 
  
  
    In an SSB receiver the AGC circuit is extremly important,
    Because the signal level is converted into audio level, via the BFO mixer.
    The AGC circuit sense the Audio level and control the IF gain 
    so that the audio level is constant, no matter if the station is local or 
    DX.
    The RF input signal level can change from -120 to +20dBm in a matter of milliseconds, 
    that is many million times,
    This kind of AGC is called Audio AGC and is easy cheap and simple to 
        construct, the trade off is the attack times will vary depending of Audio 
        frequency
    After constructing this AGC I have tested it both on SSB and CW signals, on 
    different signal levels, and found it satisfying.
  
 R7 is the ATTACK time, R8 is the RELEASE time 
    also called HANG time, C2 can be changed to your need of regulation speed, 
    I have 1uF and 2u2 in parallel.
    For SSB only C2 can be 1uF, for CW only C2 can be 10uF, or you can add a switch 
    to change the attack and release times.
    R11 is the RF GAIN or better called IF MAX GAIN, Here the MAXIMUM possible 
    IF gain can be set like eny other HF Transceiver.
  
 The two op-amps is FET input, Rail to Rail 
    on both input and output, I think TL072 or even LM358 could be used.
    The 470 Ohm resistor in series with the output is to avoid self-oscillation 
    in the Rail to rail output, This problem apply not to all op-amp types.
  
 
    
  
 The output voltage goes to the two IF amps 
    and the PIC controller pin 2, The PIC has 10 bits resolution on the ADC, (Analog 
    to Digital Converter)
    This is used for the S-Meter, The S-Meter readout is calibrated using a signal 
    generator, to show the real S number that represent the signal level
    This is the table used to calibrate the read out:
    
  
| dBm 
            | S-units     (S9=100 uV, R=50 Ohm) | 
|---|---|
| - 7 dBm | S9+60 | 
| - 17 
          dBm | S9+50 | 
| - 27 
          dBm | S9+40 | 
| - 37 
          dBm | S9+30 | 
| - 47 
          dBm | S9+20 | 
| - 57 
          dBm | S9+10 | 
| -67 dBm | S9 | 
| -73 dBm 
         | S8 | 
| - 79 
          dBm  | S7 | 
| - 85 
          dBm  | S6 | 
| - 91 
          dBm  | S5 | 
| - 97 
          dBm  | S4 | 
| - 103 
          dBm  | S3 | 
| - 109 
          dBm  | S2 | 
| - 115 
          dBm  | S1 | 
| - 121 
          dBm  | S0 | 
| FT-817 
          Measured   | FT-757 
          Measured | S-units 
          (dBm) Correct value  | 
|---|---|---|
| -41 dBm | -23 dBm | S9+60 
          (-7 dBm)  | 
| -47 dBm | -39 dBm | S9+40 
          (-27 dBm)  | 
| -77 dBm | -57 dBm | S9+20 
          (-47 dBm)  | 
| -80 dBm | -73 dBm | S9 (-67 
          dBm 100uV)  | 
| -95 dBm 
         | -79 dBm | S8 (-73 
          dBm) | 
| -98 dBm 
         | -83 dBm | S7 (-79 
          dBm) | 
| -99 dBm 
         | -87 dBm | S6 (-85 
          dBm) | 
| -100 
          dBm  | -89 dBm | S5 (-91 
          dBm) | 
| -101 
          dBm  | -95 dBm 
           | S4 (-97 
          dBm) | 
| -101 
          dBm  | -97 dBm | S3 (-103 
          dBm)  | 
| -102 
          dBm  | -100 
          dBm | S2 (-109 
          dBm)  | 
| -103 
          dBm  | -102 
          dBm | S1 (-115 
          dBm)  | 
| -104 
          dBm  | -104 
          dBm | S0 (-121 
          dBm) | 
 
    Here is the AGC voltage seen from the PIC ADC,
    The ADC is 10 bits, so 0V is 0000 and 5V is 1023
  
 
    The table can also be viewed as a curve,
    If I just had mounted a normal meter, the S meter readout would be verry un-linear.
    That is why I use the PIC and the LCD display to show the signal strength.
    
  
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