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![]() "Alan Horowitz" wrote in message om... Is there a place in modern technique for regeneration (Q-multiplication)? I guess that depends on the application. I don't know how true it is, but I believe I saw that some of the 433 MHz ISM band receivers use either regenerative or superregenerative detectors. They are tiny and have sensitivities better than -106 dBm. There has been new work on superregens (September/October 2000). An article was published in QEX, a ham radio journal. The first file at http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/vhfproj.html is that article but it requires membership to get it. However, on the same Web page, I see another that appears to be available without membership. It is An Ultra-Simple VHF Receiver for 6 Meters . You can probably contact the ARRL and buy a reprint of the first article. It is well worth it. The author, Charles Kitchin, says the gain in a superregen detector is about a million. He discusses his discovery of shaping the quenching waveform so that selectivity is not lost. And he says it is possible to receive FM and NBFM as well as AM. It is a very enlightening article. I plan to build a superregen to play with. After I get one going, I think I will try to make it work at 450 MHz. Like some other posters here, I built my previous regen 40 years ago. Cheers, John |
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