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Diverd4777 ) writes:
To Whomever: How this thing work aside from just scanning & stopping somewhere on the dial..? I'm not going to look at the link, but from your comment, I assume the radio is one of those 2-button FM radios, which are selling here down to $1.99 each. I bought one when it hit that point, because I was curious. I couldn't read the number on the IC, but since there was no ceramic filter (or IF transformer) I assumed the IC was the Phillips TDA7000. That IC converts the incoming signal to a very low frequency, I think the 70KHz area, where active filters can provide the selectivity. Yes, there's an image problem, but for FM broadcast the image lands between stations. Checking the datasheet, it couldn't be the TDA7000 because the pin count did not match. But the Phillips website pointed to some similar ICs, and one of them had the right pin count. It was something like the TDA7088 (don't quote me, since it's been a while, though I have posted about it in various newsgroups since I first looked into this). Tracing the circuit, it was a match. Then I looked more closely at the IC, and there was a number and it was "7088". The difference between this IC and the TDA7000 is the extra logic circuitry for the scanning. Press the scan button, and it applies a ramp to the varactor in the local oscillator. When the radio hits a station, a stage notices that it is a station, and that stops the ramp. Press the scan button again, and it scans further up the band, until it hits another station, and so on. Press the reset button, and it goes back to the bottom of the band. So assuming the spammed radio is the same thing, it is somewhat selective, and just uses an analog ramp voltage to tune it, rather than a synthesized local oscillator of a better and more expensive radio. These radios sell from that dollar or two to twenty dollars or more with a brand name. I have no idea if the more expensive ones are any better. I actually never tried mine. I was curious about it's internals. I suspect operation is limited. Even apart from the odd conversion scheme, the thing runs off two AAA batteries, which surely can't make for a good mixer, and I suspect it may tend to overload, like many cheap FM radios before it. Michael If you live in an area with Dozens of stations, how can you just pick out the One or Two you want ?? IF there are only TWO stations in yur area; or if you JUST DON'T CARE what station you get - then maybe this is the radio for you.. Possibly good for something, I'm not sure what; rather spend a few bucks more & get the AM/FM/ SW Jwin JX -m14 http://store.yahoo.com/kb-electronics/jx-m14.html now THATS a cheap radio !! Dan In article , (Parking Space) writes: I bought a mini radio on this web site: http://www.absolutebestprices.tk/ it works pretty well, I want to share this site with others. Check it out |
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