J
JasonW
Guest
(NOTE: The following was an *experiment*--I don't advocate doing this for continuous Part 15 AM broadcasting except perhaps during emergency situations.)
Hello All,
While rummaging around early this morning I found a TalkingSign www.talkingsign.com transmitter that I had stashed away years ago. I had never been crazy about it because the modulation level is rather low (unlike with the Talking House www.talkinghouse.com , "line out" audio doesn't work well because it is too soft) and its audio sounds like a 3 kHz telephone line--muddy.
However, since the TalkingSign transmitter has a built-in RF ammeter to enable tuning the 3 meter wire antenna, I decided to experiment with using a longer antenna both with and without a variable capacitor in series between the antenna and the RCA antenna jack on the back of the transmitter.
I have a ~28 foot insulated #19 gauge wire antenna running around my ceiling, which includes an 8 foot vertical section that comes down to the floor. I first connected this antenna directly to the transmitter using a male RCA/female BNC adapter and a male BNC/binding posts adapter connected together. Using the TalkingSign's built-in antenna matching network variable capacitor, at my chosen frequency of 1600 kHz (carrier only) I was unable to get a good match--the RF ammeter needle never moved farther than about 20% of the way from zero. The transmitter's adjustable antenna matching network clearly wants to "see" a 3 meter antenna. (I briefly tried the unit's 3 meter wire antenna, and it easily tuned up with no problems.)
Next, I connected an AM radio receiver-type 160 pF variable capacitor in series between the TalkingSign and the ~28 foot wire antenna. At maximum capacitance, the RF ammeter tried to go violently "off the scale" when I adjusted the transmitter's built-in antenna matching network variable capacitor. Backing off the 160 pF variable capacitor by about 1/10th of a turn enabled me to obtain a perfect, "needle-gentle" match using the transmitter's variable capacitor. The longer antenna not only increased the radiated power (the signal didn't fade out past the end of the block [~250 feet] as it did with the 3 meter wire antenna), but the audio now sounds *much* better--as good as the Talking House. The longer antenna definitely has greater bandwidth than the supplied 3 meter wire antenna. -- JasonW
Hello All,
While rummaging around early this morning I found a TalkingSign www.talkingsign.com transmitter that I had stashed away years ago. I had never been crazy about it because the modulation level is rather low (unlike with the Talking House www.talkinghouse.com , "line out" audio doesn't work well because it is too soft) and its audio sounds like a 3 kHz telephone line--muddy.
However, since the TalkingSign transmitter has a built-in RF ammeter to enable tuning the 3 meter wire antenna, I decided to experiment with using a longer antenna both with and without a variable capacitor in series between the antenna and the RCA antenna jack on the back of the transmitter.
I have a ~28 foot insulated #19 gauge wire antenna running around my ceiling, which includes an 8 foot vertical section that comes down to the floor. I first connected this antenna directly to the transmitter using a male RCA/female BNC adapter and a male BNC/binding posts adapter connected together. Using the TalkingSign's built-in antenna matching network variable capacitor, at my chosen frequency of 1600 kHz (carrier only) I was unable to get a good match--the RF ammeter needle never moved farther than about 20% of the way from zero. The transmitter's adjustable antenna matching network clearly wants to "see" a 3 meter antenna. (I briefly tried the unit's 3 meter wire antenna, and it easily tuned up with no problems.)
Next, I connected an AM radio receiver-type 160 pF variable capacitor in series between the TalkingSign and the ~28 foot wire antenna. At maximum capacitance, the RF ammeter tried to go violently "off the scale" when I adjusted the transmitter's built-in antenna matching network variable capacitor. Backing off the 160 pF variable capacitor by about 1/10th of a turn enabled me to obtain a perfect, "needle-gentle" match using the transmitter's variable capacitor. The longer antenna not only increased the radiated power (the signal didn't fade out past the end of the block [~250 feet] as it did with the 3 meter wire antenna), but the audio now sounds *much* better--as good as the Talking House. The longer antenna definitely has greater bandwidth than the supplied 3 meter wire antenna. -- JasonW