The power output of many transmitter circuits are very low because no
power amplifier stages are incorporated. The transmitter circuit
described here has an extra RF power amplifier stage, after the
oscillator stage, to raise the power output to 200-250 milliwatts. With a
good matching 50-ohm ground plane antenna or multi-element Yagi
antenna, this transmitter can provide reasonably good signal strength up
to a distance of about 2 kilometres.
Long Range FM Transmitter Circuit diagram :
The circuit built around transistor T1 (BF494) is a basic low-power
variable-frequency VHF oscillator. A varicap diode circuit is included
to change the frequency of the transmitter and to provide frequency
modulation by audio signals. The output of the oscillator is about 50
milliwatts. Transistor T2 (2N3866) forms a VHF-class A power amplifier.
It boosts the oscillator signal power four to five times. Thus, 200-250
milliwatts of power is generated at the collector of transistor T2.
For better results, assemble the circuit on a good-quality glass epoxy
board and house the transmitter inside an aluminium case. Shield the
oscillator stage using an aluminium sheet. Coil winding details are
given below:
- L1 - 4 turns of 20 SWG wire close wound over 8mm diameter plastic former.
- L2 - 2 turns of 24 SWG wire near top end of L1.(Note: No core (i.e. air core) is used for the above coils)
- L3 - 7 turns of 24 SWG wire close wound with 4mm diameter air core.
- L4 - 7 turns of 24 SWG wire-wound on a ferrite bead (as choke)
Potentiometer VR1 is used to vary the fundamental frequency whereas
potentiometer VR2 is used as power control. For hum-free operation,
operate the transmitter on a 12V rechargeable battery pack of 10 x
1.2-volt Ni-Cd cells. Transistor T2 must be mounted on a heat sink. Do
not switch on the transmitter without a matching antenna. Adjust both
trimmers (VC1 and VC2) for maximum transmission power. Adjust
potentiometer VR1 to set the fundamental frequency near 100 MHz.
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