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On Sun, 1 Apr 2012, Lemon Tree wrote:
I am conducting ongoing experiments with regenerative radio receivers. One problem I have repeatedly encountered is low frequency squigging/motorboating. Particularly when using somewhat higher CE transistor currents. Oddly, changing the values of any of the capacitors in the circuit did not change the frequency of the squigging. There was nothing wrong with the decoupling and even adding additional decoupling capacitors had no effect. Almost certainly the unwanted low frequency oscillations are due to electrothermal effects. Directing hot air from a hairdryer at the transistors for less that a second stopped the low frequency oscillation. After stopping the hairdryer the circuit started squigging again after a couple of seconds. The fact that regenerative receivers are operated with the amount of positive feedback (regeneration) so close to the threshold of oscillation makes the extremely sensitive to the gain of the sustaining amplifier. Even slight changes in the gain of the transistors (caused by self- heating or the environment) can then have a big effect. This is almost certainly the basis of the low frequency squigging in the circuit. But that's "normal". Howard Armstrong noticed it early on, and never pursued it. Then later, I think when he was doing some work on regeneration preparatory to the court battle over the patent, he noticed it again. And then he pursued it, and got superregeneration. So his original regen circuit could oscillate at ultrasonic frequencies as well as at radio frequencies if the regen was turned up too much. It was just incidental, later he tried an external ultrasonic oscillator to "modulate" the regen receiver, but for most of the time ever since, the same active device has been both the RF transistor and the ultrasonic oscillator. It was all very black box for most of that time, as it got relegated to secondary status, the explanations dropping off and few pursuing it much. It's really a scheme similar to reflex (where one stage is both amplifying radio frequency and audio frequency) or "autodyne" circuits, where the same stage is both a rf mixer and rf oscillator. One project in QST and later their VHF manual had a receiver chain that used converters feeding an IF strip and then a regen detector, the regen detector configured so it could go into ultrasonic oscillation too so it could be either regen (for CW) or superregen. Turn down regen. That may fix the problem. Or try another circuit. Realistically, it's not the sort of thing that people report, so it would seem plenty of regen circuits, tube and transistor, don't have a problem. Michael VE2BVW |
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