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Mitar G. Kolac wrote:
I am interested in building a simple receiver to listen on 6m band. I have tried to search the net but without success. Any suggestion? I have some experience in building things from kits but do not have deeper knowledge in electronics. Since it's purely for receiving, I assume you don't have a license for it, and are interested in the hobby in more depth than just hearing a bunch of old men talk about the XYLs ;-) Probably the cheapest way to /build/ one would be to scour the internet for any kind of receiver schematic... I saw some not too long ago - I'll make a note here to try browsing for it again (but it will have to be about a week from now as tomorrow I'll spend most of my time doing work for my dad and homework for college, then next week it's alllll school). I MIGHT get a chance to do some stuff Tuesday, dunno... Anyway, it's real simple, if you don't care too much about knowing exactly what frequency you're listening to. You find a receiver schematic on the net (I'll try to find one for you if you want), then instead of using the coils described, you experiment with your own - larger diameter, longer length, closer turns, further spread apart, center tapped, etc. You'll need a variable capacitor. Probably best to go to the Dollar General and pick up one of those cheapie $5 rotary tunable (the kind that use a knob) handheld AM/FM receivers. Then, just steal the variable cap out of it. It will have six leads on it, for 4 possible pairs (the two middle leads are tied together (common). There will be a 20-40 pf pair, and a 20-120 pf pair. The 20-120 will give better frequency spread, but very coarse tuning and maybe a touch of selectivity loss. Still, with the right coils, the 20-40 pf pair should do nicely. In fact, now that I think about it, you might be able to make do with just one of those by changing the coils (there are usually only 2 or 3 of them). Wow, a $5 portable 6m receiver that can also pick up low VHF TV channels - excellent! FWIW, I've built an FM Broadcast band transmitter... only 18 parts, not counting breadboard/wire/antenna/input/LED parts, and I get 1/8 mile range on it. Anywhoo, I have been able to interfere with my TV (only a few feet away) by using different coils and capacitor leads, so it should be fairly easy to get what you want for cheap if you're patient and don't mind fiddling with coils and such. Of course, it's not going to receive beautifully, nor very selectively, but it should be able to pick up ppl in your area. Let me know if you want help finding a simple schematic - and I'm talking just like 20 parts or so that you can pick up at the radio smack. -- __ ____ / _| | _ \ Unregistered Linux User #18,000,002 | |__ | _ \ \__/ |___/ Sink the ship to reply by email. |
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