Shortwave Crystal Set!

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  • čas přidán 26. 01. 2019
  • Let's see what we can do with a loose coupled Shortwave optimized Crystal Radio.
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Komentáře • 355

  • @horsenuts1831
    @horsenuts1831 Před 3 lety +14

    Three months ago I was travelling to my annual vacation across the south of England between 1am and 6am (heading to the Scilly Islands if anybody is interested). It involved travelling through very rural areas and I basically lost all of my digital radio reception in the car and very little on FM. Out of complete boredom and also trying to stay awake I started fiddling with AM, and the only station I could hear that didn't drift in and out was a Spanish radio station operating out of Madrid, about 1200 miles away (can't recall the exact station). My Spanish isn't very good, but I could follow the conversation and it just about kept me awake during the dark hours on the road.

    • @elcomandantebacterio2422
      @elcomandantebacterio2422 Před 3 lety +3

      Hi! I live in Madrid, and I can hear at night BBC radio 5 on 909Khz and the BBC 4 on 198khz with good sound, better on 909 than 198.
      Saludos

  • @billpotter9716
    @billpotter9716 Před 4 lety +7

    I built a number of crystal sets as a child in the 1970s. They were usually from Radio Shack and started as low as $2.95. They seemed magic because they did not need batteries. But with experimentation, I noticed that only glass diodes worked. Black rectifier diodes did not work. Also, the earphone had to be of the super-sensitive piezo variety. Oh, the mysteries! Later I studied electronics and began to understand some of them. 73 de AB2ES.

  • @AdamosDad
    @AdamosDad Před 4 lety +9

    At age 14 or 15 I built a broadcast band crystal radio with galena/ cats whisker detector, I later substituted a germanium diode, and a Quaker oats box for the coil. Great memories here.🎙73's kd9oam

  • @AlreadyThere1965
    @AlreadyThere1965 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you for all the great projects. This is something I have wanted to build for a long time and your stuff is always well thought out.

  • @andrzejzawada6172
    @andrzejzawada6172 Před 3 lety +2

    Amazing move. I thank for reminder.
    I learnt radio - engineers 60 years ago. I constructed to sciences such just radio receiver sets on crystal. I greet all HAM's, de SP2EEF and 73 from Poland.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety

      Odwiedziłem TVP Warszawa raz w 1998 roku i miałem karpia i wódkę.

  • @snarfusmaximus
    @snarfusmaximus Před 5 lety +21

    I always get excited when I see that you have posted a new video. You don't post often but it's always gold.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks! I'm working and it's not easy to produce these quickly, but I try to get something out every few weeks.

  • @marknesselhaus4376
    @marknesselhaus4376 Před 4 lety +4

    I had forgotten that I wired up a SW crystal with open air spacing many years ago and it worked great. Thanks for this vid as I will now go and rebuild what I had.

  • @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE
    @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE Před 2 lety +7

    Thanks for making this Mike. The challenge of making a crystal set for the amateur bands is really attractive. I accept the limitations but has to be worth a try!

  • @chuckermatinger3794
    @chuckermatinger3794 Před 5 lety +23

    Beautiful shortwave crystal set. Definitely the most selective I've ever witnessed. Love this video!

  • @markjulius2006
    @markjulius2006 Před 4 lety +4

    Great video! I learned more in this video about the components of a crystal radio and how they work than any other video, hands down. Thank you for sharing. Thumbs up.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety +2

      Well thanks for watching and have fun building a set.

  • @richardrea7146
    @richardrea7146 Před rokem

    Thank you for a most informative video. I enjoyed crystal set construction many years ago.

  • @stationvictormike3415
    @stationvictormike3415 Před 5 lety +2

    This is an invaluable video on what happens when correct antenna length is used... A+++++++++++ love it.

  • @danielsteele7544
    @danielsteele7544 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for being our Elmer,you have tought me so much.you sparked my interest in Ham radio.I studied and now am a General class Ham on my way to Extra class,also practicing cw in Hope's of going on straight key night as you showed us what fun it is.Radio is no doubt your passion in life and I see you really enjoy it.

  • @waldemarbernardodesouza5147

    Good night I'm seeing here in Brazil, excellent radio crystal work with good selectivity and sensitivity in short waves, congratulations

  • @skycarl
    @skycarl Před 5 lety +2

    Came back again to get more pointers. I am working on a crystal radio series and your info has really helped once again. I will reference your channel in my video and hope to send some viewers your way. Thanks as always.

