True Battery Capacity Tester Based on Arduino

True Battery Capacity Tester Based on Arduino

Overview

The Arduino based capacity tester of true battery power is capable of measuring almost any type of rechargeable or non-rechargeable batteries by fully discharging the battery with known current and log data to PC.

Details

A full lab testing of batteries can be obtained by connecting the discharge circuit to Arduino. This can send the log data to the PC and be able to show a full graph or chart of the discharge and total capacity. Different batteries can drain different sources during various discharge phases. Sometimes, at the end of discharge, the electrical current may be too low and choose a different one. This tester can provide much needed information on the battery power.

The tester can be used for different types of batteries such as Li-Ion, NiMH, NiCD, or Pb. It utilizes an ATmega168 along with a 16MHz crystal and two 22pF capacitors. The two A/D pins from the Arduino were connected to the added 2.2Ohm resistor that cam e along with an 8Ohm FET. The exact voltage drop on the resistor was obtained by subtracting the values. The software includes auto detecting battery type as the LCD gets connected.

READ MORE - True Battery Capacity Tester Based on Arduino

Sensitive Clap Switch

This is the circuit of a very sensitive clap switch. It switches ON/OFF a White LED or electrical appliances through claps. The circuit can sense the sound of claps from a distance of 1-2 meters.

Condenser Mic picks up sound vibrations caused by the clap. These sound vibrations are given to the inverting input (pin2) of IC1.It amplifies the sound collected by the Mic. Resistor R2, R3 and variable resistor VR1 adjust the sensitivity of the amplifier. Resistor R1 set the sensitivity of Mic. The amplified output pulses from IC1 passes to the input of IC2 (CD 4017).Resistor R4 keeps the input (pin14) of IC2 low so as to prevent false triggering.

IC2 is a decade counter IC which is wired as a toggle switch. That its outputs 1 and 2 (pins 2 and 3) becomes high and low when the input pin14 receives pulses. Pin4 (output4) is connected to the reset pin15 so that further counting will be inhibited. The high output from IC2 passes through the current limiter R6 to the base of switching transistor T1. When T1 conducts, White LED (D2) turns on. If a 6V 100 ohms relay is connected to the points marked (A and B), the relay will also energize and the load (bulb or electrical equipments) will be switched on. In the next clap, output pin 2 becomes low and relay and White LED will be switched off. LED D1 (Red LED) indicates the OFF position.

Designed by D.Mohankumar

READ MORE - Sensitive Clap Switch

LA4440 Stereo Amplifier

LA4440 is a two channel audio power amplifier IC with inbuilt in dual channels enables it for stereo and bridge amplifier applications. In dual mode it gives 6 W per channel and in bridge mode 19 W output.

It has good ripple rejection of 46dB, small residual noise, built in over voltage and surge voltage protection etc. ideal feature of the IC is its pin-to-pin protection. Here LA4440 is wired in Stereo configuration using both inputs and outputs.

Features of LA4440

1. Built in two channels to use as Mono and Stereo
2. Dual mode 6W x 2 and Bridge mode 19W
3. 46 dB Ripple rejection
4. 18V Max. Power handling and 12V typical
5. Good channel separation and low distortion
6. Built in Audio Muting function and Pin-to-Pin protection
7. Surge protection circuitry

LA4440 Stereo Amplifier Circuit

Pin connection of LA4440

Pin
1 NF1
2 Audio In 1
3 Pre Amp Ground
4 Audio Mute
5 DC
6 Audio In 2
7 NF2
8 Gnd
9 BS 2
10 Audio Out 2
11 VCC
12 Audio Out 1
13 BS 1
14 Gnd

LA 4440 Amplifier Assembled

D.Mohankumar

READ MORE - LA4440 Stereo Amplifier

One Transistor FM Radio Receiver Circuit

Here’s simple FM receiver circuit for a simple superregenerative FM radio. It is sensitive, selective, and has enough audio drive for an earphone. These designs generally have low component counts, however the design or my construction have been far from simple.

FM Receiver Schematic

FM Receiver Schematic

FM Radio Receiver Circuit Layout
Because this is a superregenerative design, component layout can be very important. The tuning capacitor, C3, has three leads. Only the outer two leads are used; the middle lead of C3 is not connected. Arrange L1 fairly close to C3, but keep it away from where your hand will be. If your hand is too close to L1 while you tune the radio, it will make tuning very difficult.

