Where Do You Start?: 27Mhz Door Knob Alarm
Where Do You Start?: 27Mhz Door Knob Alarm
Where Do You Start?: 27Mhz Door Knob Alarm
CONTENTS
27MHz transmitter with crystal - 1-transistor with crystal
Receiver for transmitter
27 MHz transmitter without Xtal - Very simple 2-transistor circuit - produces tone.
Receiver for Transmitter
27 MHz transmitter without Xtal - with multivibrator to produce tone - improved circuit
Receiver for transmitter
In this discussion we cover 27MHz transmitters and receivers as found in remote control cars,
aeroplanes, walkie talkies and some of the older-style garage door openers.
We have provided a number of circuits so you can work out the best type for your application and
these circuits will also help you understand which components are critical and which components
can be changed.
It's a matter of looking at each circuit and seeing the general layout, and comparing it to the other
circuits. In this way you are building up a concept of "building blocks" and this is the basis to
learning electronics.
Talking Electronics does not provide any kits for these circuits as the products (toy cars, wireless
doorbells etc) are readily available in toy shops, hobby shops and many of the $2.00 "junk Shops."
You cannot buy many of the special components and the cost of the completed item is less than
buying the components!
MAKING A TRANSMITTER
This discussion covers a number of transmitters and receivers. The different circuits show you what
is absolutely needed and how different engineers think. Some circuits will work better than others
and some have unnecessary components.
Then you will need a receiver.
Some circuits are 1-channel, some are 2-channel and some are 4-channel. Choose the tone that
suits your requirement.
First we will go over some background.
Let's start:
Channel Frequency
1 26.995
2 27.045
3 27.095
4 27.145
5 27.195
6 27.255
and these were very popular for transmission - especially in countries where transmitting was
strictly controlled.
Both 27MHz and 49MHz circuitry produced very low cost devices and they are still available. But
you must be careful as some of the latest types are much more sophisticated (and sometimes cost
less than the older types).
We will investigate how they work and how they can be modified.
Very little is available on how these circuits work and this article will cover the "building blocks."
When we use the term "building block" we mean a group of components making up a circuit that
carries out a particular function and can be connected to another circuit to achieve a final result. In
this way you can create your own project without having to design each of the sections. A typical
example is the 5-channel remote control circuit we have modified to produce an on-off action from
two of the outputs. You can build these circuits from scratch, but why re-invent the wheel? If you
want a 27MHz or 49MHzlink, the best idea is to buy a toy and modify it.
If you want voice communication, get a walkie talkie. If you want a single on-off operation, get a
remote control car.
Some remote control cars have up to 5 channels and sell for less than $20.00. You can get
everything you need on 2 printed circuit boards, ready for modification, without having to source the
components.
Look for 4 function models that require 3v operation for both remote and receiver. The fifth function
is "turbo" and is not used in some of the designs. The photo below is the 4(5) function 27MHz
remote control car we discussed above:
5 channel remote control car as discussed
in the text. It uses only 4 of the 5 channels.
The first two circuits (figs 1& 2) form a single-channel transmitter-receiver link. The second receiver
(fig 7) uses a split supply to power a motor in the forward and reverse direction (it uses the same
transmitter as shown in fig 1). The third transmitter & receiver, (figs 12 & 22) is a multi-channel
design, with a chip in the receiver. Then we cover a 27MHz walkie talkie. This is a 4 transistor
model. It uses the same type of super-regenerative front-end as our receiver circuits and injects
Amplitude Modulated (AM) audio onto the signal. The result is a very noisy transmission but a very
effective way to achieve both transmission and reception with the minimum of components. Most of
the parts have a dual function, operating in both transmit and receive mode. This makes the circuit
very efficient, component-wise.
