Hobby Electronics Basics basics of an RF circuit?

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basics of an RF circuit? andrew_h 02-17-06
Posted by andrew_h on February 17, 2006, 3:04 am
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What are the basic components of an RF transmitter, and there
respective roles ? (I'm learning electronics so excuse the
newbie-language!). Any help would be great.

Transistor(s) - used to amplify the signal ? Possibly what else?
Resistors - to limit current entering transistor base, collector and
biasing ?
Capacitors - ??? filter out higher frequencies than needed? Why are
caps sometimes connected to the collector of a transistor?
Crystal - I understand the concept of this, i.e. say 27 Mhz - does it
filter the inductor frequency to precisely what the crystal is labelled
at?
Inductor (which antenna eventually links to) - does this generate radio
frequency (which must then be amplified by transistors)?
Signal Diode - ?

Sorry again if I sound like a newbie, I'd like to learn as much as I
can bout RF circuits.

Any answers would be appreciated.


Thanks,
Andrew


Posted by Phil Allison on February 17, 2006, 3:24 am
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"andrew_h"

> What are the basic components of an RF transmitter,


http://www.rod.beavon.clara.net/spark.htm



** Learn to crawl first.




......... Phil




Posted by Walter Harley on February 17, 2006, 12:56 pm
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> What are the basic components of an RF transmitter, and there
> respective roles ? [...]

Get yourself a copy of the Amateur Radio Relay League (ARRL) Handbook. It's
published every year or so, and has been since about when radio was first
invented, so you shouldn't have trouble finding old editions for not too
much money.

The ARRL Handbook is chock full of very good introductory material on basic
electronics, RF electronics, and practical applications. It is precisely
aimed at enabling people like you - intelligent people with an interest but
not much academic background in electronics - to learn and do interesting
things with radio electronics.

But it is just not possible to answer your questions in a brief Usenet post,
in a way that will actually give you useful understanding. Asking "what
does a capacitor do in an RF circuit" is a lot like asking "what does a +
sign do in a mathemetical equation". The nature of a capacitor is simple
(at least theoretically - at RF, things don't always behave like perfect
components), but it can perform many different functions depending on the
circuit that it's in, limited only by the creativity of the designer. The
magic happens in the relationship between the components, not in the
components themselves.



Posted by Charles Schuler on February 17, 2006, 5:30 pm
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>> What are the basic components of an RF transmitter, and there
>> respective roles ? [...]
>
> Get yourself a copy of the Amateur Radio Relay League (ARRL) Handbook.
> It's published every year or so, and has been since about when radio was
> first invented, so you shouldn't have trouble finding old editions for not
> too much money.
>
> The ARRL Handbook is chock full of very good introductory material on
> basic electronics, RF electronics, and practical applications. It is
> precisely aimed at enabling people like you - intelligent people with an
> interest but not much academic background in electronics - to learn and do
> interesting things with radio electronics.

Amen to that. Anybody interested in RF should have a copy.



Posted by Bob Myers on February 17, 2006, 2:25 pm
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> What are the basic components of an RF transmitter, and there
> respective roles ? (I'm learning electronics so excuse the
> newbie-language!). Any help would be great.

The components you listed could be considered the basics of
practically ANY electronic product. It would be better to ask
about the basic "blocks," or fundamental circuits which would
be used together to create a practical transmitter.

For RF communications, the most common "basic building blocks"
would be:

Oscillator: This is a circuit which generates a sinusoidal output
(a "sine wave signal"), or more broadly SOME form of
periodic waveform, with no input other than power. At a
minimum, it is a transistor or some other active element which
is basically being used as an amplifier, plus some form of
frequency-selective positive feedback path; that latter item may
be either a combination of components such as capacitors and
inductors which act as a filter, or a quartz crystal - which ALSO
acts as a filter, just through a slightly different mechanism.
There are various named classes of oscillators, which are most
often distinguished by the form this filter and feedback path
take.

Modulator: A circuit which somehow varies the signal produced
by the oscillator, in accordance with the variation of an input
signal (i.e., the signal carrying the information you want to transmit).
There are various forms of modulation, and so quite a few different
forms of modulators. This is too complex a subject to even begin
to cover here.

Output amplifier: A circuit which increase the power of the
modulated signal for transmission, and which drives the antenna.
It is possible in some types to combine this "output amplifier"
function with the "modulator" function, but you'll learn more about
that as you get into the specifics of transmitters.

There can certainly be other circuits and components involved;
there can be additional amplification between these stages,
tunable oscillators (for varying the transmit frequency), additional
filtering here and there, and of course all of this is going to require
an appropriate power supplier. I would strongly second the
recommendation that you find a good book covering the basics
of RF and aimed at the amateur or hobbyist - as noted, the
ARRL Radio Amateur's Handbook is certainly among the best
choices here.

Bob M.

>
> Transistor(s) - used to amplify the signal ? Possibly what else?
> Resistors - to limit current entering transistor base, collector and
> biasing ?
> Capacitors - ??? filter out higher frequencies than needed? Why are
> caps sometimes connected to the collector of a transistor?
> Crystal - I understand the concept of this, i.e. say 27 Mhz - does it
> filter the inductor frequency to precisely what the crystal is labelled
> at?
> Inductor (which antenna eventually links to) - does this generate radio
> frequency (which must then be amplified by transistors)?
> Signal Diode - ?
>
> Sorry again if I sound like a newbie, I'd like to learn as much as I
> can bout RF circuits.
>
> Any answers would be appreciated.
>
>
> Thanks,
> Andrew
>



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