Winding L1
L1 sets the frequency of the radio, acts as the antenna, and is the primary adjustment for super-regeneration. Although it has many important jobs, it is easy to construct. Get any cylindrical object that is just under 1/2 inch (13 mm) in diameter. I used a thick pencil from my son’s grade school class, but a magic marker or large drill bit work just fine. #20 bare solid wire works the best, but any wire that holds its shape will do. Wind 6 turns tightly, side-by-side, on the cylinder, then slip the wire off. Spread the windings apart from each other so the whole coil is just under an inch (2.5 cm) long. Find the midpoint and solder a small wire for C2 there. Mount the ends of the wire on your circuit board keeping some clearance between the coil and the circuit board.

A tuning knob for C3

C3 does not come with a knob and I have not found a source. A knob is important to keep your hand away from the capacitor and coil when you tune in stations. The solution is to use a #4 nylon screw. Twist the nylon screw into the threads of the C3 tuning handle. The #4 screw is the wrong thread pitch and will jam (bind) in the threads. This is what you want to happen. Tighten the screw just enough so it stays put as you tune the capacitor. The resulting arrangement works quite well.

FM Radio Receiver Circuit Adjustment
If the radio is wired correctly, there are three possible things you can hear when you turn it on: 1) a radio station, 2) a rushing noise, 3) a squeal, and 4) nothing. If you got a radio station, you are in good shape. Use another FM radio to see where you are on the FM band. You can change the tuning range of C3 by squeezing L1 or change C1. If you hear a rushing noise, you will probably be able to tune in a station.

Try the tuning control and see what you get. If you hear a squeal or hear nothing, then the circuit is oscillating too little or too much. Try spreading or compressing L1. Double check your connections. If you don’t make any progress, then you need to change R4. Replace R4 with a 20K or larger potentiometer (up to 50K). A trimmer potentiometer is best. Adjust R4 until you can reliably tune in stations. Once the circuit is working, you can remove the potentiometer, measure its value, and replace it with a fixed resistor. Some people might want to build the set from the start with a trimmer potentiometer in place (e.g., Mouser 569-72PM-25K).

Browse : FM Receiver on Amazon

See more: MP3 FM Transistor

Source: Build A One Transistor FM Radio

READ MORE - One Transistor FM Radio Receiver Circuit

Radio Mobile RF Propagation Stimulation

Radio Mobile is a free and powerful tool for plotting RF patterns and predicting the performance of radio systems. Using freely available terrain elevation data it can produce grey scale, x-ray and rainbow colored virtual maps. One can also produce 3-D and stereoscopic views as well as flyby animations. Background images can be merged with scanned maps, satellite photos and Mapquest maps to produce accurate prediction plots. You can obtain your copy of Radio Mobile from the official website.

Installing Radio Mobile
There are two ways to install Radio Mobile. You can either download the installer file available through this website or download the individual compressed files from the Radio Mobile website or the QSL.net mirror.

Obtaining Elevation Data
Before you can really do anything with Radio Mobile you need to obtain the proper elevation data for the area in which you are creating plots. Radio Mobile accepts elevations in a number of formats including SRTM, DTED and GTOPO30. Fortunately most of this data is available free of charge and with a little effort is easily installed.

Installing Elevation Data
You have downloaded some elevation data you first need to extract it and then configure Radio Mobile so that it can find it. If you downloaded GTOPO30 or DTED data from the sites mentioned previously you may notice the files have the extension tar.gz. In the UNIX world this is known as a “tarball” and this short 7-Zip Tutorial will show you how to extract the data contained within the tarball you downloaded.

Creating A Map
You have Radio Mobile configured to use your elevation data you can begin creating maps. Click on File | Map Properties and you will again be presented with the Map Properties window. This time make sure you uncheck “ignore missing files” and have SRTM set as one of your data sources. The reason for doing this is to get Radio Mobile to tell you which SRTM data files are missing so you download the missing pieces. There are some holes in the SRTM coverage so there is a chance you will not be able to download the missing files. If this is the case check “ignore missing files” after you have filled in as many missing pieces as possible.