  • @jmatonis
    @jmatonis Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing. This has got to be the easiest SWL radio I have run across. I will be adding this to my to do list. 73

  • @karlschulte9231
    @karlschulte9231 Před rokem +4

    Amazing results from a basic effort technically. But you covered lessons useful across radio. I used to teach, as part of a radio systems engineering course, a quick history of receivers starting with crystal sets. Moved to TRF and regens and then full suprhets and FM. Showed how each built on former. And that there are still bits of old time "DNA" in all but modern SD radios. And why we have desense, spurs, image, mixing QRM and so on. EE students had usually little to no training along this line. There is a place, and an important one, in your experiments and lessons today as well. Especially when EMP hangs over our heads like the Sword of Damocles! Best 73 Karl WA2KBZ

  • @Legord2
    @Legord2 Před 5 lety +1

    Dear Gentleman, surfing the web I discovered your channel, I saw your video and I found very interesting, you are very didactic, very professional working, thank you very much for giving us your time and knowledge, greetings from Henry of USA.

  • @swishpan
    @swishpan Před rokem +2

    Excellent build and well explained! I see a lot of improvements on my first crystal set, especially on improving the q.

  • @pumapolitecnico
    @pumapolitecnico Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for contributing your knowledge to many of us who are eager to learn more about the guts of radio frequency.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety

      73's Construir estos viejos circuitos de radio es muy divertido. ¡Gracias por ver!

  • @tommay681
    @tommay681 Před 5 lety +2

    I am amazed by the selectivity you are achieving! I would never have imagined this kind of performance from a TRF circuit on HF. - cheers 73 de KD9AFB

  • @PapasDino
    @PapasDino Před 5 lety +4

    Well done Mike...amazing how simple stuff simply works! 73 - Dino KL0S

  • @karlschulte9231
    @karlschulte9231 Před rokem

    My dad, W5EWF ( sk but i have his call), retired Signal Corps, made am incredible crystal set. Pancake coils matching taps, pre and main tuning andan s meter. It had a volume xtrl on the meter! In Chicago suburbs it was needed. As i fine tuned it kept pinning. On my Baldwins room filling volume ( small room though) and very selective. These are amazing sets. Thanks for your neat vids. 73 Karl WA2KBZ & W5EWF ( Hondo Johnny, RI

  • @ricklee4
    @ricklee4 Před 2 lety +2

    Wow! Great video and brings back good memories from the early '60s. I was 12 years old and making crystal sets to swap for anything a kid would want, stamp albums, marbles, etc.
    Then I made a short wave set, no amplifier just a crystal ear piece. I had a long wire antenna (didn't learn about di-pole or fan for many years) and late at night I could pick up several VOA and BBC stations (I was in Australia so I'm guessing the stations were close) as well as HCJB in Ecuador, FEBC in the Philippines and Radio Peking as it was known back in those days.
    I do know I had two coils on the breadboard, a salvaged variable capacitor for tuning and a glass crystal diode, other than that I don't recall much detail. I never traded the short wave set because it was so good.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 2 lety +1

      A desperate radio kid will do anything for a better set.

  • @frankartieta7483
    @frankartieta7483 Před 5 lety +5

    Great Video here :)
    I sometimes build regens !
    My last was a NA5N PIPSQUEAK
    It is a real shame there is not more on shortwave
    When I was a young kid I accidentally built a crystal set that would pick up shortwave !
    I was truly experimenting :)
    You can only truly experiment
    When you really have no understanding of how to get where you want to be :)
    I just got lucky with the LC and likely had really good conditions !
    I do not experiment anymore !
    I have learned enough to understand what I would really need to do if I were capable :)
    Knowledge does at times take the fun out of things !
    Nothing compares to ignorant Bliss when things work
    73

  • @VegasCyclingFreak
    @VegasCyclingFreak Před 5 lety +4

    Interesting stuff... I should try making one just for kicks. I remember in the late 70s my dad took some little clock radio and added a bunch of coiled wire to the antenna and then we were getting stations from Germany, BBC, etc. That was pretty cool, will never forget that.

  • @daveys
    @daveys Před 4 lety +10

    I’ve never built a crystal set before and I’m now wondering why I never did it earlier. They’re great fun and quite a good learning tool. As I’m doing my full licence at the moment I feel that the importance of doing crystal radio earlier wasn’t stressed but probably should have been!
    Excellent video BTW, I learned loads!!

  • @mrdovie47
    @mrdovie47 Před 4 lety +3

    Playing with an MK484 radio chip a few years ago, I got strong reception in the 7 MHz range, which is quite above it's range. Figuring that the MK484 was acting as a regenerative receiver, I tuned another receiver to 7 MHz and got a signal from my MK484. When I tapped on the tuning capacitor, I heard the sound on the other SW receiver. It crossed my mind that two MK484 circuits near each other might be able to transmit and receive at the same time. I plan to play with this idea in the near future.

