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What you are saying makes sense conceptually. But finding the decoder
circuit seems a little rough. How would one recognize this? Secondly, I never considered the signal loss that the receiver itself would have. I think that I could simply boost the signal at the exciter (it already has some form of adjustable gain IIRC). Any reason that would not work? Obviously, I would need to look at the overall modulation... which I do not have the capability of doing... but that is a separate issue. Fred Francis wrote: If you have any technical knowledge or know someone who does this can be done with any decent receiver. You have to find the discrimator coil or the input to the stereo decoder IC. This is generally the same electrical point. You can either tap that point with a high input impedance wideband amplifier or simply disconnect the input to the decoder IC and feed this to an adjustable amplifier such as a video distribution amplifier. Video DA's seem to work great for this purpose as they have wide bandwidth DC to 6Mhz. I have done this a few times and a scope is very helpful in determining loss through the ampifier. Use a dead carrier with pilot 19Khz and measure a reference before any work is done. Then when a connection is made to the input of an amplifier check the level again. If the level to the input has dropped you may have impedance issues that will cause you problems. Let me know how this works for you or if you have any further questions. |
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