Browse: Radio Mobile Software on Amazon
See more: FM Transmitter MP3
Source: Using Radio Mobile for Windows

READ MORE - Radio Mobile RF Propagation Stimulation

VHF Radio FM Transmitter Circuit

Here’s a VHF Radio FM transmitter. This project is a simple VHF FM transmitter using only one crystal and will cover 145.00 to 146.00 MHz. The crystal is a 44.9333 MHz crystal for 145.500 receive, as used in the Trio (Kenwood) 2200, PYE, Motorolla, Tait equipment, to name but four. The frequency of the crystal is not critical as almost any other xtal for the 2-meter band will function.

VHF Radio Transmitter

VHF Radio Transmitter

No provision has been made to tune the vhf radio transmitter to different channels, as this transmitter was first used as a single channel “repeater box”, leaving my main rig free to be used on other channels. The transmitter circuit is given above and simply mixes the output of a (more or less) conventional receiver multiplier (x3) with the output of a 10.7MHz VFO that is modulated with true FM.

Ordinary 1N4001 diodes will function well as varicap diodes, but if true varicap diodes (such as BA102 etc.) are used you will have to reduce the value of the 18pf capacitor coupling D1/D2 to L1. L1 may be a 10.7MHz IF transformer robbed from a domestic receiver, but remove the internal capacitor. Adjust L1 (10.2 – 11.2 MHz) to cover 145-146 MHz.

The transmitter modulator is a simple circuit which I will post later. Two OP-Amps were used in the prototypes, the first was a MIC amplifier to bring the MIC AF OP up to 500mV RMS. Clamp the AF with a couple of back-to-back diodes (limiter) then the second OP-Amp amplifies the clipped AF to the correct level, (about 1.5v RMS) for 5KHz deviation. Adjust the gain of the first OP-AMP for MIC GAIN and adjust the gain of the second OP-AMP for deviation (with FULL AF).

Audio Modulator

Audio Modulator

The output of the transmitter amplifier driver will supply about 10-20mW to the PA. I didn’t use a Power Amplifier because I lived so close to the repeater (path loss = -109dB). There are hundreds of VHF QRP PA’s published in SPRAT, INTERNET, RSGB books, RadCom, and PACKET RADIO so I will leave that to your own ingenuity. A single transistor, such as the 2N3866 will be more than adequate to get up to 250mW, but an additional band-pass tuned circuit should be used between them.

Browse: VHF Radio Transmitter on Amazon

See more: Wireless Transmitter

Source: FM Transmitter

READ MORE - VHF Radio FM Transmitter Circuit

ICL7107 Digital LED Voltmeter [Universal Digital Voltmeter] This circuit is a digital voltmeter with LED display. It's ideal to use for measuring the


This circuit is a digital voltmeter with LED display. It's ideal to use for measuring the output voltage of your DC power supply. It includes a 3.5-digit LED display with a negative voltage indicator. It measures DC voltages from 0 to 199.9V with a resolution of 0.1V. The voltmeter is based on single ICL7107 chip and may be fitted on a small 3cm x 7cm printed circuit board. The circuit should be supplied with a 5V voltage supply and consumes only around 25mA.




The use of 7805 5V voltage regulator is highly recommended to prevent the damage of ICL7107, 555 ICs and to extend the operating voltages.

Parts list of The Digital LED Voltmeter:

R1 = 8K2 R1 = 8K2
R2 = 47K / 470K R2 = 47k / 470K
R3 = 100K R3 = 100K
R4 = 2K R4 = 2K
R5, R6 = 47K R5, R6 = 47k
R7 = 0R / 4K7 R7 = 0R / 4K7
R8 = 560R R8 = 560R
C1,C5, C6, C8, C9 = 100n C1, C5, C6, C8, C9 = 100n
C2 = 470n / 47n C2 = 470n / 47n
C3 = 220n C3 = 220n
C4 = 100p C4 = 100p
C7 = 10-22u C7 = 10-22U
D1, D2 = 1N4148 D1, D2 = 1N4148
IC1 = ICL7107 IC1 = ICL7107
IC2 = NE555 IC2 = NE555
OPTO = CA 10 pin FTA = CA 10 pin






The digital LED voltmeter can also be configured to measure different voltage ranges and display higher voltage resolution.

