Sunday, October 25, 2009

1W FM Amplifier For Ipod FM Stereo Transmitter






Why do I have 2 parallel resistors like that?It is because I want to be able to change the gain of the amplifier. On the PCB below you will see that I only have 2 pads for the resistors. When I want to resistors I solder the two resistors R5 and R6 on top of each other and the same with R3 and R4.
I advice you to start building without R3 and R5 and test the unit. If you want you can then add R3 and R5 later to obtain max gain of this stage.Q2 has a gain of 12 dBm. FB2, C7, C8 works as filter for rejecting RF to power line.
The last amplifier stage is based around the transistor 2N3866. This transistor has low input impedance.





I match it by using 2 capacitors (C11, C12) and the inductor L1 to about 50 ohm. The transistor has an output impedance match, (C13, C14, and L3) to get best performance for an 50-75 ohm antenna.
- The inductor L1 is made by a wire 2 turns with 5mm diameter.- The inductor L2 is made by a wire 7-9 turns with 6.5mm diameter.- The inductor L3 is made by a wire 4 turns with 6.5mm diameter.
L4 is a Axial Lead Bead, which reject RF very good and has low resistance. You can use almost any choke or large inductor for L4, it is not a critical component.The FM transmitter require 2 AAA batteries and consume about 38mA.To get rid of batteries, I have added a voltage regulator IC1, to the PCB which deliver 3.3V to the FM transmitter unit.
The PCB is mirrored because the printed side should be faced down the board during UV exposure.To the right you will find a pic showing the assembly of all components on the same board.This is how the real board should look when you are going to solder the components.It is a board made for surface mounted components, so the copper is on the top layer.




Grey area is copper and each component is draw in different colours all to make it easy to identify for you. The scale of the pdf is 1:1 and the picture at right is magnified with 4 times.

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