    • @chuckermatinger3794
      @chuckermatinger3794 Před rokem +1

      When I was a kid I built my own crystal sets. Once I tapped on the piezoelectric earphone of one of my crystal radios and heard the tapping on a nearby AM superhet receiver! The crystal set was connected to an external antenna. I want to try to recreate this experiment. Another event, in more recent years, was that I was playing with a toy with an electronic sound generating chip inside. With its preprogrammed sounds playing, I placed this toy near an AM radio. The sound could be clearly heard on the AM radio! The toy was somehow generating an AM signal. The whole idea of low power RF experimentation is intriguing me. Crystal sets are the epitome of that.

  • @rEdf196
    @rEdf196 Před 5 lety +3

    I like the tilting antenna coil coupler and the tuned dipole idea on your crystal set. Your setup looks very similar to my CB radio crystal set video I made years ago. I did use my regular Homemade ground plane CB antenna I normally use for my Galaxy DX 959 when shooting skip. put a PL259 connector on my xtal set plugged the CB antenna in and worked real well. I may try making a bigger dipole for my other (nicknamed ) HAARP Detector SW set very similar in design to the CB crystal set.

  • @solidtubeaudio8442
    @solidtubeaudio8442 Před 5 lety +2

    Very informative and inspiring work, thank you for posting it.
    To expand on the text overlay seen at 6:54, performance can be improved by making the bypass capacitor C2 no greater than 1000 picofarads (pF) and connecting it as directly as possible between the anode of D1 and the rotor terminal of C1. This maximizes radio frequency current through the diode, D1, and increases the audio frequency load impedance. A ceramic or mica dielectric capacitor (as shown in the assembly) is preferable because these types usually have less inductance.
    The reactance of C2 at .01 microfarads (uF) as shown in the schematic diagram will be only around 7961 ohms at 2 kilohertz (kHz) and 3981 ohms at 4 kHz, attenuating the audio signal and defeating the purpose of using high impedance headphones, transformer, or a high input impedance amplifier. The .006 uF used on the breadboard gives reactance of 6635 ohms at 4 kHz, still quite low. Making C2 1000 pF would give a reactance of just under 40000 ohms at 4 kHz. Since this set doesn't tune to less than around 5 megahertz, it is arguable that a bypass capacitance of 50 pF would be sufficient.
    Additionally, the input resistance of the LM386 is 50 k ohms, not particularly high. It combines with the reactance of C2 and the 10 k ohm attenuator shown. The net audio load impedance at 4 kHz with the .006 for C2 and the 10 k on the LM386 input set for no attenuation is 3694 ohms (ignoring j).

  • @jamesmorton7881
    @jamesmorton7881 Před 3 měsíci

    Terrific Project 1. ❤❤. Great educator for getting started.❤❤

  • @KarlsLabReport
    @KarlsLabReport Před 4 lety +12

    This is the MOST selective and sensitive crystal set I’ve ever heard!!! Excellent work - thank you for sharing!

  • @lomgshorts3
    @lomgshorts3 Před 3 lety +3

    Crystal radio, a receiver that works without batteries! I prefer to use marked dials that can be tuned easily, epecially National Velvet Venier dials that are so very accurate. Other Knightkit dials are almost as accurate, but elimintion of dial "backlash" is so very important. Thanks for your videos!

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety +1

      You have mastered selectivity indeed if you need those verniers! Have you tried biased crystal sets yet? They need a battery.

  • @javilarg
    @javilarg Před 5 lety +1

    A really nice project for SW lovers. I love the intro with cuban Radio Martí 👍🏻

    • @patrickwall8517
      @patrickwall8517 Před 4 lety

      Actually Radio Marti is broadcast from the US and beamed at Cuba. They actually use a Voice of America transmitter.

  • @khalidtarawneh2289
    @khalidtarawneh2289 Před rokem +1

    Mike Oh Mike where shall i start. I find my self going back to watch your videos at random and i would never have thought in a million years i would ever be interested in building a Crystal Set in-spite of its fascinating phenomenon, yet here I am commenting right before hitting it at my bench and digging in "THE Junk Box" to build this beautiful Gem you showed. Again as usual a wonderful visual article. Plz accept my belated interest in Crystal Sets.
    73s from Amman JY

  • @waldemarbernardodesouza5147

    excellent work, crystal radio receiving short waves. I'm from Brazil, I have a radio from galena to band of 520 khs to 1700 khz made by me sorry that we do not have more broadcasts in om operating here in my region Thanks for the video

  • @joelaut12
    @joelaut12 Před 5 lety +1

    Fine project, thanks for posting!

  • @visente8283
    @visente8283 Před 5 lety +1

    Por fin algo diferente. Enhorabuena por el video, me ha gustado mucho. Un saludo desde España.
    EA5-GOE 73

  • @mikesmuseum
    @mikesmuseum Před 5 lety +3

    Wow, what a great video! You went into a lot of detail and your diagrams were fantastic. One thing though, I was hoping you would have talked more about your Faraday shield and how it reacts with it in the circuit - and without it. Perhaps you can go into more depth in your next video. Keep up the great work, I always look forward to your videos.

