Multi-frequency receiver
Appearance

The Mutli-Frequency Receiver (MFR) was a Digital Signal Processor (DSP) based printed circuit card designed by Mark A. Indovina at Computer Consoles Inc. in Rochester, NY. The initial MFR board, MFR-I, is notiable for being designed in February and March 1983 prior to Texas Instruments officially announcing the TMS320C10 DSP April 8, 1983.
Variants
- MFR-I:
- This printed circuit card, introduced in 1983, contained a single TMS320C10 16-bit fixed point DSP chip operating at 20 MHz.
- MFR-II:
- This printed circuit card, introduced in 1985, contained two
TMS320C25 16-bit fixed point DSP chips operating at 40 MHz.
- MFR-III:
- This printed circuit card contained a single TMS320C30 32-bit floating point DSP chips operating at 40 MHz. Although a prototype was designed, this card never went into volume production.
Features
- The MFR software, written entirely in TMS320 assembly language, was capable of decoding multiple channels of PCM digital audio.
- MF, Multi-Frequency Tones
- DTMF, Dual-Tone Band, Multi-Frequency Tones
- Call Progress Tones
- Other system audio frequencies as needed for on-line, and off-line system testing
- Due to the tight timing involved in the designs, controlled impedance printed circuit board design techniques was introduced with the MFR-I layout in 1983.