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#21
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On 2005-11-24, John Larkin wrote:
I know a guy who uses surface-mount resistors as explosive detonators. I understand you can place a row of surface-mount capacitors along the edge of a board so they will be scraped off by any accidental contact with nearby sheetmetal. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#22
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On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 18:49:24 -0500, Jon Yaeger wrote:
Take apart a couple of D cell carbon-zinc batteries. Wash off the carbon rods. Put each in a wooden clothes pin and connect the attached ends to the mains voltage (US customers only, please). Tap the free ends of the rods together. Move them apart as necessary. Very bright! Much brighter than you are. One of the MIT EE course videos on the web shows a demonstration of AC across a pickle... it is an interesting effect. Not sure how the pickle tastes afterward. Cooking hotdogs with AC is similar, but the pickle gives off a much nicer translucent flickering glow. Very pretty. --- Regards, Bob Monsen The question of the ultimate foundations and the ultimate meaning of mathematics remains open; we do not know in what direction it will find its final solution or even whether a final objective answer can be expected at all. "Mathematizing" may well be a creative activity of man, like language or music, of primary originality, whose historical decisions defy complete objective rationalization. - Hermann Weyl in 1944 |
#23
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![]() John Larkin wrote: TO-220 bipolar transistors make nice temperature sensors. I like that trick. Esp the isolated tab type. Graham |
#24
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Roy Lewallen wrote:
Zener diodes work fine as varicaps, at least at HF. The lower the zener voltage and higher the power dissipation rating, the higher the C. As someone else mentioned, transistor emitter-base junctions can be used as either zeners (typical zener voltage around 5 volts) or varicaps. A zener can be used as a broadband noise source. I've had the best luck with zeners of 10 - 15 volt breakdown, with around 100 uA current. Some are noisier than others, and they often have a critical current where the noise is the greatest. Tektronix used selected transistors to generate high voltage (~100 volts) fast steps (~100 ps rise time if I recall correctly) by avalanching the collector. Some fraction of some common transistor types worked satisfactorily in this application. 1N914 type diodes can be used as step recovery diodes to generate a step with about a ns risetime -- maybe faster with a chip component and some care. This could be the basis of a broadband harmonic generator. Roy Lewallen, W7EL At a leading Ultrasonic flaw detector company we used simple low frequency Motorola sot23 transistors in avalance mode for making a nice pulse generator for 100MHz probes. These were better than the Zetex avalance specified transistors. -- ciao Ban Apricale, Italy |
#25
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![]() "Henry Kiefer" wrote in message ... Do you know of other interesting devices or circuits good for misuse? LED's work both ways, as a light emitter and a photodiode. The inbuilt colour filter can be used to distinguish between Grass and Not grass f.ex. by comparing output from a red and a green LED using white light as illumination. Back when fiber was ex$$$pensive one often saw clever circuitry using two transmitters to form a duplex connection over a single fiber. The USD 10 solar powered garden lamps will, with a little persuation, yield a nice solar cell well below the price of a similar unit in the shops - and - two 600 mAh NiMh batteries and a grotty circuit for switching the LED. |
#26
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ehsjr writes:
Henry Kiefer wrote: Do you know of other interesting devices or circuits good for misuse? Best regards - Henry An LED as a shunt regulator. Also, as a varicap. Ed Also a photodetector that is insensitive to long wavelengths (because of the high bandgap). -- John Devereux |
#27
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(not x-posted)
Besides the already mentioned reverse-polarized diodes as varicaps (http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/varicap/index.htm), I use 74HC240 as HF QRP finals (600mW) and IRF510 as HF PA (20-30W max, QST has some articles in the past). Paolo IK1ZYW |
#28
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![]() Besides the already mentioned reverse-polarized diodes as varicaps (http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/varicap/index.htm), I use 74HC240 as HF QRP finals (600mW) and IRF510 as HF PA (20-30W max, QST has some articles in the past). Paolo IK1ZYW TL-431 Shunt regulator as a low powered fixed gain 3 terminal audio amplifier. W4ZCB |
#29
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John Larkin wrote:
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 18:30:06 +0100, Jorgen Lund-Nielsen wrote: Henry Kiefer wrote: Hi all - After my first thread going from "standard" cheap parts for up to vhf frequency to a discussion about the usefulness of Spice simulator...... I try it another time hopefully get attention of frustrated co-readers: For example the rechtifier diode 1N4007 can be used as a rf switching diode, for example as rx/tx-switch. This is because it is a pin structure diode. This type is cheap and you can get it almost everywhere. It shows good performance for the price. Surely for high-end you should do it with another type tuned to the application it is made for. But anyway it works in some circuits. Do you know of other interesting devices or circuits good for misuse? Best regards - Henry Tuner Switching Diodes like the european BA244 (NOT PIN-Diodes!) work well as medium fast Step Recovery Diodes. Tell me about it. I tried some pins to see if they would snap, and they turn out to have incredibly mushy reverse recovery, Slop Recovery Diodes. I'll have to try the varicaps. John Hello John, I wrote: NOT PIN - Diodes - as they wouldn't snap. i mean Band Switching diodes for TV-Tuners like the BA244 and the BA682. BA682 Datasheet: http://www.vishay.com/docs/85530/85530.pdf - and they snap! Try it! Jorgen dj0ud |
#30
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Ban wrote:
Roy Lewallen wrote: Zener diodes work fine as varicaps, at least at HF. The lower the zener voltage and higher the power dissipation rating, the higher the C. As someone else mentioned, transistor emitter-base junctions can be used as either zeners (typical zener voltage around 5 volts) or varicaps. A zener can be used as a broadband noise source. I've had the best luck with zeners of 10 - 15 volt breakdown, with around 100 uA current. Some are noisier than others, and they often have a critical current where the noise is the greatest. Tektronix used selected transistors to generate high voltage (~100 volts) fast steps (~100 ps rise time if I recall correctly) by avalanching the collector. Some fraction of some common transistor types worked satisfactorily in this application. 1N914 type diodes can be used as step recovery diodes to generate a step with about a ns risetime -- maybe faster with a chip component and some care. This could be the basis of a broadband harmonic generator. Roy Lewallen, W7EL At a leading Ultrasonic flaw detector company we used simple low frequency Motorola sot23 transistors in avalance mode for making a nice pulse generator for 100MHz probes. These were better than the Zetex avalance specified transistors. 2N2369 for fast pulses. 2N2222 and even 2N2219 works, but a bit slower and they requiring more voltage to avalance, but still 1nS rt The Zetex are slower but can deliver much more current (up to 60A, ZTX 415 family). Jorgen |
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