The IF stage from a Motorola 19K1 television set circa 1949.
Discrete transistor 455 kHz IF amplifier.
More modern IF amplifier and demodulator in integrated circuit form
Intermediate-frequency (IF) amplifiers are amplifier stages used to raise signal levels in radio and television receivers, at frequencies intermediate to the higher radio-frequency (RF) signal from the antenna and the lower (baseband) audio or video frequency that the receiver is recovering.[ 1]
Uses
IF amplifiers in heterodyne receivers apply gain in a frequency band between the input radio frequency and output audio frequency or video frequency , often following one stage of RF amplifier . This allows most of the gain in the form of a fixed-frequency amplifier, simplifying tuning. Compare to its predecessor, the tuned RF receiver . IF amplifiers might use double-tuned amplifiers or staggered tuning to generate the appropriate frequency response needed. Some use more than one IF frequency.
Commonly used circuits
Mutual inductance coupling: contains two windings that are joined by mutual inductance.
Shunt capacitance coupling: These circuits have a wide pass band.
composite IF transformers: receivers used for A-M and F-M receivers.[ 2] [ 3]
References
External links
Media related to IF amplifiers at Wikimedia Commons