What is the VOR (VHF Omnidirectional Range) reference signal? I have to calculate the spectrum of this signal.
Asked
Active
Viewed 5,339 times
5
-
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VHF_omnidirectional_range has a good description – Steve Kuo Oct 25 '17 at 15:53
-
@mins That's very helpful and complete documentation. The best answer! Thank you for finding time to help me. – Hari Seldon Oct 25 '17 at 20:17
-
See this answer, the reference is a 30 Hz sine, but depending on the type (CVOR/DVOR), the reference is transmitted either as a AM sideband (DVOR) or as a FM subcarrier at 9.96 kHz (480 Hz swing) sent as DSB-SC (CVOR). The other signal is the variable, also a 30 Hz sine. The corresponding spectrum is this one (missing the id tone and voice channel) – mins Sep 28 '20 at 10:51
1 Answers
6
VOR Ground Station is aligned with magnetic North. It emits two signals:
- a 360° sweeping variable signal
- an omni-directional reference signal
When an aircraft receives those signals, its receiver compares those and a measures the phase difference. This gives a precise radial position of the aircraft which is displayed on its Omni-Bearing Indicator (OBI), Horizontal Situation Indicator (HSI) or a Radio Magnetic Indicator (RMI), or a combination of two different kinds.
This picture shows the two signals:
- Blue is 360° sweeping signal
- Green is omni-directional reference signal
Farhan
- 29,390
- 14
- 112
- 183
-
This is very enlightening! And also I would like to know more about this omni-directional reference signal (blue one). For example if it is sinusoidal, and all other informations for calculating its spectrum. Thank you! – Hari Seldon Oct 25 '17 at 15:42
-
2Trying to fig out why they made the reference signal flash in that gif. I guess that's indicating when it's at 0° phase? – TomMcW Oct 25 '17 at 18:20
-
@TomMcW: Yes it's misleading, it looks like the bearing is determined by timing the interval between a north pulse and the maximum strength of a supposed thin beam (and I saw another post on the site where it's interpreted this wrong way). – mins Sep 28 '20 at 11:05
