SW Aerial Amplifier

Posted in Amplifier, on 2015-09-09

Description:

A radio frequency amplifier to boost SW reception. Frequency range approximately 5 to 20 MHz.

SW Aerial Amplifier

Notes:

The problem with amplifying weak radio signals is that you also amplify the noise. What you can receive depends on how much background noise is present, whether it be man made interference or static. In this design the RF signal is first met by a resistive attenuator, this is necessary as strong signals could otherwise overload your receiver. The transformer T1 is would on a 1 inch diameter ferrite loop. The primary (antenna side) is 2 turns of 22 swg wire. The secondary is 4 turns of 22 swg wire. The 4 turns are spaced to occupy roughly half the coils circumference. The approximate inductance of the secondary is 20uH. To cover 5 to 20 Mhz a capacitor tuning from around 3pF to 200pF is required. A standard capacitor of 400 or 500pF (full mesh) can be used by including a series capacitor, C2 in the above Capacitors. Capacitors in series behave the same as resistors in parallel. The smallest capacitance is just less than the smallest capacitor in series and highest value also less than the highest capacitance. With a 220pF capacitor for C2 and a 500pF variable capacitor (that tunes down to 5pF) the effective capacitance tunes 143pF to about 4.8pF. This is roughly correct and not critical as the gain of the FET will amplify frequencies outside the tuned circuit range. The 2N3819 FET operates in common source. The series base resistor R1 is included to even out the response, the internal gate source impedance is thus increased by R1 at higher frequencies. The drain circuit includes a 2.5mH choke. A 4.7mH can also be used. As the Q factor of these coils are high, a series resistor R3 is introduced to flatten the response. The frequency response is shown below calculated at 10% increments of VC1:

SW Aerial Amplifier

The output impedance from the FET is high, so is buffered by the BC108C in emitter follower mode. Current drain is around 3mA from a 9 Volt battery. As with any RF circuit, the circuit is sensitive to noise and interference. A metal or aluminum box would be a good choice for this project. However, on my trusty breadboard, this circuit preformed well, and weak signals were boosted well. 

Parts List:

  • R1 100k
  • R2 1k
  • R3 330
  • R4 47k
  • R5 68k
  • R6 4.7k
  • VR1 4.7k
  • C1 100n
  • C2 220p
  • C3 100n
  • C4 1n
  • C5 10n
  • VC1 500pF
  • L1 2.5m
  • J1 2N3819
  • Q1 BC108B
     

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Credits

Source , Author: Andy Collinson