More about Universal Digital LED Voltmeter
READ MORE - ICL7107 Digital LED Voltmeter [Universal Digital Voltmeter] This circuit is a digital voltmeter with LED display. It's ideal to use for measuring the

UHF Wireless Audio Video Sender Circuit

This wireless circuit provides you with wireless audio and visual transmission to a TV. The TV acts as a receiver, eliminating the need to buy a separate monitor. You can also hook it up to a VCR or CCD Camera, and even set up a remote CCTV security system!

AV Sender Circuit Schematic

AV Sender Circuit Schematic

Audio Video Sender Circuit Description

Q3, VC1, C13, C16 and L3 all make up a colpitts oscillator circuit that fluctuates form 220~250 MHz. You can regulate the frequency to any value within this threshold by tuning VC1 or L3. C13 modulates the signal rate. When the capacitance increases, so does the modulation. R9 and C16 bias the local oscillation. If you lower R9’s frequency to 680W the oscillator’s output level will increase.

AV Sender Block Diagram

AV Sender Block Diagram

Q2 and L2 act as a frequency doubler. C7, along with FCZ7S3R5 (IF transformer), the Q4 transistor, C14, C19 and R12 all make up the mixer. This mixer takes both audio and visual signals together and “mix” them into one and passes through RF Amplifier Q1 to transmit the signal to the antenna.

How This Wireless Audio Video Sender Works

  1. Turning the blue component’s trimmer on VC1 varies the frequency. When we turn the trimmer, the television’s channel has to be changed accordingly. It is easier to tune the A/V Sender if you have a spectrum analyzer to help you find the correct frequencies. If the frequency is tuned to 474 MHz then this would be the equivalent of your TV’s channel 14 UHF band.
  2. The IF transformer is used to synchronize the audio and video frequency’s level radio. If the TV’s image is too blurry then you can adjust the IFT to fine-tune the image.
  3. SVR1 controls the video signal input ratio, while SVR2 controls the audio portion. You can tune these components according to your needs.

Browse Audio Video Sender on Amazon

Source: Audio Video Sender

READ MORE - UHF Wireless Audio Video Sender Circuit

How to Build a Dipole FM antenna

The antenna rod is made of 6 mm copper tube I found in a shop for cars. It is actually tubes for the breaks, but the tube works great as antenna rods. You can use all kinds of tubes or wire. The benefit of using a tube, is that it is strong and the wider tube diameter you use, the wider frequency range (bandwidth) you will also get. I have noticed that the transmitter gives highest output power around 104-108 MHz so I set my transmitter to 106 MHz.

Dipole-FM-Antenna-Diagram

The calculation gave the rod length of 67 cm. So I cut off two rods at 67cm each. I also found plastic tube to hold the rods and to give it a more stable construction. I use one plastic tube as boom and a second to contain the two rods. You can see how I used black duct tape to hold the two tubes together. Inside the vertical tube are the two rods and I have connected a coax to the two rods. The coax is twisted 10 turns around the horizontal tube to form a balun (rf choke) to prevent reflections. This is a poor mans balun and lot of improvement can be done here.

Copper Material

Copper Material

I placed the antenna on my balcony and connected it to the transmitter and turned on power supply. I live in a medium city so I took my car and drove away to test the performance. The signal was perfect with crystal clear stereo audio. There are many concrete building around my transmitter which affects the transmitting range. The transmitter worked up to 5 km distance when the sight was clear (could not obtain line-in-sight). In city environment it reached 1-2km, due to heavy concrete.

Dipole FM Antenna Construction

Dipole FM Antenna Construction

I find this performance very good for a 1 W amplifier with an antenna which took me 45 min to build. One should also take in account that the FM signal is Wide FM, which consume much more energy than a narrow FM signal does. All together, I was very pleased with the result.

Antenna Testing and Measuring
Thanks to a complex antenna analyser, I have been able to get a plot of the antenna performance.
The red curve show the SWR and the grey show Z (impedance). What we want is a SWR of 1 and Z to be close match to 50 ohm.

As you can see, the best match for this antenna is at 102 MHz where we have SWR = 1.13 and Z = 53 ohm. I did run my antenna at 106 MHz, where the match is worse SWR = 1.56 and Z = 32 ohm.

