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Coilless FM Transmitter
Posted on Tuesday, March 20, 2012 Category: FM Transmitters
The RF oscillator using the inverter N2 and 10.7Mhz ceramic filter
is driving the parallel combination of N4 to N6 through N3.Since
these inverters are in parallel the output impedance will be low so
that it can directly drive an aerial of 1/4th wavelength. Since the
output of N4-N6 is square wave there will be a lot of harmonics in
it. The 9th harmonics of 10.7Mhz (96.3Mhz) will hence be at the
center of the FM band. N1 is working as an audio amplifier. The
audio signals from the microphone are amplified and fed to the
varicap diode. The signal varies the capacitance of the varicap and
hence varies the oscillator frequency which produce Frequency
Modulation.
300mW FM Transmitter
Posted on Wednesday, February 1, 2012 Category: FM
Transmitters
FM Broadcast Transmitter
Posted on Sunday, January 8, 2012 Category: FM Transmitters
iPod FM Transmitter
Posted on Tuesday, December 6, 2011 Category: FM
Transmitters
Here are instructions for building your own ipod FM radio
transmitter. It works quite easy, there is a power switch on the
bottom to turn it on and tune your radio and transmitter to the right
frequency. For the antenna you can use a copper wire of 70 cm. The
range of this FM transmitter is about 100 to 150 meters (500 feet).
With R5 you can adjust the input signal and with C6 you can tune
your frequency. Transmitter is supplied by 9V battery.
Simplest FM Transmitter
Posted on Tuesday, October 18, 2011 Category: FM
Transmitters
This simple FM Transmitter takes audio input through a 1/4" phono
jack and, constructed as shown, without the optional antenna
connections, will broadcast an FM radio signal about 30 feet. This is
the standard model of simplest FM transmitters includes a trim
capacitor to adjust the transmitting frequency. It can be powered by
a 9V battery and uses a hand-turned copper coil. The circuit is
extraordinarily simple and could be built on perfboard or on a panel
almost as easily.
Miniature FM Transmitter
Posted on Thursday, August 25, 2011 Category: FM
Transmitters
This miniature transmitter is easy to construct and it's transmissions
can be picked up on any standard FM receiver. It has a range of up
to 1/4 of a mile or more. It is great for room monitoring, baby
listening, nature research, etc. L1 is 8 to 10 turns of 22 gauge
hookup wire close wound around a non-conductive 1/4 inch
diameter form, such as a pencil. C4 is a small, screw-adjustable,
trimmer capacitor. Set your FM receiver for a clear, blank space in
the lower end of the band. Then, with a non-conductive tool, adjust
this capacitor for the clearest reception. A little experimenting and
patience may be in order. Most of the parts' values are not critical,
so you can try adjusting them to see what happens.
FM Transmitter Circuit
Posted on Monday, August 8, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
Here is the circuit diagram of the simple FM transmitter using a
transistor. Great performance or range is not guaranteed here,
because this is an elementary design. General purpose radio
frequency transistor BF 494 (Q1) is used here for obtaining FM
modulation. A condenser mic is used here to pickup the sound.The
condenser mic converts the sound to electrical variations and this
variations are fed to the base of Q1 , which performs the
amplification as well as modulation.The capacitor C2 and L1
determines the frequency of transmission.The circuit can be
powered from a 9V transistor radio battery.
1W FM Transmitter
Posted on Wednesday, July 27, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
A very good 1 watt fm transmitter circuit, very easy to build circuit.
It has 4 transistors, one is a very stable oscillator, followed by a
buffer stage to prevent frequency variation when you adjust the
transmitter. Next is a resonance stage and the final stage built with a
minimum 1W transistor which must have a heatsink. You must use a
LM7805 stabilizer for the oscillator diodes and one LM7809 for
powering up the T1 oscillator stage. This will give you a very stable
transmitter frequency.
