1964 Antique MODEM Live Demo
Eric Smith
eric at brouhaha.com
Mon Jun 1 06:16:43 CDT 2009
Gordon JC Pearce wrote:
> So, you can't see a possible set of circumstances where having the wrong
> voltage coming in the serial port could cause the frequency shift to be
> wrong?
>
If you put enough voltage through a serial port signal, you'll break the
modem. Then you'll probably get a fixed frequency regardless of the
input, or no frequency at all. Other than that, no, having the wrong
voltage won't cause the frequency shift to be wrong.
> How clever do you think the tone generator side is?
>
Clever enough that its frequency isn't a linear function of the serial
port signal voltages. Modems with EIA-232 (formerly RS-232) interfaces
detect whether the transmit data signal has a voltage above or below a
threshold, and generate one of two tones based on that. They don't feed
the transmit data signal directly into a VCO, if that's what you were
thinking. Doing it that way wouldn't result in a reliable modem, since
an EIA-232 mark signal can be anywhere from -3V to -25V, and a space
from +3V to +25V.
For current loop, it senses current rather than voltage, but the
principle is the same. It doesn't base the tone on the precise amount
of current flowing, because even in a loop that has a nominal current
(i.e., 20mA), the actually current may be significantly different.
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