Conclusion: My antenna was not perfect for 106 MHz, I should re-run my filed test at 102 MHz. I will probably get better results and longer transmitting distance. Or I should make the antenna a bit shorter to match the frequency 106 MHz.

Browse: FM Antenna Outdoor on Amazon

See more: Wireless FM Transmitter

Source: How to build a dipole antenna in 45 minutes

READ MORE - How to Build a Dipole FM antenna

One Transistor FM Radio Receiver Circuit

Here’s simple FM receiver circuit for a simple superregenerative FM radio. It is sensitive, selective, and has enough audio drive for an earphone. These designs generally have low component counts, however the design or my construction have been far from simple.

FM Receiver Schematic

FM Receiver Schematic

FM Radio Receiver Circuit Layout
Because this is a superregenerative design, component layout can be very important. The tuning capacitor, C3, has three leads. Only the outer two leads are used; the middle lead of C3 is not connected. Arrange L1 fairly close to C3, but keep it away from where your hand will be. If your hand is too close to L1 while you tune the radio, it will make tuning very difficult.

Winding L1
L1 sets the frequency of the radio, acts as the antenna, and is the primary adjustment for super-regeneration. Although it has many important jobs, it is easy to construct. Get any cylindrical object that is just under 1/2 inch (13 mm) in diameter. I used a thick pencil from my son’s grade school class, but a magic marker or large drill bit work just fine. #20 bare solid wire works the best, but any wire that holds its shape will do. Wind 6 turns tightly, side-by-side, on the cylinder, then slip the wire off. Spread the windings apart from each other so the whole coil is just under an inch (2.5 cm) long. Find the midpoint and solder a small wire for C2 there. Mount the ends of the wire on your circuit board keeping some clearance between the coil and the circuit board.

A tuning knob for C3

C3 does not come with a knob and I have not found a source. A knob is important to keep your hand away from the capacitor and coil when you tune in stations. The solution is to use a #4 nylon screw. Twist the nylon screw into the threads of the C3 tuning handle. The #4 screw is the wrong thread pitch and will jam (bind) in the threads. This is what you want to happen. Tighten the screw just enough so it stays put as you tune the capacitor. The resulting arrangement works quite well.

FM Radio Receiver Circuit Adjustment
If the radio is wired correctly, there are three possible things you can hear when you turn it on: 1) a radio station, 2) a rushing noise, 3) a squeal, and 4) nothing. If you got a radio station, you are in good shape. Use another FM radio to see where you are on the FM band. You can change the tuning range of C3 by squeezing L1 or change C1. If you hear a rushing noise, you will probably be able to tune in a station.

Try the tuning control and see what you get. If you hear a squeal or hear nothing, then the circuit is oscillating too little or too much. Try spreading or compressing L1. Double check your connections. If you don’t make any progress, then you need to change R4. Replace R4 with a 20K or larger potentiometer (up to 50K). A trimmer potentiometer is best. Adjust R4 until you can reliably tune in stations. Once the circuit is working, you can remove the potentiometer, measure its value, and replace it with a fixed resistor. Some people might want to build the set from the start with a trimmer potentiometer in place (e.g., Mouser 569-72PM-25K).

Browse : FM Receiver on Amazon

See more: MP3 FM Transistor

Source: Build A One Transistor FM Radio

READ MORE - One Transistor FM Radio Receiver Circuit

UHF Wireless Audio Video Sender Circuit rovides you with wireless audio and visual transmission to a TV

This wireless circuit provides you with wireless audio and visual transmission to a TV. The TV acts as a receiver, eliminating the need to buy a separate monitor. You can also hook it up to a VCR or CCD Camera, and even set up a remote CCTV security system!

AV Sender Circuit Schematic

AV Sender Circuit Schematic

Audio Video Sender Circuit Description

Q3, VC1, C13, C16 and L3 all make up a colpitts oscillator circuit that fluctuates form 220~250 MHz. You can regulate the frequency to any value within this threshold by tuning VC1 or L3. C13 modulates the signal rate. When the capacitance increases, so does the modulation. R9 and C16 bias the local oscillation. If you lower R9’s frequency to 680W the oscillator’s output level will increase.