  • @IrishvintageTVRadio
    @IrishvintageTVRadio Před 5 lety +2

    Great channel! Going to have a go at this when time permits.👍

  • @josephhager1933
    @josephhager1933 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you love your videos,very informative.

  • @garygullikson6349
    @garygullikson6349 Před 9 měsíci

    As a little kid I was fascinated with my dad's old Grunau Teledial that picked up a lot of SW in the 40's, must have had a decent "aerial" and ground. I fiddled with crystal sets, mini tube and transistor AM and radio control circuits as an adolescent into adulthood. Never absorbed much theory but learned soldering and electronic assembly, eventually got a starting job in electronics assembly, and later became an aerospace electronics assembly/soldering instructor later moving into contracts/administrative work.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 9 měsíci

      Soldering correctly for aerospace is a serious situation and those who do it have to be constantly checked and trained on the latest methods and standards.

  • @Special-Delivery57
    @Special-Delivery57 Před 3 lety +1

    You are living the dream!⚡️💚⚡️ 📻 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

  • @RobertLock1978
    @RobertLock1978 Před 5 lety +1

    Cool..... I had a kit from radio shack back in the day..... looks like something fun to get back into B)

  • @user-pd5ot4zd4b
    @user-pd5ot4zd4b Před 10 měsíci

    Wow, this is really cool. That seems totally usable. In this era of SDR, I find the simplicity and elegance of minimalist radio to be magical, especially when you consider It works without the amp and external power. In grade school my friend had a RadioShack 101 kit and hooked up the crystal radio project to a wire out the window to a tree and to a radiator for ground - "there's no batteries???" - amazing, and it still works. At least hams will keep broadcasting.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 10 měsíci

      Good Shortwave really peaked with propaganda programming and no internet or satellites.

  • @ElPasoTubeAmps
    @ElPasoTubeAmps Před 5 lety +2

    Very impressive crystal radio.

  • @australischemediengemeinschaft

    Ein besonderes Dankeschön für diesen Filmbeitrag. Dieser Film gehört ebenfalls zu den empfehelenswerten Beiträgen in den Physikunterricht von Bildungseinrichtungen. Mit wenig finanziellen Mitteln ist ein Kurz-Mittel-Langwellenempfänger betriebsbereit aufgebaut.

  • @Bruugensnort
    @Bruugensnort Před rokem

    Thank You so much ! Fantastic and well done sir.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před rokem

      It really is all about the antenna and the ionosphere at Shortwave Frequencies.

  • @bennyrobles9194
    @bennyrobles9194 Před rokem

    A crystal out of an old microwave works fine for an ear piece. I did glue a piece of 5/8 pvc pipe on to the crystal, so I can hear the soundwaves better.
    I also taped a small piece of ferrite on a bamboo stick, and slide it up and down in the pvc pipe with the magnet wire coils around it, when I find a station. It does emplify the sound.

  • @bernardlash4169
    @bernardlash4169 Před 3 lety +2

    Learned something new! Faraway shield between the coils .definitely liked 🤔

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety

      Thanks for taking the time to watch my sometimes too long videos!

    • @grs6262
      @grs6262 Před 3 lety

      @@MIKROWAVE1 never too long..

  • @markbatten5178
    @markbatten5178 Před 5 lety

    Super!! keep goin lets see what can be done. Thanks again!!

  • @eocapone
    @eocapone Před rokem +1

    Your set is very cool. I have never made a short ware crystal radio. Only for broadcasts. I have to try it.

  • @mheermance
    @mheermance Před 5 lety +3

    This is really neat. I've built a few crystal radios, but they usually lack selectivity, so I can only get a few close AM channels.

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 Před 5 lety +1

      Selectivity can be improved by having more tuned circuits and lighter loading on the tuned circuits.

  • @k8zhd
    @k8zhd Před 5 lety +4

    That's pretty impressive! I've built a few crystal sets, when I was a teen in the '60s, but never thought that shortwave was possible. Probably wasn't, with the crude techniques I was using then. But it gave me a start. I became a ham and have been licensed over 50 years now, and retired as an electrical engineer.

    • @rogerklekacz9599
      @rogerklekacz9599 Před 3 lety +1

      I started out in the early 60’s also. I built a few crystal sets and then amplified them with early transistors. I didn’t get real serious with them, but by experimenting with coils, I was able the get the shortwave bands. I was licensed at age 14 in about 1964. I’m 71 now and still hold a license, but I’m not very active now. Plan to get back to it. One item of interest, I used a crystal radio, actually an untuned RF detector with tiny speaker (self powered) as my CW monitor. WB0ETN

    • @jeromegrzelak8236
      @jeromegrzelak8236 Před 2 lety

      @@rogerklekacz9599 ME 2 om

  • @abundantYOUniverse
    @abundantYOUniverse Před rokem

    I really enjoyed this thanks.

