2022-05-07 - Radio ------------------------------------------------------------------- I'm still on my quest to understand a bit more about analog electronics, and while reading, i have become quite intrigued with inductors and capacitors, and all the things they can do when you put them together. However, learning from theory only is no fun, and the best way to learn is from practice. So to have some practice building, i've taken up the challenge of building a crystal radio. As a base for information i've taken the book "Making a transistor radio" by G.C. Dobbs (724 from the Ladybird series) from 1972. While this book was intended for kids, i've found it great to read. The content is great and educative and the illustrations are excellent. From a local radio electronics shop, i've purchased a polyvaricon capacitor (2x 266p), a germanium diode (OA91), a Crystal (piezo) ear piece and a roll of 0.3mm enameled wire. With these parts i've made some attempts to create a functional radio roughly as follows: Y │ OA91 ├─────┬─|>|────┐ │ │ │ C │ vari o coil C = cap Earpiece c │ o | │ │ |─────┴────────┘ === Ground The first attempt was only partially succesful. With the 266pf capacitor i consided that i needed a inductor of around 380uH to get a resonant frequency of around 500kHz. And on a ferrite rod i still had it would take around 60 windings to get such an inductance value (i thought). After wiring all the parts up, connecting a wire antenna and earth, i couldn't really hear much going on. And after fiddling around with things, the primary issue was that the crystal earpiece was faulty and seemed to have a loose connection. After some fiddling with the earpiece, it was somewhat working (if i held still and didn't move). However, not much could be heard. After some more figuring i started to hear static noise of some sort. But this seemed mostly a signal picked up from the building/surroundings (transformators and such). While fiddling with things, i disconnected the variable capacitor, and all of a sudden i started hearing very faint voices (in a very foreign language). But with the capacitor reconnected, nothing could be picked up. As i don't have any equipment to test resonant frequency of the tank circuit, or even ways to test inductance or capacitance of the polyvaricon capacitor, i was very much in the dark. The faulty earpiece constantly failing also made things more complex. So the next day, i considered the coil might have had too many windings combined with the ferrite core, and that i had been picking voices from some longwave stations. However as i had no idea, i created another coil using an old plastic caulk tube (dia approx 4cm) and some breadboard wire. Again, i wound 60 windings (but had to make an unintentional tap, after 40 windings as i ran out of wire. Now with this coil all of a sudden i could receive some local stations at the MW frequency band that i expected. Still the faulty crystal piece was very annoying, failing every 5 seconds. Furthermore the audio level was so low that words were barely distinguishable So today i've made an audio amplifier on a breadboard using a BC547 and a LM386, so that i could at least use my normal earphones. At first i couldn't get the amplifier to work (only silence in combination with the crystal receiver), so i set off to test the amplifier by itself. Unfortunately i don't have any sensible equipment to measure anything. I wanted to feed a signal that i knew which was working (from TV or PC), but i didn't have a suitable plug (or cable) to do that. So i used a 555 timer, to create an audible square-ish wave signal, and after some fiddling with the breadboard (ugh breadboards) the amplifier came to live. The crystal receiver above was connected to the amplifier and all of a sudden i could hear crystal clear radio... Albeit multiple stations at once. :) However, it was very satisfying to finally hear something distinguisable on a actual headset. This way i could really follow conversations on the radio. Furthermore, the unintended tap at 40 windings proofed to be useful as well, as with the first 40 windings bridged by a croc-clip, i could tune in some completely different band, which gives me all kinds of foreign stations... The reception changes all the time (based on atmospheric circumstances?) but i've heard, Romanian, French, Portugese and American stations i think. Now this last bit i find really cool! And while the radio is still pretty shitty (and cannot tune properly to a single station properly yet) the audio amplifier really makes listening to the thing much more fun and easy. So now the next steps are to figure out how to get the tuning/selectivity to work, and to build the audio amplifier onto a PCB. Furthermore, i think i should consider getting some proper measurement equipment (Functioning multimeter, scope, maybe a function generator)... Anyway, it's good to have something working!