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On Fri, 12 Dec 2003 16:41:06 +0000, Paul Burridge
wrote: Hi all, I wanted to build an RF relative field strength meter, so set about searching on the Web for any existing designs. Those I turned up weren't particularly impressive, so I decided to start from scratch and design my own. I've just completed that this afternoon. I've allowed for 0.25mV input to give rise to FSD on the microammeter. Question being, however, is that going to be sensitive enough? Does anyone have any idea what the field strength in microvolts or millivolts is from a half Watt transmitter at about 6 feet away? I guess I should have posed this question *before* designing it, but who among us can honestly say they haven't designed something without knowing what the spec is? :-) Anyway, ballpark figures gentlemen, please. p. -- "I expect history will be kind to me, since I intend to write it." - Winston Churchill Hello Paul, have a look here, http://www.alphalink.com.au/~parkerp/noapr97.htm Here is a crystal set circuit. http://circuitos.tripod.cl/schem/r85.gif Convert it to a field strength meter by Replacing the headphones with a large sensitive meter, something big enough that you can still see the pointer, when viewed from across the room. Bigger the better. Use a germanium diode. Use a metal box. Use a short telescopic aerial. Coil and variable capacitor to cover, 40Mhz,. 35Mhz and 27Mhz, I am guessing those are the frequencies of interest, use a switch if necessary to add/remove some turns or add/remove a capacitor. I know you have a grid dip oscillator so fiddling the coil and capacitor values to get the frequency ranges will be a snack for you. Using your field strength meter only six feet away is too close. Keep it as far away as possible from your radio control transmitter but still being able to see it, that is the reason for the big meter movement. I am thinking of big cheap plastic 6 inch square types. Anything will do so long as you can see it from across the room and the movement is microamps full scale and not milliamps. I am sure I have explained this to you yonks ago, well, if I have, never mind. maybe you forgot :-) Set up your known good commercial radio control set at one end of the room, and field strength meter at the other side of the room. Note the meter reading. Now compare readings with your experimental transmitter. Is it more or less? Make adjustments to your experimental transmitter. This is the fun part. I found that sitting my field strength meter (even though it had rubber feet) on my wife's metal serving tray reduced hand capacitance and made it nicer to adjust. So experiment with and without a sheet metal base. Maybe the first circuit without a parallel tuned circuit would be less fuss to use. Maybe you can knock up both types and tell us which was better. Heh heh heh.... Regards, John Crighton Sydney |
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