing techniques (such as crystal control or frequency synthesis), the Wadley Loop does not attempt to stabilize the oscillator. Instead, it cancels the drift mathematically.
Since the high-IF of part 1 drifts in the same direction and the same amount as the "synthetic oscillator" of part 3, when they are mixed in part 4, the drift terms cancel out and the result is a crystal-stable signal at a second intermediate frequency.
However, the drift makes it impossible to use high-IF selectivity to reject undesired signals. Instead, the high IF is designed with a band-pass characteristic. Also, since the first oscillator is cancelled out, it cannot be used to tune a particular signal. Instead, it selects an entire band of signals - which one depends on which harmonic was chosen in part 3 above. The size of the band is equal to the spacing of the crystal harmonics. A conventionally tuned "back end" selects the desired signal from the band of signals presented at the second IF.
To a new user, the feel of the first oscillator tuning control is counterintuitive. Although the knob moves in a continuous, analog fashion, its effect on the receiver operation is discrete, that is, the tuning advances in 1 MHz jumps.
An example is Yaesu's FRG-7 communications receiver, The Wadley Drift Cancelling Loop which uses the system to remove local oscillator drift. The Racal RA17 and Realistic DX-302 also used the Wadley Loop in their design.
An optical implementation of a Wadley Loop has recently been proposed. This allows a compact relatively unstable laser to be used as a local oscillator. The system's stability being obtained from a master 'comb source' (usually a pulsed laser, such as a mode-locked laser), possibly common to many receivers within an exchange.
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