Before we start, some of the Japanese transistors have either a very high frequency capability or a
very high collector current. These transistors need to have an equivalent for the circuit to work
successfully. Here is a list of some of the type you will come across and some equivalents:
BC327 60 45v
PNP 0.7v 800mA
BC328 @300mA 25v
BC337 60 45v
NPN 0.7v 800mA
BC338 @300mA 25v
BC547 45v
BC548 NPN 70 0.7v 30v 100mA
@100mA
BC549 30v
BC557 PNP 100mA
C945 NPN 50v 150mA
1815 NPN 50v 150mA
This means it produces an unmodulated 27MHz signal and when picked up by a receiver, such as
shown in fig 2, the result is a clean, noise-free reception. To increase the output of the transmitter,
the 390R resistor is replaced by a 220R. This increases the current from 7mA to 12mA. The resistor
could be decreased to 150R for more output. Page 2 of this article covers test equipment that can
be used to detect the output and the frequency of transmission.
MAKING A 5-CHANNEL
TRANSMITTER/RECEIVER
This 5-Channel 27MHz link has 5 outputs. The output goes HIGH when the corresponding button on the
transmitter is pressed. You can use 2,3 4 or 5 of the channels. We chose 5-Channels as it uses the same number of
components as a 2, 3 or 4 channel design.
But first:
THE FIELD STRENGTH METER
Before building the Transmitter/Receiver you need to build a Field Strength Meter so you can test the
transmitter.
Here is the circuit for Field Strength Meter MkV. It can be constructed on a small piece of matrix board
or simply soldered together and connected to a 0-500uA movement. A "Movement" is similar to a "Panel
Meter." You can use 0-1mA movement or the 0.5mA current-range on an analogue multimeter.
This is simply an "untuned" RF detector to prove the transmitter is producing a signal.
The Field Strength Meter circuit is simple but it is designed to detect the 27MHz transmitter in this
project. The "lead" is flex or enamelled wire 10cm long and wrapped around the antenna of the
transmitter for 2cm to get RFenergy-transfer. Our prototype transmitter produced about 25% scale
deflection.
1. THE TRANSMITTER
The transmitter consists of two transistors. The first transistor produces the tone in conjunction with the
second transistor and the second transistor produces the 27MHz signal. Button "A" produces a 200Hz
tone button "B" produces 1kHz tone, button "C" produces 1kHz tone button "d" produces 1kHz
tone button "E" produces 1kHz tone
The second transistor is a self-contained oscillator and it gets its feedback (to oscillate at 27MHz) from
the transformer. The main coil is the 9t section and the feedback to the base is 4 turns.
Nothing happens until one of the buttons is pressed as the first transistor is held in a "turned-off" state
by the 3M3 and the second transistor is not turned on as the base and 2k2 are not connected to
anything.
When a button is pressed, the 4n7 starts to charge via the resistor connected to the button and the first
transistor starts to turn on.
The 4n7 gets charged to a voltage that allow the first transistor to turn on slightly. This allows current
and voltage to flow through the 2k2 to turn on the second transistor and produce 27MHz. A voltage-
drop is produced across the 100R load resistor and this pushes the left-side of the 4n7 DOWN. The
right side moves down and it feeds some of its energy into the base of the first transistor to turn it on
MORE.
This causes the second transistor to turn on more and create a higher amplitude. After a very short
period of time the energy from the 4n7 (only a small amount of energy is delivered and the amount can
be worked out by knowing how many millivolts gets generated across the 100R between normal
operation of the second transistor and its higher turned-on state) has been fully delivered and and the
first transistor starts to turn off. This causes the second transistor to turn off slightly and the 4n7 "rises in
the circuit." At the same time it gets charged again by the resistor connected to the switch and the cycle
repeats.
The end result is a fairly brief pulse that causes the second transistor to create a larger amplitude. This
is detected by a receiving circuit as a higher amplitude 27MHz signal produced 200 times or 1,000 times
per second. This is called an AMPLITUDE MODULATED SIGNAL and in this case it shown on a CRO
as peaks or spikes and in a speaker as a buzz or tone.
The frequency of the tone is determined by the value of the 4n7 and the resistor that charges it.
