for a long time I was looking for a system-on-chip solution of a low power rf receiver, capable of receiving data rates of about 100 - 200 kbps.
Sadly I found out, that all these "finished" solutions consume way to much current. Therefore I decided to develope a kind of similar receiver on my own.
-> Please close the thread. I think there is no need for a thread, where no constructive critisism is applied.
Very, very sorry, but it's blindingly obvious that you don't know the first thing about RF, and little about electronics - from a very brief glance you don't use bridge rectifiers, and FET's need biasing, you can't just leave the gate floating.
Essentially the front end is a crystal set, you really need a single germanium rectifier for that, followed by suitable carrier removal.
Called a pull-down resistor? Of just gate biasing resistor? FETs (JFET) are normally 'ON' so maybe bias resistor needed to get linear wave swing (partial ON OFF) according the signal feed.
Well.. thank you for you "help".
I was asking in this forum, because I tried to LEARN something .. of course not anybody can be as experienced as you might be, Mr. Goodwin.
Leave the gate floating is actually a in RF electronics very common method to detect AM - I've seen it very often on pages of RF enthusiasts.
For me, it's definitely the last time, I asked something here.