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Dave wrote: John Smith wrote: flashdrive wrote: ... Has anyone ever successfully reverse engineered the pre-amp of a Wellbrook loop? It might be possible to dissolve the encapsulating material (epoxy?) to reveal the PCB and componants. Otherwise a medical scanner (seriously) might reveal some useful information. My question would be, "Why go to the trouble?" Indeed, grab a DC - 1Ghz MMIC device (make sure you don't get an SMC component, unless you like soldering under a microscope), stick a proper filter for the freqs/bands in front of it, and feed its' input with a well designed loop ... if you need EXTREME gain, you can cascade a couple of MMICs. Regards, JS I do SMD rework occasionally, with MagEyes. You'd use a power amplifier for a pre-amp? SMD is best for RF but small through lead components on a PCB should be OK for HF work. Depending on SMD size of the components I use 4X to 10X magnification. I agree with Smith, design your own stuff besides how well things work depends as much on how circuits are physically built or laid out. The encapsulate is for weather protection not for defeating copying. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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