  • @SuburbanDon
    @SuburbanDon Před 4 lety +5

    It's amazing what can be done with so little.

    • @johnnytacokleinschmidt515
      @johnnytacokleinschmidt515 Před 3 lety +1

      Little in the way of parts and materials. Much in knowledge and expertise. Great stuff!

  • @konradrueb1567
    @konradrueb1567 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank for sharing
    Konrad

  • @mariadelcarmencastillo9183

    Nice job. i remember long time ago when 16 i built an short wave cristal set with audio bc 187 transistor for af power. i heard Radio Netherlands in the transmissions directed to Mexico. TKS 73 XE2EJ

  • @NOMOREPAM
    @NOMOREPAM Před 3 lety

    Thank you. I enjoyed very much. Also it gave some good ideas to improve my regenerative radio.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety

      Regenerative Receiver construction and improvements become quite addictive! Parts 1 to 3 are done. Now that it is working, I want to try some alternate tubes and even pull the tubes and stick in FETs and see what happens.

  • @artofwar4644
    @artofwar4644 Před 4 lety +2

    I really enjoy this video a lot old timer

  • @deltagold9646
    @deltagold9646 Před 4 lety

    Thumbs up, Interesting build !

  • @mushtaqobaray7529
    @mushtaqobaray7529 Před rokem

    Very well made, most of RF Enhancements, limitations, building techniques allmost fully and nicely covered in this video, Shortwave reception technique is beyond doubt fantastic i feel. Would like in future if the SW broadcast bands are individually spreadout technique is shown, 13M to 12M.

  • @ronb6182
    @ronb6182 Před rokem +1

    My crystal set I made picked up broadcast band and short wave band. It was my penny radio. A dark penny works better than shiney pennies. my long wire antenna was connected but still picked up short wave. My coil had lots of turns about 4 inches on a 4 inch PVC pipe.. I had no tuning capacitor . You tuned by moving the wire across the penny. Like the fox hole radio. I made the fox hole radio when I was in the seventh grade and used a fat capacitor across the razor blade. I picked up weak station KQV and of course KDKA in Pittsburgh, back to the penny radio . There are exceptions to the rule. A long wire antenna will pick up SW if I remember right I had two stations at once. Frequencies apart . Of course the short wave band is dead now all the foreign stations are gone. I may still build the penny radio again I may be able to pick up a local or two. Probably Cuban radio that's all that's on now in Florida. I remember picking them up when I still lived in Pennsylvania on my Atwater Kent radio. I sure miss that radio I could pick up both WWV and WWVH at the same time on short wave. Usually on 15 Mhz. 73

  • @kensmith5694
    @kensmith5694 Před 5 lety +4

    A few points from my days of doing this:
    1) The ends of the coils that face each other should be the ground ends.
    2) It can be simpler to slide the antenna side coil away along a track than to rotate it away.
    3) A small capacitance across the input side of the audio transformer can help.
    F=1/(2*PI*sqrt(L*C)) = 10KHz
    The windings of transformer tend to be a lossy capacitor.
    4) A capacitor in the feed to the RF transformer primary can help but you need to keep it well away from your circuit ground.
    5) Don't forget the "drip loop" on the coax. Before it enters the house take the coax lower than the actual entry so rain water runs off instead of through the wall.
    6) In some houses a dipole inside the roof works fine.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 5 lety

      Good tips! 1. Ground to ground or cold to cold is even more important in regenerative receivers where the hot side can pull the set off frequency as the coupling is changed.

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 Před 5 lety

      @@MIKROWAVE1
      Yes, if your topology is one where the inductive feedback is from a point with a large amplitude the capacitance can be a big issue.
      That is a long way out from crystal stuff.

    • @johnbrewer9833
      @johnbrewer9833 Před 5 lety

      @@kensmith5694 as we used to say .....one over two pi root LC , gives you the resonant frequency.!

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 Před 5 lety

      @@johnbrewer9833
      "Used to say".
      I said that at work last week and will likely say it again this week.

    • @chuckermatinger3794
      @chuckermatinger3794 Před rokem

      Thanks for these tips! When using two coupled coils, should the windings be in the same direction?

  • @JpChannelOne
    @JpChannelOne Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks for the deep background informations. Reducing windings and using a proper shottky diode fm crystal receiving is also possible.

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 Před 5 lety

      The best FM crystal radio has two diodes. Basically, it is two AM radio circuits with a slight difference in the toning.

