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One tube transmitter
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Capable of 100% modulation and has fairly good fidelity.
-- Kind regards, Terry Judkins |
One tube transmitter
TerryJ wrote:
Capable of 100% modulation and has fairly good fidelity. How do I tell if it uses AM or FM transmission signals? The diagram shows nothing in reference to a FM or AM transmission bands. -- Johnny Byrns (http://www.fmamradios.com/Johnny's.html) |
One tube transmitter
On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 19:00:17 GMT, "Johnny Byrns"
wrote: TerryJ wrote: Capable of 100% modulation and has fairly good fidelity. How do I tell if it uses AM or FM transmission signals? The diagram shows nothing in reference to a FM or AM transmission bands. For one thing, the audio input is fed directly to a transformer in the plate circuit of the oscillator tube. Classic AM. Next, the oscillator is fixed at 1 MHz by the crystal. No audio gets into the oscillator grid or cathode to FM it. ============== Dave M Never take a laxative and a sleeping pill at the same time!! |
One tube transmitter
In message , Dave M
writes On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 19:00:17 GMT, "Johnny Byrns" wrote: TerryJ wrote: Capable of 100% modulation and has fairly good fidelity. How do I tell if it uses AM or FM transmission signals? The diagram shows nothing in reference to a FM or AM transmission bands. For one thing, the audio input is fed directly to a transformer in the plate circuit of the oscillator tube. Classic AM. Next, the oscillator is fixed at 1 MHz by the crystal. No audio gets into the oscillator grid or cathode to FM it. ============== Dave M Never take a laxative and a sleeping pill at the same time!! You would find it rather difficult to FM a crystal oscillator. Possible, but difficult. Ian. -- |
One tube transmitter
"Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In message , Dave M writes On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 19:00:17 GMT, "Johnny Byrns" wrote: TerryJ wrote: Capable of 100% modulation and has fairly good fidelity. How do I tell if it uses AM or FM transmission signals? The diagram shows nothing in reference to a FM or AM transmission bands. For one thing, the audio input is fed directly to a transformer in the plate circuit of the oscillator tube. Classic AM. Next, the oscillator is fixed at 1 MHz by the crystal. No audio gets into the oscillator grid or cathode to FM it. ============== Dave M Never take a laxative and a sleeping pill at the same time!! You would find it rather difficult to FM a crystal oscillator. Possible, but difficult. Ian. -- Many early FM transmitters directly modulated the crystal. This gave only very limited frequency excursion. Full deviation was acheived by frequency multiplication. Long since, simpler methods have been used such as heterodyning of a second, AFC controlled oscillator and of course the currently common PLL systems. |
One tube transmitter
In article ,
Ian Jackson wrote: In message , Dave M writes On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 19:00:17 GMT, "Johnny Byrns" wrote: TerryJ wrote: Capable of 100% modulation and has fairly good fidelity. How do I tell if it uses AM or FM transmission signals? The diagram shows nothing in reference to a FM or AM transmission bands. For one thing, the audio input is fed directly to a transformer in the plate circuit of the oscillator tube. Classic AM. Next, the oscillator is fixed at 1 MHz by the crystal. No audio gets into the oscillator grid or cathode to FM it. ============== Dave M Never take a laxative and a sleeping pill at the same time!! You would find it rather difficult to FM a crystal oscillator. Possible, but difficult. Ian. Some of the early BBC FM transmitters did exactly that, FM a crystal oscillator. Regards, John Byrns -- Surf my web pages at, http://fmamradios.com/ |
One tube transmitter
In article ,
"Brenda Ann" wrote: "Ian Jackson" wrote in message ... In message , Dave M writes On Thu, 05 Jul 2007 19:00:17 GMT, "Johnny Byrns" wrote: TerryJ wrote: Capable of 100% modulation and has fairly good fidelity. How do I tell if it uses AM or FM transmission signals? The diagram shows nothing in reference to a FM or AM transmission bands. For one thing, the audio input is fed directly to a transformer in the plate circuit of the oscillator tube. Classic AM. Next, the oscillator is fixed at 1 MHz by the crystal. No audio gets into the oscillator grid or cathode to FM it. ============== Dave M Never take a laxative and a sleeping pill at the same time!! You would find it rather difficult to FM a crystal oscillator. Possible, but difficult. Ian. -- Many early FM transmitters directly modulated the crystal. This gave only very limited frequency excursion. Full deviation was acheived by frequency multiplication. Long since, simpler methods have been used such as heterodyning of a second, AFC controlled oscillator and of course the currently common PLL systems. Most early FM transmitters used frequency multiplication irrespective of how they were modulated. In the US prior to the introduction of stereo phase modulation was the predominant method of doing FM and required a very high amount of frequency multiplication to achieve 100% FM modulation at low audio frequencies. Even PLL type modulators like the RCA system ran the modulated VCO at somewhere around 5 MHz and used frequency multiplication to get up into the FM band. Regards, John Byrns -- Surf my web pages at, http://fmamradios.com/ |
One tube transmitter
You would find it rather difficult to FM a crystal oscillator.
Possible, but difficult. Not really. It's done all the time in temperature-compensated oscillators, simply by varying the series or load capacitance. |
FM One tube transmitter
Excuse me, but that circuit uses two tubes.
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FM One tube transmitter
Shouldn't diodes count as "tubes", if only in an "antique" sense?
"William Sommerwerck" wrote in message . .. Excuse me, but that circuit uses two tubes. |
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