Are you using a carrier on 2.3 MHz AND another on 2.8 MHz,as per the suggested circuit?
Those, and more.
Are you modulating the original FM carrier/s with audio,or data of some kind?
No extra modulation. Just what the companion transmitter (TSH512) chip does.
From the App Note,I would guess that the filters normally used are ceramic or,maybe even SAW filters rather than LC for this reason.
Well a simple LC filter wouldn't have a high enough Q, IMHO.
(Although the ST engineers claim a low Q is fine since the "tuning" range of the tank is usually limited to begin with.)
Agilent Genesys S/Filter seems to be a great program for designing filters with both amplitude and group delay symmetry.
Sure! Only a mere $10,000 software package!
If you get everything, it's more like $30,000! (Where's the animated smiley icon that coughs up money?)
Heck, if I could afford that, I'd just hire a good analog EE to design the filters for me - or even finish my project while I paint my house!
But seriously - Genesys does look like a very good software package. And I did manage to sweet-talk my way into an eval license for it. So I've got 30 days to play with it and get some good designs out of it. (Although I did manage to crash it within 10 minutes of starting it for the first time. Hmmm...)
What's really fun is to mock up the same filter in Genesys and LTSpice, and try to get them to agree with each other.
Now how good a filter do you actually need? You may not need great distortion figures, or you may be able to allow for a generous filter bandwidth versus the FM deviation.
That...is a very good question!
My hunch is that all I really need is a filter with a nearly-flat delay group inside the FM deviation band, and at least a -3db drop outside the passband. So yes, the passband can probably be rather large in comparison, as long as the cutoffs filter out the carriers above and below the one it's passing through.
Or just buy an IF filter module.
I've looked - I can't find any manufacturer that has them in the 2-3 MHz range.
(Well, technically I did find one, but they want me to buy full reels - 1500 @ $3.50 ea - of BPFs for each frequency. Can't afford that!)
I'm seriously tempted to just put in a bandpass opamp and call it a day. But I'm trying to keep the complete circuit's power requirement as low as possible, and I have a slight fear it would introduce a little noise into the circuit. (I have nothing solid to base that fear on - I just know that opamps can't possibly be noiseless.)