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In article , mike
writes: Hey group, I have a portable radio with no external ground. Recently I built a PI network antenna tuner in a metal box and included an output for earth ground. So the outer sheild of my coax inputs as well as outputs and the variable capacitor frames are on this ground to earth. The random wire input goes strait to the tuning capacitor thus needs some kind of static drain off. I have heard using a neon bulb and a 2 watt 2.2k ohm resistor in between the inputs and ground would discharge static buildup and give me some warning of build up conditions. A small neon bulb was used in thousands of ARC-5 Command Set receivers in WW2 for static bleed-off. Similar to an old NE-2 bulb. No need to use a resistor. The neon will conduct somewhere around 70 Volts and shunt any static pickup to ground...then goes into non- conducting state until the next static potential build-up. I am also concerned about limiting the voltage to the receiver front end to prevent damage. I have heard installing back to back high speed diodes between the imputs and ground would acheive this. I understand everything but the diodes. What does back to back mean. I recall diodes are one way, but which way goes where? Should I look for a certain type or rating of diode? You can use practically anything modern in the way of diodes there but the high-speed types such as 1N914 and 1N4148 are very cheap and available many places. Varistors could be used (GE "movisters") or even 1N4000 series rectifier diodes. Diodes have a 0.6 to 0.7 VDC forward conduction voltage if silicon. Put them side by side with the anode of one to the cathode of the other at each end. That will limit voltage input to about 1.4 V peak-to- peak. You could put a small series resistor, say 22 Ohms or so, between antenna input and the diodes to limit peak diode current on conduction. Your option...since the series resistor will drop the RF input level slightly. You could also use a high-inductance RF "choke" in place of diodes and neon bulb. 1 to 5 mHy would work at HF bands. That forms a constant low-resistance DC path from antenna to ground and keeps static accumulation bled off immediately. Len Anderson retired (from regular hours) electronic engineer person |
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