AV Sender Block Diagram

AV Sender Block Diagram

Q2 and L2 act as a frequency doubler. C7, along with FCZ7S3R5 (IF transformer), the Q4 transistor, C14, C19 and R12 all make up the mixer. This mixer takes both audio and visual signals together and “mix” them into one and passes through RF Amplifier Q1 to transmit the signal to the antenna.

How This Wireless Audio Video Sender Works

  1. Turning the blue component’s trimmer on VC1 varies the frequency. When we turn the trimmer, the television’s channel has to be changed accordingly. It is easier to tune the A/V Sender if you have a spectrum analyzer to help you find the correct frequencies. If the frequency is tuned to 474 MHz then this would be the equivalent of your TV’s channel 14 UHF band.
  2. The IF transformer is used to synchronize the audio and video frequency’s level radio. If the TV’s image is too blurry then you can adjust the IFT to fine-tune the image.
  3. SVR1 controls the video signal input ratio, while SVR2 controls the audio portion. You can tune these components according to your needs.

Browse Audio Video Sender on Amazon

Source: Audio Video Sender

READ MORE - UHF Wireless Audio Video Sender Circuit rovides you with wireless audio and visual transmission to a TV

Radio Mobile RF Propagation Stimulation( plotting RF patterns and predicting the performance of radio systems)

Radio Mobile RF Propagation Stimulation

Radio Mobile is a free and powerful tool for plotting RF patterns and predicting the performance of radio systems. Using freely available terrain elevation data it can produce grey scale, x-ray and rainbow colored virtual maps. One can also produce 3-D and stereoscopic views as well as flyby animations. Background images can be merged with scanned maps, satellite photos and Mapquest maps to produce accurate prediction plots. You can obtain your copy of Radio Mobile from the official website.

Installing Radio Mobile
There are two ways to install Radio Mobile. You can either download the installer file available through this website or download the individual compressed files from the Radio Mobile website or the QSL.net mirror.

Obtaining Elevation Data
Before you can really do anything with Radio Mobile you need to obtain the proper elevation data for the area in which you are creating plots. Radio Mobile accepts elevations in a number of formats including SRTM, DTED and GTOPO30. Fortunately most of this data is available free of charge and with a little effort is easily installed.

Installing Elevation Data
You have downloaded some elevation data you first need to extract it and then configure Radio Mobile so that it can find it. If you downloaded GTOPO30 or DTED data from the sites mentioned previously you may notice the files have the extension tar.gz. In the UNIX world this is known as a “tarball” and this short 7-Zip Tutorial will show you how to extract the data contained within the tarball you downloaded.

Creating A Map
You have Radio Mobile configured to use your elevation data you can begin creating maps. Click on File | Map Properties and you will again be presented with the Map Properties window. This time make sure you uncheck “ignore missing files” and have SRTM set as one of your data sources. The reason for doing this is to get Radio Mobile to tell you which SRTM data files are missing so you download the missing pieces. There are some holes in the SRTM coverage so there is a chance you will not be able to download the missing files. If this is the case check “ignore missing files” after you have filled in as many missing pieces as possible.

Browse: Radio Mobile Software on Amazon
See more: FM Transmitter MP3
Source: Using Radio Mobile for Windows

READ MORE - Radio Mobile RF Propagation Stimulation( plotting RF patterns and predicting the performance of radio systems)

VHF Radio FM Transmitter Circuit using only one crystal and will cover 145.00 to 146.00 MHz.

Here’s a VHF Radio FM transmitter. This project is a simple VHF FM transmitter using only one crystal and will cover 145.00 to 146.00 MHz. The crystal is a 44.9333 MHz crystal for 145.500 receive, as used in the Trio (Kenwood) 2200, PYE, Motorolla, Tait equipment, to name but four. The frequency of the crystal is not critical as almost any other xtal for the 2-meter band will function.

VHF Radio Transmitter

VHF Radio Transmitter

No provision has been made to tune the vhf radio transmitter to different channels, as this transmitter was first used as a single channel “repeater box”, leaving my main rig free to be used on other channels. The transmitter circuit is given above and simply mixes the output of a (more or less) conventional receiver multiplier (x3) with the output of a 10.7MHz VFO that is modulated with true FM.

