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i use my GD-meter when building antennas and tuning
antennas and traps to frequency. Although the calibration is quite inexact, it's always possible to listen to the GD-meters frequency on the receiver. "Paul Burridge" On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 17:23:50 -0600 (CST), Turner) wrote: THERE MUST HAVE BEEN SOMETHING WRONG WITH YOUR MILLEN. BILL T. I'm not using a Millen and this post isn't a troll as someone else suggested. The meter I use started out life as a Tradiper (Japanese) but because it was hopelessly outdated and used old germanium trannies with enough lead inductance to tune a VoA transmitter, I decided to rip its guts out and rebuild from scratch.The actual chassis/meter/facia etc was quite high quality, so it made sense. I got this nice circuit from the UK equivalent of the ARRL Handbook and set about building it. It used 2 SK88 FETs and the output of this oscillator could be adjusted to keep its impedence as high as poss for each test, thereby giving really good dips when even quite heavily loaded low Q circuits were tested *provided* they were physically big enough to shove the sense coil into. The sense coils are about 3/4" in diameter, which although fine for large, out-of-circuit component measurements, is *hopeless* for getting in close on a circuit board with subminature components a fraction of the size. That's the main problem I face with all GDMs, though: they all seem to have relatively huge sense coils relative to today's component sizes :-( |
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Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin #649 | Dx | |||
Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin #649 | Dx |