AM transmitter antenna problem..
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and i was applying the decoupled audio signal to the base of Q1 and the values for C1, C2 and L were 1n , 10n , and 50uH respectively to get about 700 KHz carrier frequency. i could see the AM signal clearly displayed on the oscilloscope , but when i tried to receive it in a radio i could not hear the audio signal sound unless i touch the antenna with my hand , when i do touch the antenna i hear a very clear and loud voice and it has a high range . when i leave the antenna i cant hear anything .
Is there anything i can do to handle that problem ?
the antenna i use is one from an old radio and i connected it to about 30 cm of wire directly to the emitter of Q1
thanks
To transmit at this low frequency you need a long antenna and a good earth connection. For shorter antenna's you need a loading coil to compensate. Without this you will not transmit further than your bench.
http://charliethompson.50megs.com/1610khz.htm
http://www.antennex.com/shack/Dec06/cps.html
please take a look at the following AM tr :
http://english.cxem.net/radiomic/bug15.php
as said in the last row it does not need an antenna or using just 30 cm will increase the range . does this imply that the output signal power in this circuit is larger than that of my circuit ? what do u expect the range of this circuit be ?
True the power of this design is higher than your transmitter's design
Bit range can't be altered drastically a little improvement is very much likely to happen
How did you decide that this circuit's power is better ?
Every Circuit uses DC power input to increase the power of AC signal
Here the second ckt uses a 9V supply and considerable dissipation by the resistors is not of great impact and so The power of the second Transmitter Ckt is higher than the previous one which uses just a 6V DC margin for amplification and enhancement
oh sorry i forgot to say that i used 9V battery instead of 6 V in my circuit and i got around 6v p-p in the oscillator output. may be it has something to do with the resistors ?
The second amplifier is a multi stage amplifier
If the gain of the first system is A and the gain of second stage is B then the effective gain of the second system is AB
Thus the second one has higher gain cause of multi staging
the first one is a simple single stage amplifier and in general the power op of them is lesser than cascaded versions
actually the audio signal i used was amplified in a first stage CE amplifier and the decoupled output was applied to Q1 base hence it's also a multistage amplifier . i wonder if the problem is related to the position of the tank circuit or to the oscillator type .. ?
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