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| I found on one site that my transistor is most likely the culprit of my superregen. the site states that FT should be at least 10 times the highest frequency I intend to receive. Right now, I'm trying to optimize channel 11 which is at about 205Mhz. Multiply by 10, and I get 2050Mhz which is over 2Ghz. The problem is that I only have access to a limited selection of transistors. For the selection, go to sayal.com, click on retail catalog, then click on transistors. The transistor I have now is a Pn3563 which only goes up to 600Mhz for FT. So someone please suggest to me a transistor having an FT of at least 2Ghz what starts wit 2N or PN or MPS. thanks.
__________________ -=: The best low-priced components to troubleshoot with are the speaker and the LED :=- | |
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| a search found 2N6618 microwave transistor http://www.datasheetarchive.com/semi...ecsheet=122742
__________________ Gods own Country Incredible !ndia www.flickr.com/photos/_akg/ "Give a man a fish, and he will eat for a day. Teach that man to fish, and he will eat for a lifetime." | |
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Since the best transistor I have on hand is rated at 600Mhz, I get: 600Mhz/200Mhz (200 Mhz is around my frequency of interest) = 3 which is less than the recomended value of 10! Is there another transistor that has an Ft of at least 2Ghz?
__________________ -=: The best low-priced components to troubleshoot with are the speaker and the LED :=- | |||
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To make it work properly (at least as far as a super-regen can), try building it properly - don't make your random changes, use a proven working circuit!. | |||
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Sure, they might have aircraft receivers, but they don't have transistor TV receivers, especially with the transistor numbers I use. HOWEVER, I do use proven mini circuits in my design like a tank circuit, and common-emitter amplifier, etc. I will make one stab at including an emiter resistor and connecting it with a capacitor (in parallel), just to see if it actually works. I begin to think that not enough resistance somewhere makes the actual mains hum sound. I will add emitter resistors to every part of my old circuit whose NPN connects directly to ground. Luckily, on a PCB, if it doesn't work, I'll just stick a blob of solder, and short the new circuit so that I can revert to the old design.
__________________ -=: The best low-priced components to troubleshoot with are the speaker and the LED :=- | ||
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The transistor number is largely irrelevent, pretty well any small signal silicon NPN will work fine. | |||
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