HF Pre-Selector Design

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Stratagem EH4 Field Evaluation of Data Quality.
Advertisements

VHF-90M Military VHF-Transciever
Safety for electronic systems High-frequency Filtering of DC Power Lines Technical, constructional and practical issues with filtering on dc power lines.
Variable Frequency Drives Bypass Options
Coaxial Connectors, Coaxial Cable, Feed Line, and a Simple Antenna.
AMATEUR RADIO TRAINING Feeders & Antennas v1.101 © essexham.co.uk.
1 KW AUTOMATIC AMPLIFIER 1. 2 SPE is a company with private capital that operates on the TLC business since 1975 planning and realizing electronic systems.
Feeders and Antennas.
5 Foundation Course Feeders & Antennas EKRS KARL DAVIES 1.
1 Troubleshooting. 2 Introduction This section provides you with the necessary skills to effectively troubleshoot the DIRECTV System.
Let’s Design An Antenna VK3PY
UVM CricketSat Assembly Manual. Getting Started Make a hard copy print out of the following page It will help you identify the proper components Place.
How they work How they are made
Chapter 9 Radio Maintenance MComm – Ch Confidence Testing Preventive Maintenance Corrective Maintenance Summary Overview MComm – Ch9 - 2 >>
1 Chelmsford Amateur Radio Society Advanced Licence Course Carl Thomson G3PEM Slide Set 14: v1.1, 22-Aug-2006 (5) Antennas Chelmsford Amateur Radio Society.
EMLAB 1 4. Linear wire antenna. EMLAB 2 Simulation of dipole antennas.
SIMPLE REGENERATIVE RECEIVER 80 and 40 with one FET and a low component count.
Near Vertical Incident Scattering Antenna
PCB Design for 1 Gbps ECE 4006 Dr Brooke. Overview What signals are being routed? How can you route those signals? How to apply routing to PCB? PCB design.
Antenna Types WB5CXC.
Limited Space and Mobile Antennas
Presenters: Ohad Fremder Assaf Haim.
Antennas Part 3 Small Loop Antenna Vector Magnetic Potential
ELECRICAL CIRCUITS.
Dummy loads & RF power measurement
CHAPTER 6INDUCTORS & INDUCTANCE & INDUCTANCE End of the lessons, students should be able to ; Understand inductors and inductance types of inductors.
Checking Antenna Systems
Joe Horanzy AA3JH April 4th, 2013 K3DN Presentation
Two Bands from One Dipole Marc C. Tarplee Ph.D., N4UFP ARRL South Carolina Section Technical Coordinator.
K9MBQ COAX VERTICAL FOR 160 AND 80 METERS
Precision Farming Creating A RTK Network - Overview.
Why do wires get hot when a current passes through them?
Prof. David R. Jackson ECE Dept. Fall 2014 Notes 5 ECE 2317 Applied Electricity and Magnetism Notes prepared by the EM Group University of Houston 1.
Electricity, Electronics And Ham Radio “Kopertroniks” By Nick Guydosh 4/12/07.
Chapter 22 Alternating-Current Circuits and Machines.
How to make use of that expensive analyzer you just bought.
GAMMA MATCHES Ozaukee Radio club November 2013 A quick overview of the steps needed to adjust an antenna matching network usually seen on many older single.
1 Computer Power Supply Amateur Radio Conversion For Cheap +12 vdc Power March 17, 2003.
Basic (VHF) Radio Communications
General Licensing Class Coax Cable Your organization and dates here.
MZC88 The Tuners Dual AM/FM Tuners Zone Specific Presets RDS – Radio Data System Info Genre & Time Call Letters Station Frequency.
Sam Stello KK4VR October, 2015
Dual Sparkle Circuit Green connections are wires – they can be any colour. Make sure all + and - connections match up. Make sure the larger battery terminal.
1 “BUILDING QUICK TAPE ANTENNAS” Dr. Al Torres KP4AQI FEBRUARY 2015.
1 A TECHNICAL BRIEFING FOR AMATEUR RADIO OPERATORS “VOLTAGE STANDING WAVE RATIOS (VSWR): WHY IT DOES NOT MEAN AS MUCH AS YOU THINK” PRESENTED TO: ARASWF.
Clint Miller KCØJUO and Paul Cowley KB7VML Story County ARES January 16 th, 2016.
Direct Calculation of Tuner Losses Dave Birnbaum K2LYV.
Auto turn off battery charger Auto turn off battery charger.
TECHNOLOGIES ESO 4 UNIT 1: ELECTRICITY AND ELECTRONICS ANALOGIC ELECTRONICS (PART 1)
IOTA RF SYSTEM Kermit Carlson 13 Nov 14. RF System Specifications 1 kV RF gap potential 30 MHz CW for electron run – Provide acceleration potential 30.
Chapter 21 Magnetic Induction and Chapter 22.9: Transformers.
Glam_i0zkz In the following pictures a multiband short- wave regen radio receiver, designed to take advantage of a single multi-function chip for both.
HF Mobile Vertical Design By Larry Benson, N7GY Vertical Antenna Theory Base vs Center Loaded Efficiency/Installation Techniques Design Example. Program.
K9MBQ ANTENNA THOUGHTS and COAX VERTICAL FOR 160 AND 80 METERS
4. Linear wire antenna.
What exactly does each part of the circuit do?
Notes 5 ECE 3318 Applied Electricity and Magnetism Fall 2017
Technician Licensing Class
ARRL – Illinois Section March 6, 2008
An {image} series circuit has {image} , {image} , and {image}
Basic Antenna Construction
A Simple, Four-Band IF/Transverter Switch
Power Supplies AIM: To understand the simple power supply in terms of the transformer, rectification, smoothing and regulation. PRIOR KNOWLEDGE: A.C.
A. To reduce television interference B. To reduce signal loss
A. Touching both terminals with the hands can cause electrical shock
Transmission Line Considerations
An Overview of Antennas:
7/9/2019 July 1, June 30, 2018.
VHF/UHF Dual Band J-Pole
Presentation transcript:

