Tba120 Receiver
Tba120 Receiver
Tba120 Receiver
Introduction
Here is a nice little receiver for narrow-band FM reception. It can also be used to
receive FSK, RTTY and PACKET signals from the HF bands. Basic receiver sensitivity
is in the region of 1uV PD and the receiver can be tuned to almost any frequency from
100KHz up to probably 120MHz. Ok then, here is the circuit diagram:
me because there are fewer stations above 20MHz to worry about. Image rejection is
quite reasonable on the prototype at 14.1MHz but there was almost no image rejection
at 100.455KHz. If you want a better image rejection at HF then I suggest you add
another tuned circuit in the antenna circuit. Consider a converter circuit if you want to
receive VHF or UHF bands above 100MHz.
Applications
There is a section of "blob-board" on the PCB that can be used to build. This board is
intended to be used in a variety of applications so the complete receiver becomes a
building- block that may be used to make:
I will post a few practical circuits later for some of the above applications, but my first
task is an FSK to RS232 driver (Baycom compatible) so I can have a direct link to my
brother G0TLA in England. This uses just two x 741 Op-Amps, one to generate -8v
from the battery, the other to give +/- 8-volts signalling for feeding pin-3 of a serial
COM port of the computer.
Coils
I tried to add an RF amplifer but it wasn't needed; the RF sensitivity is about 1uV PD
without it. I have added the PCB foil to the DOWNLOAD section together with the
component overlay. In the component overlay all tuned windings are marked "P" and
link input/outputs are marked "S". The approximate coil winding ratio's are given beside
T1 and T2 in the circuit diagram. T1 and T2 I wound on IF transformers from AES (part
No: IL-100 at US$0.95 for a pack of five). In the prototype, T1 and T2 are wound
according to the following table:
Frequency Coil Primary Tapping Secondary Cy
13-19MHz T1
11-turns 1-turn
3-turns
33pf
13-19MHz T2
11-turns none
2 turns
33pf
19-27MHz T1
11-turns 1-turn
3-turns
15pf
19-27MHz T2
11-turns none
1-turn
15pf
26-35MHz T1
11-turns 1-turn
3-turns
8.2pf
26-35MHz T2
11-turns none
1-turn
8.2pf
33-43MHz T1
7-turns
1-turn
2-turns
6.8pf
33-43MHz T2
7-turns
none
1-turn
6.8pf
100MHz
T1
4-turns
1-turn
2-turns
5.6pf
100MHz
T2
4-turns
none
1-turn
5.6pf
For 100MHz the internal ferrite is removed from the can. T3 and T4 are standard
455KHz IF cans from AES. Cx is contained in the IF transformers. Use the YELLOW
cans for T3 and T4 but the other cans you can strip down and rewind for T1 and T2. The
pads on the PCB will accomodate both the pin-out variations found in these packs. Note
that one of the cans in this pack have a 180pf capacitor mounted horisontally flat
between the coil and base. The former will have to be super-glued back to the base after
removal of the capacitor. Note also that T4 secondary is not used.
Crystal Selection
The crystal oscillator (BC547 + T1) will oscillate at the crystal cundamental frequency
or the 2nd, 3rd, 5th or 7th harmonic of the crystal. A 30MHz crystal will therefore
oscillate at 10MHz, 20MHz, 30MHz, 50MHz or 70MHz. It is just to select the right Cy
and T1 turns. The receive frequency will therefore be 455KHz above or below the local
oscillator frequency (eg. 10MHz xtal will receive 29.545MHz or 30.455MHz with T1
tuned to 3rd harmonic). Select T2 and Cy to tune the frequency you want to receive.
Crystal cut for resonance at a fundamental will function on the 5th and 7th harmonics
but crystals designed for fundamental use may not oscillate at these harmonics.
The Prototype
Here is a photograph of one of the first basic prototypes (without any clever add-ons).
The prototype looks a bit messy because I have done quite a lot of "hacking" to prove
it's operation on different frequencies. I have not tried it above 100.455MHz so I do not
(yet) know if this receiver will work in the 145MHz band. If you do have a go then let
me know your experiences. If you also find another use for this receiver then let me
have the circuit and "blob-board" layout and I will post it (with full credits) to this
article.
Alignment
Easy! Adjust T3 and T4 for maximum received noise then put a 10mA meter across the
100R resistor feeding the oscillator. Adjust T2 for the deepest DIP. The dip gets deeper
then suddenly vanishes, wind back T2 a little until the dip suddenly appears again.
Inject an RF signal of sufficient level to give a slightly noisy signal and tweek T1 and
T3 for minimum noise, reducing the generator level to keep the signal weak and noisy.
Now adjust T4 for maximum UNDISTORTED receive signal. The continuous FM
deviation should NOT exceed about +/-2KHz with the components shown.
Have fun with this circuit. Very best regards from Harry - SM0VPO
ESTE CIRCUITO HA SIDO PUBLICADO TAL CUAL EL AUTOR LO PIDIO, SIN SER
MODIFICADO EL ESQUEMA Y SIN TRADUCIR EL TEXTO A NUESTRO IDIOMA.
AGRADECEMOS A HARRY POR EL CIRCUITO EL CUAL ES MUY BUENO Y, A SU VEZ,
SIMPLE DE ARMAR. Y ESPERAMOS QUE EN BREVE NOS HAGA LLEGAR EL DIAGRAMA
DEL CIRCUITO IMPRESO.