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![]() "Tom Bruhns" wrote in message ... "Joe" wrote in message link.net... "Reg Edwards" wrote in message ... An 18 nano-henry inductor seems, to me, to be an impractical inductor value. ;-) You just aren't working with small enough, high enough frequency circuits, Reg. 3 turns of 28AWG on a 4-40 (USA) screw (remove the screw, of course) will give you about 18 nH. Unloaded Q at 440MHz will be around 200. The link to the schematic is: http://www.radiotronix.com/downloads/433_pair.pdf Easy enough to use SMT components soldered to a piece of copper-clad for a ground plane. Just put down the two caps and the shunt resistor "tombstone" style, one end soldered to the ground plane and the other up in the air, separated by enough distance to put the series coil and resistor between them. You can keep the parasitic L and C very low indeed this way. You can also use tiny squares of copper-clad glued down to the ground plane as tie points. It's also possible to mechanically make a simple circuit like this on copper-clad using surface mount parts, by scribing lines with something like an X-Acto knife and removing strips of copper. In this case, I could see scribing four lines across the board, separated by about 1/16 inch, and removing two copper strips, one from between the first and second scribe, and one from between the thrid and fourth scribe. That leaves a trace about 1/16 inch wide. Cut gaps in the trace, about 1/16 inch long, where you want to solder down series components. Solder shunt components across from the trace to the copper ground plane. Bridge across the trace with a copper strap to connect the two gound plane sides, with the bridge up in the air over the trace. Nice to have a ground plane on the opposite side, with some holes and wires to connect to the top-side ground planes, but not necessary. I'm thinking 0805 parts with the sizes I mentioned...make things slightly larger for 1206. You can make the trace be a 50 ohm transmission line if you want, by sizing things right. Cheers, Tom Hi Tom, Being so new at this, I don't even know what you mean by 'tombstone style', and it sounds like an awful lot of work to be scoring pcboard with an Xacto knife to create transmission line effects. I talked with a tech rep from radiotronix today. They called me because I ordered a half dozen modules from mouser. He explained that the pi circuit on the TX is so the TX sees 50 ohms, which is pretty critical. I have not done anything with the transmitter modules yet (they are from Velleman because they are thru hole), but I am building a receiver board on pc board using pcbexpress and single sided copper pcboard. It will be the first prototype. Now that I have it working on a breadboard I am going to build one and see how it works. I am planning on using a straight piece of (20ga) wire for the 18nH inductor and using the T network of 2 8pf caps beside it. The tech said this is just a low pass filter, but it seems to make a difference in receiver sensitivity. The noise on the receiver is supposed to be there according to him. It is between 1Khz and 1.5Khz. he said some people use the data slicer pin with a holtek ht12D decoder, which i am doing or you can also use a micro to look for the bit pattern and decode the signal. I am just using the TV (transmission valid) to set off the rest of my circuit which, right now, consists of a latch and an LED. Joe |
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