HF Pre-Selector Design For Field Day, each band should have one to prevent harmonic interference to the other stations, especially when running high power. { e.g. 14.2 MHz x 2 = 28.4 MHz right in the best part of the 10 m band!} The design is simple, tuning is very easy and it can be constructed in about an hour. See Note Pages for additional comments. n6vng@arrl.net. 2003/07/04 Dr. Carl O. Jelinek N6VNG

Very Simple Circuit Output 2 Turns Input 2 Turns Parts List: 2” O. D. x ½” TOROID Red for HF, Yellow for VHF Power < 300 Watts Use insulated 12 gage wire for the coils. Variable Capacitor ~255 F. 2 ea. Female chassis mount Connectors for Input and output RF tight AL Box [Optional 2P2T switch to bypass] ~14 Turns I have used AMIDON FT-240-43 Ferrite Toroidal Cores for the HF Bands [80 meters to 10 meters ]. Check the temperature of the torrid under load conditions. ~ 255 m F 2003/07/04 Dr. Carl O. Jelinek N6VNG

Construction Notes Mount variable capacitor in an RF tight metal enclosure so that the plates have good spacing to the walls. Mount female bulkhead connectors for the kind of coax your antenna and rig use on the back wall of the box. Wire each of the 2-turn loops to one of the bulkhead connectors. A single pole double throw switch may be used to bypass the pre-selector. [optional] Wide Plate spacing on the variable capacitor may be required for high power. 2003/07/04 Dr. Carl O. Jelinek N6VNG

Tuning Instructions Terminate one port with a 50-Ohm load that will dissipate full power {It does not matter which port since the circuit is symmetrical.} Connect an antenna analyzer to the other port and set it for the highest frequency band. {e.g 10 meters } Tune the capacitor to make sure that the per-selector has a low VSWR and tunes over the full band. If it can’t, choose a smaller value or reduce the number of turns on the larger coil. Test the lowest band that it will tune to. Mark the bands on the box to speed tuning. Connect your rig, tune to the highest band and test at full power to determine that the toroid does not get too hot. If it does, you need a larger size and perhaps larger wires. Connect a dummy load to one port and the VSWR analyzer to the other. Alternately, you can use a rig at low power, if it has a calibrated dial and VSWR meter. 2003/07/04 Dr. Carl O. Jelinek N6VNG

Comments VSWR should be better than 1.5:1 over each band. Each band could use a fixed tuned pre-selector with high quality NPO capacitors. However, I prefer the variable tuned approach so that I can retune to work a lower band at night on Field Day. You can use a smaller size toroid and wire for QRP rigs. Use a Yellow toroid for VHF {e.g. 6 and 2 Meters} Several sections can be ganged together to get sharper tuning, if there is a really bad out of band interference problem, however, tuning may be a little tricky and insertion loss will increase. Cavities are better at 2 meters and above, but they are large, much more difficult to build and tune. Send comments to Carl at n6vng@arrl.net. 2003/07/04 Dr. Carl O. Jelinek N6VNG