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In article ple.org,
Michael Black wrote: Sorting through the junk box (50 years + and growing!) I am amazed at the number of ex-valve-consumer-radio 2-gang tuning condensers (not capacitors in them thar days!) that I have in the junk box, which was the germ of an idea for preselection without coil switching - ie, one twin gang condenser giving two tuned circuits for each band in the HF range. It was covered in "73", at least, two articles, the same author, in "73". One was definitely in 1964, but I can't remember which. The first one used one of those large air variables, the other used one of those mylar insulated cariables as seen in small transistor radios. A websearch says the small one was in "73" in December 1964, W6SFM was the author of that and the earlier article. Both definitely have an explanation of how it works, two coils with quite different inductance, one coming into use while the other is mostly insignificant as the variable capacitor changes value, and vice versa. That sounds a bit like the "single coil" Z-match antenna tuner design. It uses a split-stator capacitor, one part in series with the entire coil primary, and the other part in series with a tap at the halfway point (halfway in windings, not in inductance). http://users.tpg.com.au/users/ldbutl...CoilZMatch.htm |
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