TinyRC.com

TinyRC.com (http://tinyrc.com/forums/index.php)
-   Bit Char-G Parts and Hop-Ups (http://tinyrc.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=11)
-   -   Mhz (http://tinyrc.com/forums/showthread.php?t=12415)

fusionlude 07-18-2003 10:50 PM

Mhz
 
does it matter in MHz??? i have 27 for my ms pro, my buddy has a bit and has 57, can someone give me a reason other than u can race each other??..

MicroSpeed 07-19-2003 01:49 PM

what do yo mean? What do you want to Know

As you can see, I am the Frequency Master

<---------------:D

fusionlude 07-19-2003 08:09 PM

nice!....i just wanted to know what is the main difference between tha frequencies?

MicroSpeed 07-20-2003 07:36 PM

oh, um... :confused:

well, I dont really know (my dad told me at one time though).
I'll ask him tomorrow or sometime

fusionlude 07-20-2003 11:19 PM

aight cool
!

dabigpig 07-20-2003 11:37 PM

well the differences are well ok look at the "frequency masters" avatar, u see the top points right lets assume that they are the same distance apart and same height from the horizontal line. ok the only difference between frequencys are the distance between one point to the next one. the wider the distance between points then the lower the frequency. that's the diff.

fusionlude 07-20-2003 11:38 PM

oh so i guess nothing then?

dabigpig 07-20-2003 11:43 PM

well on larger scale stuff (like 2way radio's) it takes more power to make a high frequency go the same distance as a low frequency or vice versa (can't remember exactly) i personally wouldn't worry about it here just don't run two cars with the same frequency cuz they interfear (u allready know that

Jtskty 07-21-2003 09:42 AM

Basically it's how frequently the signal "go's" I don't know the excact terms but that's pretty simple way to explain it.

FMZPLAYER1 07-29-2003 12:17 PM

The way these cars work is called OOK transmission (on-off keyed transmission). The controller chip makes digital pulse codes, that actually turn the transmitter on/off at something like 13-17 times a second (don't know the exact numbers)-but it varies on what buttons you press.

The receiver picks up the "chopped" radio signal code, and the chip in the car decodes the pulses and triggers it's outputs (FWD-REV...) according to what "pulse code" it's getting.

Hold the transmitter real close to an FM radio and you should hear different beeping and buzzing sounds for each button pressed. Kinds sounds like an old 56k modem dialing up :)

A 27Mhz transmitter is actually sending 2 signals at once, first, the 27Mhz radio signal itself-- (the carrier), and second, the pulse codes (on/off breaks in that signal)-- the modulation.

If you could see the radio signal from the 27Mhz, it would be like a wavy line with chunks cut out of it (the pulse breaks)
/\/\/\/\/\/ /\/\/\/\/\/ /\/\/\/\/\/ /\/\/\/\/\/

The 57Mhz would look the same, except the wavy parts would be much more compressed (about twice as many /\/\/\/ in the same space)
It would look more like.... ||||||||| |||||||||| ||||||||| |||||||||
--well you get the idea, waves are so close that they look more like up/down lines.

The only difference you might notice is the range you get with different controllers, some have those annoying "cripple capacitors that drop the signal power to almost nothing, but usually it's buildings and appliances the mess with the radio signal, some frequencies just seem to make it, while some don't.

I tried a 27Mhz and a 49Mhz outside and they were almost the same, but in my basement the 27's have less range...
If you have a baby monitor running then the 49Mhz is going to have real problems, living close to a schoolbus dispatch CB radio tower will mess up the 27's bigtime :rolleyes:


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:09 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.