2 Watt FM Transmitter
Posted on Monday, July 18, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
5 Watt Transmitter
Posted on Thursday, July 14, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
40mW FM TRANSMITTER
Posted on Friday, July 8, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
The transmitters on my homepage seem to be quite popular,
especially those intended for the 88 - 108MHz FM band. I must
really confess that I also favor this broadcast band, mainly because
it is so easy to find signals on the workshop radio. Everyone has an
FM radio, and it is fun to play with. Experimental antennas and the
like can all be developed in this band since there are a huge range of
"beacons" all transmitting just for my benefit :-). Basic oscillators
also are easy to fault-find in this frequency band, and then later
modified for other VHF bands. The V5 FM Wireless Microphone is
a 10mW transmitter that featured a coil fabricated on the PCB itself.
This made the project easy to duplicate and removed "microphony"
(the ability of coils to act as a microphone with spring-line reverb).
But as several people have already commented, although more
stable than most other similar kits and projects, the frequency still
does vary with battery voltage. In just one session it can vary by
200kHz when a cheap "Mighty Atom" battery falls to 8 volts.
8W Broadband FM RF Amplifier
Posted on Friday, June 17, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
Simple FM Transmitter
Posted on Wednesday, June 8, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
Mini FM transmitters take place as one of the standard circuit types
in an amateur electronics fan's beginning steps. When done right,
they provide very clear wireless sound transmission through an
ordinary FM radio over a remarkable distance. I've seen lots of
designs through the years, some of them were so simple, some of
them were powerful, some of them were hard to build etc. Here is
the last step of this evolution, the most stable, smallest, problem-
less, and energy saving champion of this race. Circuit given below
will serve as a durable and versatile FM transmitter till you break or
crush it's PCB. Frequency is determined by a parallel L-C resonance
circuit and shifts very slow as battery drains out.
5 Watts FM RF Amplifier
Posted on Monday, May 9, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
This fm rf amplifier uses 2SC1971 transistor to provide 5 watts of
output. Output matching is adjusted via the two 40pF trimmer
capacitors likewise also to the input. Note that the emitter of this
transistor is directly grounded on the heat sink and should have a
good thermal transfer. Driving power of 100 to 200mW can be
applied in order to provide 5watts of output. Use a dummy load to
tune this amplifier and remember that the transistor is biased in
Class C, sufficient filtering should be followed after the output to
minimize all the harmonics. Use ground plane construction
technique in the PCB lay-out for best result, the more the grounding
the better. If you have hard time finding the 10uH rf choke, try to
wind 1/2 meter of 0.2mm enamel wire over a 33K 1/2 watt resistor
and solder the coil ends to the legs of the resistor.
Mini FM Transmitter
Posted on Thursday, April 14, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
9 Volt battery operated simple Mini FM Transmitter. FM
Transmitter is very simple, compact, and has transmission signal
with a range of 100-150m, good sensitivity and low current
consumption. Transmitter's schematic consists of a bass amplifier
for the first transistor and the proper frequency generator in the
second. FM Transmitter divided transitional capacitor that allows
you to set up a cascade separately.
Broadcast FM Transmitter
Posted on Tuesday, April 12, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
Here's a nice AC mains powered FM Broadcast Audio Transmitter
with pre-emphasis, audio level control, and tuning control. The
circuit consists of a frequency modulated oscillator, an audio
preamplifier with pre emphasis to supply the frequency modulating
signal, and a buffer amplifier to drive the antenna connector.
Oscillator's frequency is determined by L1 resonating with the 10 pf
capacitor and the total capacitance across it. The collector-base
capacitance of the transistors Q3, Q4, and Q5 is a function of their
revers bias. This is basically a poor man's (or lazy man's) varactor.
