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amdx wrote in :
One of us is confused. Do you want a FM transmitter or an amplifier. The FM transmitter will transmit a frequency that your FM receiver will receive, but you need to feed in a source of audio. That could be you. ![]() cover all bases, but to summarise: An antenna several tens of feet away is picking up good signals, but wired connections to small portable radios often moved between rooms are inconvenient (even dangerous obstacles if lying around in hallways, over furniture, etc). A small FM aerial amplifier built around a MAR-6 IC works to boost the signal for direct connection, but can it also be used to drive a 1/4-wave dipole for the immediate locality? There's little doubt that it is very low power, likely not able to send enough RF out to justifiably annoy anyone (especially given the UK legal allowance of it now), and almost certainly not enough to feed back to the external aerial given how much RF attenuation exists between inside and outside as it is. Anyb excess can be reduced, this is not the problem, the problem is getting enough in the first place. So the question is: can the MAR-6 based aerial amp drive a dipole with a similar power to that had from these new microtransmitters? It's going to see a similar impedance for that intended, so whatever impediment there may be, impedance doesn't seem likely to be a problem. |
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