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#1
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I have a clock radio that gets lousy reception in my office at work.
I want to experiment with adding external antennas to it. Maybe a half-wave looped dipole for FM and a small external loop for AM. My question is how to add the external connection. The radio has a loopstick ferrite antenna (I presume for only AM) The loopstick has 4 connection points. 2 of them are on the same circuit trace which only goes between these two points and nowhere else (what might this be for?). The other two, one goes to DC ground and the other goes off into the circuitry of the radio. If I solder leads to these four points, is that my external connection for only AM or both AM and FM? I presume the FM antenna is the power cord because that is commonly done in radios of this type and adjusting the shape of the power cord just right picks up my FM station in question, 88.7 MHz. How can I add an external connection in this case? TIA, Todd K. |
#2
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Todd K. wrote:
I have a clock radio that gets lousy reception in my office at work. I want to experiment with adding external antennas to it. Maybe a half-wave looped dipole for FM and a small external loop for AM. My question is how to add the external connection. The radio has a loopstick ferrite antenna (I presume for only AM) The loopstick has 4 connection points. 2 of them are on the same circuit trace which only goes between these two points and nowhere else (what might this be for?). The other two, one goes to DC ground and the other goes off into the circuitry of the radio. If I solder leads to these four points, is that my external connection for only AM or both AM and FM? LW/MW AM bands usually look similar in popular medium-class radios. It's a resonat circuit tuned with a variable capacitor, the inductor is just the ferrite-rod antenna. 4 wires you've found are proably used for 2 bands: LW and SW. Find two of them leading to ground, the left two are these, which are connected to rotors of variable caps. Connect a wire through a 100pF capacitor, that should improve reception a bit. In case you come across troubles with noise level or other distortions, try winding some insulated wire round the ferrite rod and then connect the ends to a loop. The last thing you could do is to connect a variable capacitor to the loop in parallel, tuning for best reception. I presume the FM antenna is the power cord because that is commonly done in radios of this type and adjusting the shape of the power cord just right picks up my FM station in question, 88.7 MHz. How can I add an external connection in this case? First you've got to do is to isolate an FM aerial signal inlet, somewhere close to the FM tuner circuitry. There might be a series coil for aerial lenghtening and insulating circuit, beware of high voltage on caps from AC decoupling. Once you've got FM tuner input, the only thing is to connect external wire. Besides, having a schematic diagram, there oughtn't to be any problems about it. -- Pawel Stobinski Republic of Poland |
#3
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Todd K. wrote:
My question is how to add the external connection. The radio has a loopstick ferrite antenna (I presume for only AM) The loopstick has 4 connection points. What has worked for me is to wrap a good number of turns of #30 insulated wire around the loopstick. Ground one end and tie the other end to an external jack. Run a long wire antenna from the jack to wherever works best. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
#4
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One way to add an external FM antenna is to create a folded dipole out of
some twinlead. Use another length of twinlead for the feedline. "Terminate" the other end of the feedline by connecting the two conductors with a 330 Ohm resistor, leaving one of the leads long. Use that lead to attach the antenna to either the whip antenna that comes with the radio, or the connector on the back. (This worked well enough in my college dorm room 'way back when.) What W5DXP said for the AM problem. Wrapping some wire around the radio itself (assuming a plastic case) sometimes works too, but not quite as well. NØKF "Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... Todd K. wrote: My question is how to add the external connection. The radio has a loopstick ferrite antenna (I presume for only AM) The loopstick has 4 connection points. What has worked for me is to wrap a good number of turns of #30 insulated wire around the loopstick. Ground one end and tie the other end to an external jack. Run a long wire antenna from the jack to wherever works best. -- 73, Cecil, W5DXP |
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