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Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
Does the agc voltage on the multi-meter change with the generator off? I can only conclude from what the S meter is doing that the generator level is too high even at minimum, but that does not
By G8HUL · #20239 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
Yes, I have checked several times that the signal is injected, I can heard the tone and adjust T17 for zero beat. The probe is in the correct location, although the manual indicates two white/green
By enriqueeeeee2001 · #20238 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
The alignment in question if for the 50kHz IF of the Drake Rx. Unfortunately the manual does not give an i/p level for this step, just set it such that there is a slight deflection in the agc voltage.
By G8HUL · #20237 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
Are you positive that you are a) injecting signal, and b) probing, in the correct locations? Also you said that the S meter went to full scale, does this happen with both the TinySA and the HP
By G8HUL · #20236 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
I read the manual. The lowest RF on the Drake SPR4 is 150 kHz. Sensitivity (i.e. before AGC reduces gain) at 10dB (S+N)/N is 0.25uV SSB/CW/RTTY (i.e. BFO mode) and 0.5 uV AM 0.5 uV is -113 dBmW
By Mike EI9FEB · #20235 ·
Re: NOISE GENERATOR for the HOME BREWERS
I recall a really simple noise generator circuit from a magazine (something like Practical Wireless, in the U.K.) in the 1970s which used a reverse biased green LED, two 9V batteries in series, a pot
By EI7JJB · #20234 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
The HP209A is used in applications likely wanting -20 dBm to +10dBm. The RF input of a communications receiver might be -110dBm (AGC at max gain, signal just above noise) and about -80dBm to -70dBm
By Mike EI9FEB · #20233 ·
Re: NOISE GENERATOR for the HOME BREWERS
David, I am aware that you stated Ham Radio. I've searched their archives as well as their cumulative indexes with no results. There are 269 Ham Radio editions in the index, from Feb 1968 to June
By Richard Jamsek · #20232 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
On some receivers, the S Meter will go towards full scale as the RF Gain is turned down and the receiver goes to low sensitivity.. > > >
By Ken · #20231 ·
Re: NOISE GENERATOR for the HOME BREWERS
It was in HAM RADIO, *not* QST. I noted that in the email. Try the archives of HAM RADIO magazine. Dave - W?LEV [email protected]> wrote:
By W0LEV · #20230 ·
Re: NOISE GENERATOR for the HOME BREWERS
Hi Dave, There are two noise source articles in QST. January 1977 pp 22 "Gated Noise Source" May 1994 pp37 "Calibrated Noise Source" Is the January 1977 the article you are referring to? Regards,
By Richard Jamsek · #20229 ·
NOISE GENERATOR for the HOME BREWERS
The best ever ham radio publication, Ham Radio, once published a relatively simple project: a "Gated Noise Source". I built and extensively used one from MF, HF, VHF, UHF, and through 1296. Search the
By W0LEV · #20228 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
Yes, but the issue is that whatever the output level is there is no a slight deflection , it remains stuck always in 1,6 volts. I have tried with? all levels that the Tiny gives. Right now? I attach
By enriqueeeeee2001 · #20227 ·
Locked Re: Noise Generator Function #features
Sorry, there will be NO noise generator inside the tinySA Topic closed -- Designer of the tinySA For more info go to https://tinysa.org/wiki
By Erik Kaashoek · #20226 ·
Locked Re: Noise Generator Function #features
Woul be nice Erik, while everyone can argue that an analog one can be better .
By Re Claudio · #20225 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
You do realise that you are looking for the agc voltage to reduce as the signal level increases?? So the procedure is to set the generator level so that you see a slight decrease in the agc voltage on
By G8HUL · #20224 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
I have been this evening trying with the 209 and the TinySA; same results even with a different voltmeter. S-meter is deflected, I have tested with different output levels, but voltmeter is always
By enriqueeeeee2001 · #20223 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
If I'm not wrong I haven't yet read that the HP209A has a 600 Ohm output impedance. But if you are working with flying wires signal levels are undefinided and not so important.?Inviato dal mio Galaxy
By grgtvl · #20222 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
The HP209A frequency range is 10Hz-2MHz. So 50KHz is within its range. Bob...VK2ZRE
By Bob Ecclestone · #20221 ·
Re: TinySA Ultra 50 Khz as a signal generator
50Khz can be both, audio and RF, feed the signal into an piezo speaker and you drive the bat nuts, feed it into an antenna and the bat doesn't know its there.
By John Cunliffe W7ZQ · #20220 ·