Hi Alex,
If ,say,the USB has errors that aren't the same as that of the LSB,the two sidebands will not be exactly the same,& the resulting demodulated signal will be adversely affected.
An example of this is "fading",in HF radio,where not only are the propagation time & losses slightly different between sidebands,but the difference varies over time,resulting in cancellation at one moment,& reinforcement the next,as the path distance, & hence,phase varies,the degree of cancellation or enhancement depending on the relative path losses.
The useful demodulated output from a detector for an AM (DSB,full carrier) signal is:
F(demod)=(f2-fc)+(fc-f1) where fc is the carrier,f1 is the LSB,& f2 is the USB.
In a perfect system (f2-fc) & (fc-f1) are identical & in phase,so add directly.
In a real system,they may not meet this criteria,& some of the effects quoted above will be noted.
In Compatible Single Sideband (CSSB):
F(demod)=(f2-fc),or F(demod)=(fc-f1),depending on which sideband you suppress.
Re: Generating SSB--if your lowest frequency is 5MHz,you shouldn't have a lot of trouble with filters if you use a lower frequency to generate the signals,then up-convert.
Are you really locked into AM/SSB for this?
Commercial practice is pretty much to use FM for microwave systems so there may be a lot more information out there for that form of modulation.
VK6ZGO