Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave Typinski ) writes:
On Sun, 21 Oct 2007 01:01:19 -0400, "Jimmie D" wrote: "Dave Typinski" wrote in message . .. Anyone have any ideas about what one might do with a television receive-only (TVRO) antenna? The thing is 10' diameter and it's mine for the price of dismantling it and hauling it out of the present owner's back yard. I'm thinking radio astronomy. Might be nice to make my own radio map of the galaxy. I'm guessing that this would work okay somewhere between 1 and 10 GHz... which means making a feed horn... which is easy enough to do. What else could I do with this antenna? Other than covering it in polyethylene sheet to make a really big bird bath... -- Dave Typinski AJ4CO I know of a couple of guys that took two of them, one for rx and one for tx, tx was a microwave oven mgnetron. He and his frined talked to each other via troposcatter. I do know if a maggie operates within a ham band or not but it didnt matter too much for these guys because they didnt have a ticket anyway. Jimmie I thought about magnetrons... but not for communication. My idea is to set it up as a radar station to measure the distance to the Moon. A microwave oven magnetron operates at 2450 MHz, which is right at the upper edge of the 13cm ham band. Unfortunately, magnetrons produce a really dirty, wide output. Worse, being right at the edge of the band, half the RF energy would be out of band. How do you think the higher bands were conquered? It was always with simple equipment that was cheap and easy (relative speaking), with the more serious work coming later. So before WWII, it was modulated oscillators and superregen receivers on 56MHz and 112MHz. After the war, new equipment was available, and there was a desire for pushing the limits (and laws came in at some point to require better signals), and there was a move to crystal controlled transmitters and better receivers. Well, they really went together, since if you changed one, the other had to follow. So that equipment got pushed up further, helping to stake out 220MHz and 420MHz. A lot of work was done on the 1215MHz band after WWII and even through the early sixties with the venerable APX/6 (I suddenly realize I may have gotten that wrong), which was a modulated oscillator for the transmitter, and it was often debated whether it was amplitude of requency modulated. The receiver was a superhet, but had a nice broad IF bandwidth, so it didn't matter how much the transmitter drifted. I seem to recall that the APX/6 was intended as an IFF unit, it gets triggered by radar and identifies itself as a friend, so nobody shoots at the airplane. Newer techniques came along, more desire to push the limits, and that sort of thing was slowly phased out on the band. But hey, it moved further up. In the late seventies, a lot of hams played with the 10,000MHz, using garage door openers, modulated oscillators and broadband receivers. The further you go up in frequency, the more such cheap and simple equipment can be tolerated, since the bands get wider (well, until they get narrowed as bits are allocated away from amateur radio). So there is long history of both wideband simple equipment and narrowband DX'ing going on at the same time, albeit at opposite ends of the band. But in reality, you dig up that article that was in "73" years ago that was about adding a phase locked loop to a microwave oven, which gives a nice narrow signal. Michael VE2BVW |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
H.F Dish Antenna update | Antenna | |||
Wanted: Dish Antenna | Equipment | |||
Need 10-16' TVRO Sat dish | Equipment | |||
Need 10-16' TVRO Sat dish | Equipment | |||
Need 10-16' TVRO Sat dish | Swap |