It is best if
you read the page on THE MIXER first.
There are many
thousands of radio stations in the world, transmitting on thousands of
different frequencies.
Radio waves
from these stations hit your radio aerial and induce voltages in it.
It is the TUNING
circuit in your radio which selects the one station that you are interested
in, and rejects all the others.
The tuning circuit
is usually a coil and a variable capacitor.
The value of
the capacitor is adjusted so that the tuning circuit is at the frequency
of the wanted station.
It is the job
of the frequency changer to change the frequency of the selected station
to a new, lower, fixed frequency.
This new frequency
is called the INTERMEDIATE frequency (I.F.).
No matter what
the frequency of the selected station is, it is changed to the I.F.
This is about
455 kHz for AM radios and 10.7 MHz for FM radios.
This frequency
changing is done by mixing the radio frequency with the frequency generated
by a local oscillator.
The local oscillator
frequency is also controlled by a coil and variable capacitor.
The output from
the mixer is the difference in frequency between the two input frequencies.
For example,
if the radio station is on 110.7 MHz and the local oscillator is at 100
MHz then the I.F. is 110.7-100 = 10.7 MHZ.
Since the tuning
circuit has to be changed in frequency every time you change stations,
then the local oscillator frequency has to be changed to keep the difference
at 10.7 MHz.
Therefore the
two variable capacitors are GANGED together.
This means that
they are both mounted on a common shaft, and when one is adjusted the other
is similarly changed.
This is represented
by the broken line in the diagram.
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