2. THE RECEIVER FRONT END
The front end of a 27MHz receiver is slightly different to the front end of a 27MHz Walkie Talkie. The
circuit is very lightly loaded so that it will detect the slightest signal and this makes it very sensitive.
The component that does this is the 3k9 in the power rail.
The transistor has only about 2v across it and takes less than 1mA.
The circuit is a common-base amplifier and under certain circumstances, a single transistor in this
configuration will oscillate.
The receiver "front-end" put together for experimenting
3. THE RECEIVER
HOW THE RECEIVER WORKS
The receiver is a super-regenerative design and the output is very noisy. However when a signal of the
same frequency as the super-regenerative circuit surrounds the antenna, the circuit has difficulty
radiating a signal and it takes more current and less current. These variations appear across the 3k9
load resistor as a change in voltage (a waveform) and the signal is picked off via a 100n capacitor and
passed to a filter stage that removes most of the background noise and amplifies the signal (tone).
The following diagram shows just some of the stages needed to decode 5 different tones and deliver the
signal to 5 separate outputs:
It would require a minimum of 20 transistors to carry out this requirement and all this has been done in a
single 8-pin chip by the author, as shown in the following circuit:
5 CHANNEL RECEIVER using H-bridge transistors
The 5 CHANNEL RECEIVER uses a TE5CHRx chip from Talking Electronics. Click HERE to buy the
chip.
Outputs are normally NOT HIGH or LOW but HIGH IMPEDANCE when not activated and this effectively
makes them "out of circuit" as far as the other components are concerned.
Outputs A and B produce FORWARD and REVERSE.
When button "A" on the transmitter is pressed, output A goes HIGH and B goes LOW.
When button "B" on the transmitter is pressed, output A goes LOW and B goes HIGH.
Outputs C and D produce LEFT and RIGHT via an actuator (or a motor).
When button "C" on the transmitter is pressed, output C goes HIGH and D goes LOW.
When button "D" on the transmitter is pressed, output C goes LOW and D goes HIGH.
When button "E" on the transmitter is pressed, output E goes HIGH.
The outputs from the chip drive an "H-Bridge" and each transistor is actually an EMITTER-FOLLOWER.
This means the bridge cannot be connected to a supply higher than the driving circuit.
The voltage drops across the driving components is nearly 2v. This means the motor will see a
maximum of 4v and that's why a 3v motor has been suggested.
The chip delivers about 25mA max into the base of each transistor and depending on the gain of the
transistor, it will supply about 500mA max.
Output 5 is limited to 25mA.
The H-Bridge section can be designed with an L2930, to take the place of 8 H-bridge driver
transistors. The chip has built-in diodes and will deliver up to 600mA per output.
In the circuit above, when the transmitter is off, the car moves forward. When the transmitter is on,
the car reverses and moves in a circular pattern due to the fact that the front wheels steer straight
when the car is moving forward but turn left when the car moves backward. This allows the operator
to guide the car around obstacles. It's a very awkward way to control a car and although it is very
simple and clever, it is not really successful in practice. We will not be going into the mechanics of
how the car steers, only the fact that the transmitter causes the motor to reverse direction. In place
of the motor you could use a relay or two separate motors to carry out a number of functions and
we will show how the circuit can be modified to do this.
The receiver works on a "tone," "no-tone" principle but the transmitter doesn't actually send a tone
as this would require additional circuitry. What happens is the receiver picks up random noise from
the airwaves when the transmitter is not operating and this functions as the tone part of the
reception. This random noise is amplified by the second transistor and passed to a 0.47u
electrolytic that keeps the third transistor in conduction for the majority of the time. The operation of
this will be discussed later. The 10u on the output of the third transistor keeps the output low for the
short periods when the third transistor is not low. The motor is connected in a bridge formation via
four transistors and these change the polarity of the supply to the motor.
When the transmitter is operating, and the receiver is within range, it picks up a 27MHz carrier that
over-rides the random noise and produces a CARRIER. This means the second transistor will not
see any noise and thus the 0.47u electrolytic will charge and turn off the third transistor. The 10u
will charge via the 2k2 and the input to the bridge will change from a LOW to 0 HIGH. This will turn
on the opposite half of the bridge to supply current to the motor in the reverse direction.
