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Hi Mark,
All of the RF design is done...........I have built two prototypes. On one of them, I use a ten turn pot to tune the VCO. The other unit uses a PLL for tuning. I think we will have some time to develop the tuning software, etc. We were tied up with a big project for the last several months; this was the Automark election machine that you may have heard about in the news. All kinds of fun things, getting it through EMC certification. Speaking of MW receivers, I did purchase the Boston Acoustics Receptor clock radio. MW performance is not bad, but the selectivity is pretty wide. It appears to be a single conversion affair that uses a 450kHz I.F. It might be a double conversion unit, but when I peaked the Radio Shack loop antenna on the image frequency, I was able to receive the image. It could also be that the (2 X 2nd I.F.) rejection isn't too good, if this is truly a double conversion unit. Is it worth the 150 dollars? Could be. I did call up Boston Acoustics to see if I could get ahold of some service information. The wouldn't make it available. When I asked them how to remove the main circuit board from the unit so that I could change the 450kHz filter, they explained that they couldn't give me that information, since I if were electrocuted, they would be liable. When I explained that I was going to quote them in my review, they said that it was ok. If anybody figures out how to get this thing apart, feel free to contact me. Oh, another thing............it could be off topic, but this is good for you Drake '7 line folks. If you change the 1st mixer in your Drake R7/TR7 to a Mini-Circuits SRA-3MH (Level 13) mixer, and you change the 1N4148s in the 2nd mixer to matched sets of 1N5711 hot carrier diodes, the receive performance improves a bit. The original 1st mixer has an SSB conversion loss of 6.5dB, while the Mini-Circuits mixer has a conversion loss of 4.75dB. As far as the 2nd mixer, it is good to get rid of those general purpose switching diodes and replace them; the 1N5711 Hot Carrier diodes have lower loss, better IM characteristics, and they are designed for RF applications. One thing about that Radio Shack cleaner. I have used some of it in the past, and it has dissolved plastic switch wafers. I would stay away from that. The Caig De-Oxit is in the same price range, and it doesn't destroy components. In the old days, we used to use Freon based solvents to clean circuit boards. I would get ahold of the De-Oxit and play it safe. Caig is the same company that marketed a product called Tweak. Pete "Mark S. Holden" wrote in message ... pete ke90a wrote: snip If you brush the dust off the circuit boards, make sure that you don't bump any of the trimmer capicators. Pete KE9OA Reminds me of when I was a kid - my best friend decided to soup up his dad's radio and found the trimmer caps and the slugs in the IF transformers were loose and needed tightening. ![]() Any update on the enthusiast's MW radio you were working on? |
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