000SHREDDER000
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tank you, I will add a tuned circuit soon??? the op-amp doesn't amplify at signal frequency, it just looks for rectified RF from the diodes.
The circuit is completely unselective and can trigger on static or any other interference, it isn't well thought out. It probably will work over short distances but 'long distance' could be a short as a few metres away depending on surrounding and background noise. Even adding a simple tuned circuit at the input would make it far more sensitive and less prone to false triggering. There is also a somewhat 'hit and miss' approach to the op-amp inputs, the output could adopt an almost random state without any negative feedback being used.
Brian.
I doubt that the author has verified detector operation above 10 GHz. As stated, the circuit utilized the nonlinear base-emitter characteristic of the OP differential input pair to rectify RF. But rectifier diode operation is frequency limited, and there are other parameters like bond wire inductance.
The circuit is a cheap "crystal radio" that has terrible sensitivity and when the RF signal is strong enough then its very simple tuning will pickup all radio stations, TV stations and communications at the same time.you mean the schematic is uncompleted?
why circuit haven't antenna
you mean the schematic is uncompleted?
why circuit haven't antenna
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