Now we will cover the circuit in detail.
The electrolytic is simply a tiny re-chargeable battery and when the circuit first turns on, it is
uncharged. The charging current passes through the base-emitter junction of the third transistor
and keeps it ON as shown in fig: 3. If the electrolytic is allowed to fully charge, the current will fall to
zero and the third transistor will turn off. But the second transistor discharges the electrolytic quickly
before it has time to fully charge. It does this by turning ON. How the electrolytic discharges is
shown in fig: 4. The only components involved in the discharge are Q2 and the diode. Transistor Q2
is turned on and it will have zero volts (0.3v) on the collector.
Discharging the 0.47u electrolytic.
This means the positive lead of the electrolytic (equivalent to the positive terminal of the battery) will
drop from say nearly 3v, to 0.3v. The negative lead must follow and normally it would be at -2.7v.
Yes, the negative lead would have a negative voltage on it relative to the 0v rail, if the diode was
not present. BUT the diode on the negative lead gets turned on as soon as the voltage on the
negative lead falls to -0.7v and prevents it going below -0.7v. As the positive lead falls, the energy
in the electrolytic is quickly discharged through the diode and when the second transistor turns
OFF, the electrolytic is ready for charging, through the 10k resistor.
CONNECTING A RELAY
Fig: 5 shows how a relay can be connected to the driver transistor to operate when the transmitter
is switched on. The change-over contacts on the relay can be used to power any device when the
transmitter is off or when it is on.
Connecting a relay to the driver
transistor. The supply for the relay
can be 6v - 12v.
A SPLIT-SUPPLY RECEIVER
The second receiver circuit we will study uses more components to do exactly the same job but it
may have better sensitivity due to the inclusion of one extra stage of amplification and the use of a
higher rail voltage. The higher rail voltage gives some stages a higher gain due to the higher
amplitude of the signal. But some of the gain has been lost in the diode pump as this type of pump
requires more energy to charge the 10u than a 0.47u. The use of a center-tapped voltage source
saves two transistors in the bridge network but necessitates the use of a double-pole switch to
disconnect both halves of the supply.
These are the switching transistor Q5, the driver transistor Q7, and the output transistor Q9. The
reason why a driver and output transistor are need is to provide a high current for the motor as it
needs a high current at start-up or when under load. A motor may take only 50-150mA when not
loaded but the current will rise to 300-500mA when loaded. It the motor does not receive this high
current, it will appear the car has no power. For the output transistor to deliver this high current, the
base must receive a current according to the gain of the transistor.
The gain of a transistor varies enormously, depending on the current flowing through the collector-
emitter circuit. The DC gain of a transistor is generally specified as between 100 - 450, but this is
under ideal conditions and is determined at a collector current of about 1mA! When the current is
increased, the ability of the transistor to amplify decreases. For a small signal transistor, this may
decrease to a gain of 75 for 50mA or as low as 10 or 20 for 250 - 500mA.
That's right, the transistor may only have a gain or 10 or 20 when passing a heavy current. This
means the base must receive a current of 25mA to 50mA to make certain the transistor will deliver
500mA. When the transistor turns on fully, the voltage between the collector and emitter is only
about 0.2v to 0.5v. If the base is not supplied with sufficient current, the transistor will not turn on
fully and the voltage across the collector-emitter leads may be 0.6v or higher.
This is how the transistor limits the current to the device it is powering. For our application we do not
want any extra voltage to be lost across the transistor and so it must be fully turned ON. So we want
the driver transistor to deliver 50mA. This will be a low-current device and 50mA will be its
maximum rating. We can allow a gain of 100 for this device so that it requires a current of 0.5mA
into the base to turn it on fully.
The turn-on resistor is the 4k7 and when you take off the voltage drop across the collector-emitter of
the switching transistor and the base-emitter junction of the driver transistor you have about 2v
remaining from the 3v supply. This gives a base current of 0.4mA.
