• Re: R-390 and Long Wave

    From Scott Dorsey@21:1/5 to bill.gunshannon@gmail.com on Sun Aug 11 22:33:29 2024
    In article <lhphtlFqrhjU1@mid.individual.net>,
    bill <bill.gunshannon@gmail.com> wrote:

    Although the spec says the R-390's range ends at .5mhz the
    dial and tuning mechanism continue on down. Has anyone ever
    looked at what it would take to make the R-390 receive Long
    Wave?

    Not with the IF frequencies where they are. You could add a
    converter to the thing, but then you'd have much poorer S/N
    because of the broadband converter. Make it narrower and tie
    it to the tuning, maybe, but at that point you might as well
    just get another receiver.
    --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott Dorsey@21:1/5 to bill.gunshannon@gmail.com on Tue Sep 10 15:27:00 2024
    bill <bill.gunshannon@gmail.com> wrote:

    Not sure I understand. Are you saying that it won't work if
    you go below 455 or because of proximity? If proximity, I
    would think it would work for frequencies below 400 as it does
    for above 500.

    You'd need an additional antenna transformer for the new band, along with
    an additional tuning circuit on the front end... and you'd need another position on the megacycle control in order to select them. Then the tuned circuit on the 2213 stage would also need an additional set of constants
    since the first variable IF would be 17-25kc instead of 17.5-25kc. This
    would put it too close to the 17kc first crystal oscillator to separate that out. But even so the upconverting would be better than downconverting
    for the first IF.

    It was really just a thought. I would love to be able to
    listen to the two ham radio LW bands (I still haven't found
    much offered as xmtrs) and who knows what else might still be
    going on down there. I miss WGU20. :-)

    A transmitter on 2200m could be a pair of 2N3055s self-excited with an
    iron coil and a capacitor to set frequency. Or you could use a crystal
    with a divider, then just fire off the 2N3055s from the divided-down signal.
    I think on 2200m you are limited by EIRP, and since antenna efficiency
    for reasonable sized is so terrible down there you probably need to pump a
    lot of RF power into your antenna. So it's good that cheap audio power transistors are readily available today.
    --scott

    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)