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Old November 25th 05, 09:51 PM posted to de.sci.electronics,rec.radio.amateur.homebrew,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.design
Robert Obermayer
 
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Default Unusual functions of cheap parts

hi,

sorry if you didnt like everything, but sometimes some voilence against
parts that cost you half a day of time and gave you a bad headache while
troubleshooting is necessary...

For more useful things, FETs actually can work as quite useful
one-component HF oscillators if wires and connection points are properly
chosen.With a second transistor one can build a working shortrange AM
transmitter.

A rather useful (works perfectly for SMPS uses) AC current probe for a
scope can be made by using a small UI cored RFI filter coil from a
monitor, connecting its windings in series and terminating with a 1ohm
resistor, to which a coax cable with BNC connector is soldered to.
The wire you want to measure the current in simply is fed trough the
core one time.
This only gives quantitative measurements unless calibrated but can be
very useful if you cant afford a real current probe.

The known resonant royer circiut used for CCFL inverters can be used for
larger inverters if appropriate parts are chosen, and can produce some
high frequency/high voltage with a transformer from a old TV (with no
internal rectifier).
This has its uses, besides connecting it to a old light bulb that works
as plasma globe or connecting both outputs to a large neon bulb
[Bienenkorbglimmlampe], which simply looks very nice but also produces
lots of RFI, so dont run it for too long.

FET gate drivers make nice TTL output stages for function generators, as
these can drive rather high currents and are fairly robust.

If a slowly, steadily changing linear voltage is necessary (for ex.
confirming the linearity of something) a 10turn precicion pot copuled
with a slow syncronous motor (a old microwave oven has a nice 2.5u/min
one) by some tape (so it slips/breaks when the pot is at its endpoint)
works nicely.