This is not enough to supply the motor with full current and thus the motor goes slightly slower in
the reverse direction.
When the switching transistor (Q5), in fig: 7, is changing from high to low, there is a gap of about
1.2v where both outputs are off. Driver Q6 is tuned on when the input line is above 3.6v, and driver
Q7 is turned on when the input line is below 2.4v.
The first two components to be removed are the 390R and 10n on the emitter of the first transistor.
The 220R is increased to 680R as shown in fig: 11 to produce the same biasing. The reason why
the 10n can be removed is because it is effectively across the 390R (via a 47n) so that the join of
the 220R and 390R is effectively at rail impedance to high frequencies.
This means the 39p can be connected to the positive rail and the 390R can be incorporated with the
220R. By using 470p as the high frequency filtering component in each of the two audio amplifier
stages, the 10k and 4n7 filtering components can be eliminated. It may also be possible to remove
one of the audio amplifier stages when the 0.47u electrolytic is used as it is much more effective
than the 15n charging the 10u.
The 15n and one of the diodes is not needed when the charging electrolytic is 0.47u. The switching
transistor Q5 is not required, however it does invert the signal so that when it is removed, the
resistors to each of the driver transistors must be changed so that the output driving the car in the
forward direction delivers full power and the reverse output delivers about 80%.
The diode simply prevents the 1kHz switch delivering a voltage to the output of the IC. It does not
have any effect on producing the 250Hz signal. It is just a "gating diode."
The 3-pin chip could be a very small microcontroller that has been programmed to produce 250Hz
when it detects a voltage on the output pin. The appearance of the 250Hz indicates the output is
generated by a higher frequency and is divided-down.
With 15k, the output has some 1kHz segments in the high part of the waveform when 250Hz
is being delivered. With 1k5, the top of the 250Hz waveform is very smooth.
This IC replaces at least 10 components in a two-transistor square-wave arrangement and this
saves time, space and money.
The surface-mount transistor produces the 27MHz carrier when the 1kHz from the IC is HIGH. This
is because the 1kHz turns the transistor ON during the HIGH periods of the waveform.
The oscillator produces a sinewave and the feedback is the 10p.
The 39p is effectively across both windings and this forms a tuned circuit with a frequency of
27MHz.
A tiny amount of this waveform is picked off by the 10p and passed to the base where the signal
delivered to the base turns the transistor ON more and more until it cannot turn on any more. At this
point in the wave, the signal via the 10p ceases and the transistor turns off. The collapsing
magnetic field delivers its energy to the 39p to charge it and this creates the second half of the
waveform. And the signal from the 10p is opposite to previously and it has no effect at all on the
transistor. The transistor plays no part in this portion of the wave. Adjusting the ferrite core changes
the frequency slightly and this is done when the transmitter is a long way from the receiver so you
can detects when the transmitter is operating at exactly the correct frequency. You use the weak
reception to make the final adjustment.
You don't have to buy these modules. You can use the transmitter/receiver from a toy car that no-
one wants any-more. (some of them are 4 channel).
You can operate sound modules, lights, gates, points and anything up to 6v and 200mA.
Every module is different with different circuitry and chips. This discussion is just an example of how
the link works.
The LC117A chip, TMX RX 3E chip and TX 3E IC are not available.
A MULTI-CHANNEL LINK
A multi-channel link is considerably more complex than a single channel design but it offers the
possibility of designing a project that has more features. The multi-channel transmitter shown in fig:
12 has forward, stop, reverse as well as left, centre, right steering.
This represents 6 channels and they are created by changing the mark-space ratio of a square
wave oscillator as well as its frequency.
The photo shows the components on the PC board:
The 6 (4) channel transmitter board
When the transmitter is not operating, the receiver picks up hash (background noise) and no
outputs are activated. This represents the STOP function. When the forward function is selected on
the transmitter, the square-wave oscillator operates at its high frequency setting, with an equal
mark-space ratio.