The voltage across Q3 is set by a voltage divider and is then
modulated by an Ac coupled audio signal from the pre amp, causing
the reverse bias to vary with the audio signal, which changes the
resonant frequency of L1's circuit, causing the frequency of the
oscillator to vary with the audio signal. The capacitance of Q4 and
Q5 is adjusted by DC bias from the tuning adjustment
potentiometer, and this capacitance sets the center frequency of the
oscillator. All of the transistors in the oscillator -Q1 through Q5, are
2N4401. The purpose of the buffer is to minimize frequency shift as
loading on the antenna is changed. It was specifically designed to
reduce the signal amplitude to the antenna. Transmitters should not
use any more power than is necessary to achieve the task at hand,
and lightly coupling the RF into the buffer's base with a gimmick
capacitor did the trick. The transistor is an MPSH34.
300m FM Transmitter
Posted on Thursday, April 7, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
This FM transmitter is about the simplest and most basic FM
transmitter it is possible to build and have a useful transmitting
range. It is surprisingly powerful despite its small component count
and 3V operating voltage. It will easily transmit over 300 meters in
the open air and even more with higher voltage supply. The circuit
we use is based on a proven Australian design. It may be tuned
anywhere in the FM band. Or it may be tuned outside the
commercial M band for greater privacy. Of course this means you
must modify your FM radio to be able to receive the transmission or
have a broad-band FM receiver. The output power of FM transmitter
is within the legal limits of many countries. However, some
countries may ban all wireless FM transmitters without a license. It
is your responsibility to check the legal requirements for the
operation and to obey them. FM transmitter is constructed on a
single-sided printed circuit board PCB.
FM Telephone Transmitter
Posted on Thursday, March 24, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
FM Transmitter Bug
Posted on Friday, March 4, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
The goal of this project is for me personally to learn a little more
about fm transmitters and fm bug making (may the HAM radio gods
bless me in this pursuit). The ideal outcome of this project is a very
small and full functional FM transmitter that we can stick into a
plastic mint box. In order to be able to build this, we'll have to learn
a lot about amplifiers, LC oscillators, mixers, antennas and FM.
This project assumes you're already comfortable build your own
PCB boards. If you're not please take a look at the homemade pcb's
tutorial before you continue. It will help you out a lot.
Small AM Transmitter
Posted on Sunday, January 30, 2011 Category: FM Transmitters
So, I needed a small transmitter, which would allow me to transmit
good, old music into my AM-only radios. So, one saturday
afternoon I got into gear, designed and built a very crude, terribly
non-optimized little transmitter. It's almost a joke expressed in
electronics, full of poor design, so please don't think that this is the
best I can do! You must see it as a quick and dirty 5-hour effort,
because that's all the time the transmitter took to design, build, and
test. Making this web page about it is taking much longer! I'm
putting this thing on the web only because many people have asked
me to do so, despite its crude design!
5W PLL FM Transmitter
Posted on Wednesday, December 29, 2010 Category: FM
Transmitters
Easy to build high-quality PLL FM transmitter with typical output
power of 5 W and no-tune design. The transmitter includes
RDS/SCA input and Audio/MPX input with optional pre-emphasis.
It can be used with or without stereo encoder. Tuning over the FM
band is provided by two buttons that control dual-speed PLL. The
transmitter can work also without the LCD display. Some
experience with building devices of this kind are highly
recommended.
25W RF Amplifier
Posted on Wednesday, October 6, 2010 Category: FM
Transmitters
RF amplifier with 25W of power for 88-108MHz FM transmitters.
Telephone FM Transmitter
Posted on Wednesday, October 6, 2010 Category: FM
Transmitters
4W PLL FM Transmitter
Posted on Tuesday, October 5, 2010 Category: FM Transmitters
The PLL transmitter exciter has the functions of providing a stable,
low noise, frequency-selectable RF signal and amplify it to a
controllable output power sufficient to drive the power amplifier. It
uses a PLL frequency synthesizer built with MC145151, which
covers the FM band in 100kHz steps. The VCO covers only a few
MHz without readjustment.
3W FM Transmitter Amplifier
Posted on Tuesday, October 5, 2010 Category: FM Transmitters
Presented is a three stage 3W FM Transmitter Amplifier using
2SC9018, 2SC2053 and 2SC1970 transistors. The circuit is supplied
by 12-14V DC voltage and requires at least 500mA of current.