    • @JpChannelOne
      @JpChannelOne Před 5 lety

      @@kensmith5694 I have built such a difference discriminator with two resonance circuits. It is very difficult to tune it well and to avoid the 50/60 Hz from environment. czcams.com/video/QDlCOB80kVE/video.html

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 Před 5 lety +1

      @@JohnSmith-eo5sp
      Yes, "toning" was a typo.
      The "ratio detector" circuit works somewhat as a crystal radio but as typically designed, the focus is on making it very linear not making it loud.
      Basically, it is the classic double tuned crystal radio design as a starting point.
      A tap on the primary side drives the center tap on the secondary.
      When you are exactly on the station, the primary voltage is exactly at 90 degrees to the secondary voltage. From the point of view of the two ends of the secondary, the phase is leading on one and lagging on the other. This makes the two diodes make the same output so they cancel. As you go either side the phase changes from 90 making one side bigger than the other. Effectively this is the two tuned circuit idea with fewer parts.

  • @sreekumarUSA
    @sreekumarUSA Před 5 lety +1

    Sir, Thank you for the educative video. I enjoyed it very much. I will be assembling one, similar to yours using OA71, OA79 Germanium Diodes. I live in a rural area, therefore I can have better Dipole antennas for better reception on 25, 31,41 and 49 Meter Bands. Instead of wood, I will go for Phenolic Fibre board and 500pF variable capacitor. I am fascinated at the Faraday's Shield, which you made. I'll be making the similar shield with tuned coil setup. The idea of LM386 1Watt amp was a good thinking. I may use ECC81 or ECC82 or ECC83 double triodes instead along with high impedence Head phones. Thanks for inspiring me as much as it may have inspired many dX enthusiasts. I have Grundig 6000 Satellite receiver with external BFO unit. FYI I received a Radio Taxi Xmission from Philippnes. That's all for now thanks much, once again. Cheers.

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 Před 5 lety +1

      A short length of ribbon cable can make a good shield.
      Strip one end and ground all the little wires.
      Sick it down to a nonconductive sheet.

    • @sreekumarUSA
      @sreekumarUSA Před 5 lety

      Thank you.

  • @va3ngc
    @va3ngc Před 2 lety +1

    I am going to have to built this. Thanks for posting.

  • @rsb51
    @rsb51 Před 4 lety

    Ist time I have ever subscribed to a youtube channel. In lock down due to corona virus scare. Wicked good source for time killing projects and it never hurts to learn a thing or two by watching and then doing. Live Free or Die!

  • @davidportch8837
    @davidportch8837 Před 5 lety

    another great video - thanks for sharing

  • @johnbrewer9833
    @johnbrewer9833 Před 5 lety

    Just subscribed. Great channel John 77 UK.

  • @donwright3427
    @donwright3427 Před rokem +1

    Stainless tig welding wire makes great coils. Never had much luck using tube detectors at these frequencies. Found a nice diode from a science fair electronic kit...

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před rokem

      I remember when the Bell Labs people were flooding the schools with little kits of early transistors and diodes, seeding the next generation of engineers. I was given an early solar cell in Physics class.

  • @tonychristoph1063
    @tonychristoph1063 Před 5 lety

    thank you ...i like your vidéo about simple receivers

  • @karlschulte9231
    @karlschulte9231 Před rokem +1

    Oh, there was an early times detector before germanium overshadowed it, called the zinc oxide crytal. It had odd features and seemed to self oscillate giving a slight gain. Finicky but i suspect that it was acting like a tunnel diode or even a transistor. It was dropped as impractical. We could have had transistors long before had this been fully understood and pursued. A good topic for a video/ experiment perhaps. 73

  • @chees6429
    @chees6429 Před 3 lety

    Cool vid I’m making one to and I need to learn about it you are a good teacher

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety

      Send a pic after you have it finished and tested! My email is on QRZ.com.

  • @45acpP90
    @45acpP90 Před 5 lety

    Very cool video. Thanks.

  • @howardsix9708
    @howardsix9708 Před 5 lety

    I still have a KB ....Kolster and Brandt 2000 ohm speaker I aquired in the 50's and a set of high impedance headphones (cans), both still going strong...difficult to source a 300 or 500 pf variable cap though nowadays...happy listening............

    • @robertturner2000
      @robertturner2000 Před 4 lety

      Peebles Originals provides newly manufactured 410pF varicaps and they have various NOS ones too

  • @andrewkurtz6280
    @andrewkurtz6280 Před 2 lety +1

    Very nice! But in my naivete, I have used my 120' long wire antenna and my crystal receiver, which work great for AM radio, and simply put in a much smaller coil to try to hear 3 to 20 MHz. It has worked great! The AM signals have not come in at all. I also don't have a Faraday screen, but it seems to work just like the AM radio with the larger coil. I do, however, use a guitar amp as my audio output, since the stations tend to be an average of a couple of thousands miles away... I did make a center-fed dipole antenna in my attic, sized for about 9 MHz, and it is good but surprisingly not hugely better than the long wire!

