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| | #106 | |
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I used the same frequency as a low power foreign language radio station on the other side of my city so I was causing interference, then the RF cops might come looking for me. Another guy in my city made my FM transmitter and reported that he saw the RF cops going down his street in their van with the rotating antenna on top. Maybe they were looking for me!
__________________ Uncle $crooge | ||
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| | #107 |
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Audio guru ,allow me to ask if i do not use ur resistor values as u suggest in transmitter #3 but using mine as below, same circuit diagram.,will it works? i using 2N3904 too. R 1 = 36k R 2 =100k R 3 = 70K R 4 = 150 R 5 = 300 C 1 = 2.2pF C 2 = 2.7nF C 3= 22 mico F c4 = 27nF R 6 = 390 may i ask how u know the adjustment of the value resistors? sorry i just new in electronic and wish to know more ,thx a lot ^0^ | |
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| | #108 | ||
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The parts have common values so why change them? Quote:
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |||
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| | #109 |
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Hi I'm not an expert in electronic but I have a question: In the circuits can I use another transistor than (for example) the 2N2222?
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| | #110 | |
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A BC547 and BC548 are 150MHz so they are also fine. A 2N3904 is 300MHz so it is fine. Their current gain are almost the same so nothing in the circuit needs changing. There are many more.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | ||
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| | #111 |
| Regarding the second transmitter, it looks the designer here is using a 4.7 pF feedback to the collector, is that feedback needed to maintain the gain or for some other reasons? The 0.01 UF seems it will short at certain frequencies and therefore block all those frequencies from being coming out to the antenna. Am I getting this right?. But what does happen if some noise is coming from the DC power supply +9V, would that affect the performance at all? My last question is to the designer of the last circuit: how much did you calculate your gain for the transmitter. I found it to be around 2 for a 100 Ohms antenna:P
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| | #112 | ||
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Quote:
The 0.01uF capacitor bypasses the base of the RF oscillator to ground at RF frequencies since it is a common-base transistor oscillator. But its value is way too high since it reduces frequencies at 3200Hz and above from modulating the oscillator. All FM radio stations use pre-emphasis (treble frequencies boost) and all FM radios have de-emphasis (treble frequencies cut) to reduce hiss. Since this transmitter cuts high audio frequencies instead of boosting them then it will sound very muffled when heard on an FM radio. My FM transmitter has pre-emphasis and its base to ground capacitor has a value of only 470pF (21 times less than 0.01uF). It sounds great.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |||
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| | #113 |
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how did you figure out the frequency of the transmitter to be 100 Mhz, is that from the LC circuit? If you want to increase the range can you just another another amplfying stage?
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| | #114 | ||
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Quote:
Using an impedance matching circuit to match the RF amplifier to the antenna will also increase the range.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |||
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| | #115 |
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Thanks for the reply, did you have a look at the tracking transmitter I believe was posted by Colin? does the antenna on the circuit picks up signal, which turns on the LED?
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| | #116 | |
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A transmitter transmits, it doesn't receive. One of Colin's tracking transmitters uses a flashing LED to turn the transmitter on and off over and over. Another of Colin's tracking transmitters uses two transistors as a slow oscillator to turn the transmitter and maybe an LED on and off over and over.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | ||
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| | #117 |
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The microphones of the circuit 1 and 3 should be in series with a resistor of 4.7K~10K as the #2 circuit is.
__________________ Jun Last edited by Junker_eu; 14th April 2009 at 02:31 AM. | |
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| | #118 | |
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Circuit #2 uses an electret mic that needs to be powered with the resistor from the positive voltage. Circuits #1 and #3 use a dynamic mic (coil and magnet) that generates a signal and does not need to be powered. The resistor will cause its diaphragm to move and then maybe the dynamic mic might be damaged or will not work.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | ||
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| | #119 |
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Audioguru, I'm putting together your transmitter circuit, but I hope to use it with a portable music player, so (as you have already said somewhere), will probably want to cut out everything left of C3, just whacking in the line-in straight to that cap. But from what I can gather, the pre-amp was where the pre-emphasis was done. How would I keep pre-emphasis in there? My somewhat basic electronics skills would say to try and make the pre-amp have a gain of unity, would making R4=R5 suffice? I guess I'm not sure how C2 and C4 will affect things (or even if I'm calculating the pre-amp gain correctly)? What modifications would you advise? | |
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| | #120 |
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If you change R4 or R5 then the preamp transistor will not be biased correctly and it will be a rectifier with severe distortion. You probably need two resistors as a left and right channels mixer at the input so use them with a resistor to ground at the input of the preamp transistor's C1 to make an attenuator.
__________________ Uncle $crooge | |
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| simple, transmitters |
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