TV Transmitter
Posted on Tuesday, October 5, 2010 Category: FM Transmitters
One of the most useful gadgets a video enthusiast can have is a low-
power TV Transmitter. Such a device can transmit a signal from a
VCR to any TV in a home or backyard. Imagine the convenience of
being able to sit by the pool watching your favorite movie on a
portable with a tape or laser disc playing indoors. You could even
retransmit cable TV for your own private viewing.
Phone FM Transmitter
Posted on Thursday, July 15, 2010 Category: FM Transmitters
This Phone FM transmitter connects in series to your telephone line
and transmits the telephone conversation over the FM band when
you pick up the telephone handset. Transmitted signal can be tuned
by any FM receiver. The circuit includes an "On Air" LED indicator
and also provides a switch which can be used to turn off the
transmitter. A unique feature of the circuit is that no battery is
needed to operate the circuit since power is taken from the
telephone line. The transmitter uses only a short piece of wire aerial
about 4" / 10 cm long to transmit the signal and some of the RF
signal is also radiated through the telephone line itself. The circuit
might be used to share or record conversations, but is not intended
for illegal use.
PLL FM Transmitter
Posted on Friday, April 30, 2010 Category: FM Transmitters
This new FM transmitter is very simple and doesn't need any RF
tuning. First of all ,we have used an integrated VCO: The POS150
from Mini-circuits. This excellent RF circuit covers all the FM Band
in a voltage range of 4V to 8V. The Kvco factor is very stable all
over the FM band, consequently, we have applied the BF signal
directly on the control voltage line coming from the PLL.
In order to simplify the transmitter design, we've used the new pll
circuit from Motorola :the MC145170. This PLL includes the
prescaler and a serial standard bus called SPI.
5 Watt FM Amplifier
Posted on Friday, February 19, 2010 Category: FM Transmitters
This design is a 2 stage amplifier that has about 17db of gain,
suitable for an input of 50 to 100 MW. Its basically a Veronica 5
watt vco transmitter, without the vco. The transistors are a 2N4427
and a MRF237. Output power is 2.5 to 5 watts, depending on input
drive and dc voltage. At 13.7 vdc with 50 MW of drive, the output
was 2.5 watts. The maximum dc voltage recommended is about 15-
16 volts.
1 Watt FM Amplifier
Posted on Thursday, October 29, 2009 Category: FM
Transmitters
100W FM AMPLIFIER
Posted on Tuesday, October 27, 2009 Category: FM
Transmitters
This Power amplifier is equipped with a bipolar transistor,the
famous MRF317 As lots of FM amplifier application ,the power
transistor is in a C class bias. All the impedance networks (Input &
Output) have been determined by using the software: Mimp.EXE. A
9 elements low pass filter ensures that we meet at least a 60 dB
rejection from the carrier.(RF Simulation with RFSIM99) The FM
amplifier has a 10 dB gain with a 60 to 65% efficiency. The Input
VSWR is around 1.4 and there's no problem to reach the max power
in all the FM band.
1W Linear FM Amplifier
Posted on Tuesday, October 27, 2009 Category: FM
Transmitters
1W iPOD FM Transmitter
Posted on Thursday, April 24, 2008 Category: FM Transmitters
Many people prefer to listen to their own music (or voice) on radio.
This project explain how you can build and connect a powerful 1W
amplifier to your FM transmitters. A perfect solution for those
wishing to listen to their favorite tunes in the car, house, garden,
school, campus, party, you name it.... Why not share your music
with every one else in your city!
200mW FM Transmitter
Posted on Monday, April 14, 2008 Category: FM Transmitters
Be "On Air" with your own radio station! BA1404 based transmitter
is an exciting product that will broadcast a high quality stereo signal
in the 88 108MHz FM band. It can be connected to any type of
stereo audio source such as personal computer, CD player,
Walkman, television, tape deck or stereo system to transmit stereo
sound with excellent clarity throughout your home, office, yard or
camp ground.