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 2 lety

      Congratulations! Not everyone has a clean and well balanced radio environment. It only takes a couple of strong stations to desense or bleed in and dominate reception for many.

  • @mikepasko7493
    @mikepasko7493 Před 2 lety

    GREAT INFO.....THANKS MUCH

  • @Studyelectron
    @Studyelectron Před měsícem

    Nice coupling increase decrease way to learn well 🌹✍️well done

  • @asbestomolesto
    @asbestomolesto Před 4 lety

    This is a GREAT video!

  • @lomgshorts3
    @lomgshorts3 Před 4 lety +1

    I would like to be able to receive WWV at 5 and 10 Mhz with the set. Great calibration, and time reference.

  • @matthiaswilhelm9813
    @matthiaswilhelm9813 Před 2 lety +1

    Very good Performance,best Whish Matthias.The Last Years I finished my Job in Selfmade AMCoil Windung with Hands.🇩🇪ist Aline in AM,Not ready Stations,Radio ist Death in AM.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 2 lety

      Herzlichen Glückwunsch zum Gewinn einiger schöner AM-Band-Induktoren. Ja, die AM-Stationen überleben, sind aber in einigen Gebieten der Welt weniger zahlreich.

  • @swradios
    @swradios Před 2 lety +1

    You make the best technical/detailed/relaxing videos. Thankyou for your efforts!
    I am curious as to the effects of the faraday shield, operation with and without the shield?

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 2 lety

      Depends on your local environment. It does nothing for the signal. Its job is to reject strong or close by capacitively coupled BCB stations.

  • @MarioXP2008
    @MarioXP2008 Před rokem

    It´s Very amazing device

  • @SanderOlbermann
    @SanderOlbermann Před 5 lety

    ELP... FANFARE FOR COMMON MAN.

  • @okhamradio
    @okhamradio Před 4 lety +1

    The best!
    Thanks for sharing! I've made this one too! It works!!!🌞🌍

  • @idontneednostinkingchannel6848

    594:8 Like ratio.. Fantastic! Go out and look at a TenTec Rig going for $5000 and up - then we see what is really happening on the bands and how easily it CAN be extracted from the ether - using the most basic of materials and methods. You're giving everyone a chance to expand their minds w/o drugs to feel what Guglielmo Marconi and Tesla and Hiram Percy experienced for pennies on the dollar.. making learning FUN again! - 73 OM! More power to ya! -

  • @vk3ye
    @vk3ye Před 5 lety

    Enjoyed the video. Re 3:13, should the dipole length for the 60m band be 100ft rather than 150 ft?

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 5 lety +1

      Yup! That is for the 90 meter Tropical Band around 3 MHz!

  • @shaneburkett253
    @shaneburkett253 Před 9 měsíci

    My name is shane, i've been listening to you for a long, long time

  • @whitebookerdog538
    @whitebookerdog538 Před 5 lety

    Wonderful Video..........

  • @luigilugnani7456
    @luigilugnani7456 Před 5 lety +1

    Bellissimi lavori di elettronica.

  • @jmitsch44827
    @jmitsch44827 Před 5 lety +1

    i THINK THE PERFORMANCE WAS GREAT. FOR THIS SIMPLE RADIO. SW GETS BETTER LATE AT NIGHT AND SOME NIGHTS ARE BETTER THAN OTHERS. SURE THE SOLAR MINIMUM IS AGAINST US BUT SW IS STILL THERE. VERY NICE VIDEO. GOT ANY SCHEMATICS FOR AN EASY BFO WE CAN USE ON OUR CRYSTAL SET AND TELL US WHERE TO GET EXOTIC PARTS IF POSSIBLE FOR BFO. .THANK YOU!