Ordinary 1N4001 diodes will function well as varicap diodes, but if true varicap diodes (such as BA102 etc.) are used you will have to reduce the value of the 18pf capacitor coupling D1/D2 to L1. L1 may be a 10.7MHz IF transformer robbed from a domestic receiver, but remove the internal capacitor. Adjust L1 (10.2 – 11.2 MHz) to cover 145-146 MHz.

The transmitter modulator is a simple circuit which I will post later. Two OP-Amps were used in the prototypes, the first was a MIC amplifier to bring the MIC AF OP up to 500mV RMS. Clamp the AF with a couple of back-to-back diodes (limiter) then the second OP-Amp amplifies the clipped AF to the correct level, (about 1.5v RMS) for 5KHz deviation. Adjust the gain of the first OP-AMP for MIC GAIN and adjust the gain of the second OP-AMP for deviation (with FULL AF).

Audio Modulator

Audio Modulator

The output of the transmitter amplifier driver will supply about 10-20mW to the PA. I didn’t use a Power Amplifier because I lived so close to the repeater (path loss = -109dB). There are hundreds of VHF QRP PA’s published in SPRAT, INTERNET, RSGB books, RadCom, and PACKET RADIO so I will leave that to your own ingenuity. A single transistor, such as the 2N3866 will be more than adequate to get up to 250mW, but an additional band-pass tuned circuit should be used between them.

Browse: VHF Radio Transmitter on Amazon

See more: Wireless Transmitter

Source: FM Transmitter

READ MORE - VHF Radio FM Transmitter Circuit using only one crystal and will cover 145.00 to 146.00 MHz.

 
 
 

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Electronic Circuits, Schematics, Hobby kits, Custom Electronics design & tutorials homepage. Tons of free working Electronic Circuits & Discusson forum with thousands of members to discuss anything about Electronics! electronic,circuits,diagrams,electronics, hobby, kits, tutorials, schematics, hobbyists Voltage sags and interruptions, transient overvoltages, fundamental of harmonics, applied harmonics, long duration voltage variation, power quality benchmarking, distributed generation and power quality, wiring and grounding, power quality monitoring, what is power quality, power quality power voltage, why are we concerned about power quality, the power quality evaluation procedure, who should use this book, need for a consistent vocabulary, general classes of power quality problems, transients, long duration voltage variation, Short-Duration Voltage Variations,Voltage Imbalance,Waveform Distortion, Voltage Fluctuation,Power Frequency Variations, Power Quality Terms,Ambiguous Terms, CBEMA and ITI Curves, Sources of Sags and Interruptions, Estimating Voltage Sag Performance, Fundamental Principles of Protection, Solutions at the End-User Level, Evaluating the Economics of Different Ride-Through Alternatives, Motor-Starting Sags, Utility System Fault-Clearing Issues, Sources of Transient Overvoltages, Principles of Overvoltage Protection, Devices for Overvoltage Protection, Utility Capacitor-Switching Transients, Utility System Lightning Protection, Managing Ferroresonance, Switching Transient Problems with Loads, Computer Tools for Transients Analysis,Harmonic Distortion,Voltage versus Current Distortion,Voltage versus Current Distortion, Harmonics versus Transients, Harmonic Indexes, Harmonic Sources from Commercial Loads, Harmonic Sources from Industrial Loads, Locating Harmonic Sources,System Response Characteristics, Effects of Harmonic Distortion,Interharmonics,Harmonic Distortion Evaluations, Principles for Controlling Harmonics,Where to Control Harmonics, Harmonic Studies, Devices for Controlling Harmonic Distortion, Harmonic Filter Design: A Case Study, Standards of Harmonics, Principles of Regulating the Voltage, Devices for Voltage Regulation, Utility Voltage Regulator Application, Capacitors for Voltage Regulation, Power Quality Monitoring Standards,Application of Intelligent Systems, Assessment of Power Quality Measurement Data, Power Quality Measurement Equipment, Historical Perspective of Power Quality Measuring Instruments,Monitoring Considerations,Solutions to Wiring and Grounding Problems, Typical Wiring and Grounding Problems,Reasons for Grounding, Interconnection Standards, Siting DGDistributed Generation, http://tinyurl.com/2fwls3

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