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Austin's Regen Receiver |
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Written by Steve Yates
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Wednesday, 29 June 2005 |
Back in 2002 my then 7 year old son Austin wanted me to help him build a radio. At that time I helped him build a cigar box crystal radio set.
He enjoyed that radio but since then he has taken a liking to CW and
his simple cigar box set would only receive AM. He wanted a receiver
that he could help build yet would receive CW and voice (AM/SSB) and on
top of that it had to have a built-in antenna so that he could take it
places and/or keep it by his bedside . . .
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Now
it was hard to convince him that those were some pretty serious
constraints but after some thought I realized that a regenerative
receiver was probably the answer. The circuit could be simple yet
sensitive enough to use a small whip antenna and could demodulate CW,
SSB, and AM with the proper setting of the regeneration (feedback). I
chose to make the receiver for 40m since on that band there is usually
something to hear on CW/SSB 24 hours a day and at night some shortwave
AM broadcast can be heard as well.

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So
in the summer of 2003 we set out to construct Austin's receiver. He was
8 years old at the time. I did the stuff that required drilling and
painting, such as most of the hardware related stuff, but I showed him
where and how to solder the parts. The enclosure was purchased from
Fry's Electronics and I painted it olive drab to make it look like a
cool piece of military gear. All of the other components were found in
my "junk box". I tinned and cut a piece of unetched double sided
circuit board and mounted it into the enclosure. This made a place to
mount the parts using "ugly construction" (part to part, point to
point). A little bit of hot glue made the larger capacitors pretty good
standoffs for other components. The hardest part of the construction
was mounting the polyvaricon tuning capacitors to the front panel. This
required some precision drilling and countersinking of the screw holes.
I showed Austin where to mount the components but I let him do most of
the soldering. Below is the result of his hard work.
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The circuit of this receiver
is very simple. The telescoping whip antenna is capacitively coupled
via C2 to the high impedance end of the tuned circuit consisting of L1,
C3, C4, C5, C6, and the polyvaricon VC2. This allows for maximum
sensitivity with such a small antenna. The received signals at the
tuned circuit's resonant frequency are coupled to the active FET device
Q1 through an old fashioned "grid leak" capacitor (C7, R2) circuit.
Positive feedback is afforded by the "Tickler Coil" L2 and the
"Throttle Capacitor" VC1. VC1 controls the amount of feedback so that
optimum regenerative can be obtained. RFC1 and C1 provide RF decoupling
for the DC supply. LED1 provides a positive indication that the
receiver is on so that it will be less likely to be left powered on
killing the battery. R3 provides the proper DC source bias for Q1 while
C8 provides RF bypassing allowing only the baseband audio to be
supplied to AF coupling capacitor C9. VR1 controls the volume of the
receiver while U1 and its associated components create a conventional
LM386 audio amplifier circuit. The headphone jack J2 is wired so the
ordinary stereo headphones can be used.

We
noticed that there was a lot of interaction between the tuning of the
main tuning capacitor VC2 and the throttle capacitor VC1 and was
presumably due to the inter-capacitance between the two. We solved the
problem by installing a grounded shield between the two as shown below.
The shield is soldered to the ground plane of the main board.
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The
photos below show the inside of the receiver. The main tuning capacitor
and the throttle capacitor can be seen to the left (front) side of the
chassis. The volume control and on/off switch can be seen to the right
(rear). The 9V battery is mounted in a clip that is attached to the
main circuit board via double-sided foam tape. Also to the left you may
notice several polystyrene capacitors. These comprise the capacitive
side of the tuned circuit. Even though the circuit values were
calculated, in reality we had to add and subtract polystyrene
capacitors to get the receiver to work exactly on 40m. We also wound L1
and L2 on a vertical coil from and inserted a small tuning slug to
facilitate fine tuning onto 40m.
Conclusions
We
completed the this receiver around July of 2003. In the end this simple
regenerative receiver meets its design objectives as well as Austin's
requirements. The receiver hears lots of good signals on 40m in the CW
or SSB modes and the reception of AM signals is adequate with the
stronger stations. The frequency stability leaves a bit to be desired
however (Note to son: That's what happens when you leave something out
of the spec's. ;-). Left alone there is hardly any noticeable frequency
drift but since the antenna is closely coupled to the tuned circuit any
changes in or near the antenna create frequency changes. The most
troubling frequency shifts are created by the headphones themselves
probably due to the fact that they are effectively part of the
antenna's return circuit (along with the operator's head). Efforts to
decouple the headphones with toroids met with little success because of
the high impedances involved. As long as you don't move around a lot
while listening the receiver is fun to play with. If you need a bit of
fine tuning just turn your head a bit. The audio quality is excellent
and the performance is amazing considering how simple it really is.
With
an external antenna and loose link antenna coupling, maybe a single
transistor RF buffer stage, this receiver could probably be transformed
into a nice little receiver to use along side a simple QRP transmitter.
Of course my son Austin is now looking to build something more sophisticated ;-)
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