If left-turn is selected at the same time, the mark-space ratio is altered to 1:3 while the frequency
remains the same. If right-turn is selected, the mark-space ratio is 3:1, with the same frequency. If
the reverse function is selected, the frequency of the oscillator is reduced to half and if the centre
steering is selected, the mark space ratio is 1:1. If the left steering is selected, the mark-space ratio
is 1:3 and if right steering is selected, the mark-space ratio is 3:1. To understand how the channels
are produced, you need to know how a multivibrator works.
When the control is returned to the stop position (via a spring-return), the current required by Q1 to
keep it turned on is supplied by the 100u on the base and as the energy is delivered from the
electrolytic, the voltage across it reduces. This reduces the voltage across the circuit but since it is
not sending out a signal, this does not matter.
After a minute, the voltage drops to almost zero and the electrolytic is finally discharged completely
by the 1M (and 4k7 in series with it). The stand-by current drops to less than 1 micro-amp, the
leakage through the collector-emitter junction when the transistor is not turned on.
The receiver is required to pick out the signal from the noise and it does this by a process called
integration and differentiation where the signal is detected due to its regular nature and this is used
to charge a capacitor.
Another circuit determines the length of time the tone is present and these are combined to
determine the nature of the control signal. Most of the circuitry for doing this is locked inside the
chip in the receiver and the only components we can see are the external items on pins 10, 1 and
19. These determine the frequency detected by the chip and the length of the "highs," but all the
rest of the signal processing is done inside the chip. The chip detects the waveforms shown in figs
14 - 19 and turns on the appropriate outputs.
Two outputs drive the motor in the forward/reverse direction and 4 outputs drive the transistors for
the steering motor. The steering motor is simply a rotary actuator. This is similar to the armature of
a motor, positioned inside a circular magnet.
The armature does not need brushes as it will only turn about 45° in one direction and 45° in the
opposite direction, depending on the direction of the current. The output of the shaft will be
connected to a lever to steer the front wheels.
The chip controls the two diagonally opposite transistors for the clockwise and anticlockwise
rotation to get left and right steering. All the rest of the circuit has been previously discussed and
the only new feature is the tapping at 4.5v for the motor. A diode on the 4.5v rail drops the voltage
to 3.8v and the two output transistors drop a further 1v, so that motor receives about 2.8 to 3v.
Here are some remote control items, shown on the web, by a hobbyist who disassembles devices
and makes a new project:
Some of these components were used to build a project and present it the web.
The only problem with this mode of transmission is interference. Electrical noise entering the
airwaves is also a varying amplitude waveform and the receiver will pick this up at the same time
and produce a very noisy result. This is one of the reasons why walkie talkies are so noisy.
However it is a starting point for learning about transmission and the circuit in fig: 24 shows how the
audio is added to the carrier.
A 4-Transistor Walkie Talkie
Nearly all the components in the 4-transistor circuit are used for both transmitting and receiving.
This makes it a very economical design. The frequency-generating stage only needs the crystal to
be removed and it becomes a receiver.
The operation of this circuit coincides with our discussion on receiver circuits at the beginning of this
article where we said the receiver was oscillating all the time, similar to a weak transmitter. A 390R
is added to the emitter of the oscillator stage to reduce the activity and turn it into a receiver. The
next section of the circuit is called a building block.
It consists of three transistors directly coupled to produce an audio amplifier with very high gain.
The first transistor is a pre-amplifier and the next two are wired as a super-alpha pair, commonly
called a Darlington pair to drive the speaker transformer.
The third block is the speaker. This is a separate item because it is used as a speaker in the receive
mode and a dynamic microphone in the transmit mode. A speaker can be used in reverse like this
and it is called a dynamic microphone because of the coil and magnet arrangement. When you talk
into the cone, the movement of the voice coil in the magnetic field produces a few millivolts output.
This can be coupled to a high gain amplifier to get quite good results.