  • @jeffmccrea9347
    @jeffmccrea9347 Před 3 lety

    When I was a kid, I built a crystal radio using a loopstick antenna rather than a huge coil and wiper. I lived 5 miles from the hill where most of the AM and TV broadcast towers were. Instead of a crystal earphone, I installed a 2K to 8 ohm audio transformer and speaker out of a pocket radio. I had to install a volume control to cut distortion and keep the volume to a comfortable level. It didn't really need a wire antenna but it did require a ground though.
    I used to play mostly with CB and the outbands, (frown if you must). I've worked in a shop repairing them and I used to repair them for our local crime watch when I lived in Florida. I have 100 CB's in my collection that I have chopped and channeled from crystal to pll although they're collecting dust now as age and disability has taken me over.
    I told you that to ask this. Have you ever tried a ground reflection antenna? Personally, I'd never heard of it nor have I seen anything mentioned about it in the ARRL antenna handbook or other publications so I call it this because this basically what it is.
    In my days of experimentation, I had an old Radio Shack 5 watt 40 channel walkie talkie that I bought in some yard sale for $5.00. I peaked it up to a true 5 watts and eliminated the two AA dummy cells in the battery case. It had an RCA jack in the side for an external antenna. I used it mainly for long wire antenna experiments because it was convenient, light, self contained, cheap and no big loss if I burned it up.
    One day, I was out in the yard with my SWR / WATT meter, some coax, some wire and a long screwdriver as a ground stake. I know that vertical dipoles have a mirror image in the ground so I began to wonder what if I connected my coax shield to a quarter wave piece of wire and strung it horizontal along my wooden basket weave fence and connected the coax center conductor to the screwdriver staked into the ground. I tried it and got a 1.4:1 match.
    The receive was very quiet as horizontal antennas tend to be on a band of mostly verticals. I got a contact from a guy 10 miles away talking skip on a horizontal beam. I was literally in the middle of a mobile home park full of aluminum clad homes. (This was 1976) I couldn't convince him that I was talking to him on a 5 watt walkie talkie using 103 inches of wire as my ground spaced 8 inches off the ground and using the earth on my hot lead.
    I credit the gain of his beam more than my "antenna" setup for the connection though. I offered to meet him somewhere and take him to my back yard and show him my setup but he thought that I was going to lead him on a wild bunny hunt so he wouldn't come.
    Anyway, it's something to think about.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1  Před 3 lety

      Yes some wild hookups. I had a setup on my Columbia 3 Speed with a tire generator power supply. I would go riding away and my buddy would monitor my transmissions to estimate range. CBs are fun and my most annoying trick was to learn CW on Channel 14. Yes imagine two kids sending morse code endlessly. The local CBers just loved that. Ha. In college I converted a CB to 10 meters. That was too easy. Instead I did one up for 15 Meters SSB. That was at the peak of the solar cycle in the early 80's. I also played with the tube type units which sometimes had 3 channels and a buzzing vibrator power supply on 12V. Antenna like you describe are Magic - who knows what you were lighting up?

  • @attilarivera
    @attilarivera Před 5 lety

    Fantastic!!!
    👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @Lechoslowianin
    @Lechoslowianin Před 5 lety

    It is clear that the radio is your passion

  • @kn9ioutom
    @kn9ioutom Před 3 lety

    AWSOME SIMPLICITY !

  • @stevemckennon5995
    @stevemckennon5995 Před rokem

    I used to build crystal sets with just a coil and a 1n914 germanium. Then i expoxed these in a bottle cap and used transistor jacks for my 3 wires which lead to the transistor amp box. Thought i was going sell these or something. No tuner. Just a 50k watt kmpc station.

  • @justdavester
    @justdavester Před 2 lety +2

    That low frequency model you show at 00:30 is lovely! Are there plans available somewhere to make one like that? Thank you! I’m new to radio builds and find this one is great to look at.

    • @southernexposure123
      @southernexposure123 Před 9 měsíci

      I just got back into making projects after a 30 year layoff. There's a lot of plans on the Internet. The basic schematics are the same for crystal radios that will hear in the Broadcast band. One main thing is the number of turns on your coil. You can wind too many turns and the radio will tune below the AM broadcast band and you'll hear no stations. Winding coils with fewer turns to hear in the broadcast band will put the receiver above the broadcast band. There's a lot of stations up there.
      Night time is better for hearing all except the strongest stations.
      I'm using 2 inch diameter PVC plumbing pipe for coil forms. I also use smaller pipe. Winding 90 to 110 turns close together lets me hear in the B C Band. When you get that sort of coil hearing add another coil near that one with 80 turns. Connect one of those coils to a ground rod and connect the other coil to a tunable (variable) capacitor connecting the second coil will help you get better separation between stations.
      Here's a trick that lets you try different coils without unwinding a coil of wire just to try coils with a different number of turns. I cover part of my PVC pipe with cardboard all the way around the pipe, but I make two cardboard covers each one shorter than the main coil form. I make those cardboard pieces so they can slide onto and off of the PVC pipe. I make those coils so when I put them on the pipe I can slide the coils close to each other.
      Then if I want to I can wind a coil with 10 to 15 turns and slide that short coil onto the pipe and slide it near the other sliding coil on the same PVC pipe..
      Another method of making coupling like in the picture you like so much is to use two different diameters of pipe so that once the smaller diameter coil is made you can slide the smaller coin inside the bigger pipe to different distances.
      Good luck.

  • @dtmty
    @dtmty Před rokem

    What would be the most basic prmitive material to make one crystal radio in range of 2-30mhz ? the antena could work better in a square pyramid antenna ?
    Thank you Mr. Mikrowave1 !!

  • @waynec8045
    @waynec8045 Před 5 lety

    Continued, also no tickler coil required and with 5KHz, 3KHz LPF and 750Hz BPF for CW. 50KHz-30MHz frequency coverage.