When the walkie talkie is in the receive mode, the first transistor is configured as a receiver and the
audio is picked off the 4k7 load resistor via a 0.47u electrolytic. It then passes through a volume
control and into the three transistor amplifier. The speaker transformer couples the amplifier to the
speaker and we hear the result. When the walkie talkie is in the transmit mode, the speaker is
placed at the input of the audio amplifier.
The audio is then amplified and the waveform appears as THE SUPPLY VOLTAGE FOR THE
TRANSMITTER STAGE. The crystal is connected to the first stage and the gain of the transistor is
increased by removing the 330R and only using a 56R for the emitter resistor.
The speaker transformer is not used as a transformer in this mode but as an INDUCTOR to couple
the output of the audio amplifier to the power rail and the signal developed across the winding is
passed to the transmitter stage as the supply voltage for the transmitter. As the waveform rises and
falls, it changes the gain of the first stage and thus the amplitude of the transmitted signal. This is
how the signal becomes an Amplitude Modulated (AM) Radio Frequency (RF) signal.
All the other components have been left out because they do not determine the DC bias point. The
biasing starts at the base of the first transistor. It is turned ON, but not fully, by the 1M resistor until
the collector voltage falls to half-rail voltage. The 1M and 5k6 resistors are chosen so that this
occurs.
This is the ideal set-point so that the pre-amplifier transistor can amplify both the positive and
negative excursions of the signal without distortion. The super-alpha pair (the second and third
transistors in the 3-transistor amp) drops a total of 1.3v across the base-emitter junctions, leaving
3.2v across the 100 ohm emitter resistor. By ohms law, this will produce 32mA as the idle current
(quiescent current) for the audio stage.
FURTHER USES
All of these circuit can be found in remote-control toys from your local department store. Simply buy
a remote control car and give it to a youngster to play with. After a day or two he will lose interest
and you will be able to pull it apart and adapt it to your own use.
To create a private channel, simply replace the crystal with one of a slightly different frequency and
retune both the transmitter and receiver coil. The multi-channel receiver has even most possibilities.
You can control four different devices directly and even more by gating the outputs. The simple
27MHz link will be used with one of our Talking Electronics FM transmitters to turn it ON and OFF
remotely.
The 27MHz transmitter will work up to 60ft (20m) and will allow you to turn off a transmitter to give it
added security from being detected. The receiver will have to be designed to turn on for 0.5sec
every 10 seconds to detect if a turn-on transmission is being sent and the whole circuit will then
shut down to conserve power if a reception is not detected.
This means you will have to transmit for at least 10 seconds to be sure the receiver picks up the
signal.
On the next page we cover some more 27MHz transmitter circuits, and on P3 we cover some
303MHz links.
P2 P3
P1 P2 P3(303MHz)
Home
CIRCUIT A
Circuit A shows a 27MHz transmitter circuit without a crystal. The main reason for a crystal is to
comply with the strict transmitting laws in most countries. A fairly narrow band has been allowed at
27MHz and to keep within this area, a crystal has been used. Since a crystal is not an expensive
component when bought in the millions, manufacturers have included them in their circuits to get
instant approval.
However the important reason for using a crystal is to get reliable operation.
When a circuit does not have a crystal, the oscillator is said to be "voltage dependent" or "voltage
controlled" and when the supply voltage drops, the frequency changes.
If the frequency drifts too much, the receiver will not pick up the signal.
For this reason, a simple circuit as shown in circuit A is not recommended. We have only included it
as a concept to show how the 27MHz frequency is generated.
The two transistors are doing two things at the same time. The second transistor is a self-contained
oscillator and it gets its feedback (to oscillate at 27MHz) from the transformer. The main coil is the
8t section and the feedback to the base is 4 turns.
The first transistor is also connected to the second transistor and the two form a low-frequency
oscillator in which the first transistor forms the timing for the oscillator and the second transistor
provides positive feedback.
The first transistor turns on via the 1M and the transistor sees this as pulling the base "down." The
collector of Q1 pulls the base of Q2 "up" and Q2 turns ON. This causes current to flow in the 100R
and the voltage on the right side of the 6n8 falls. The capacitor tries to make the left side fall too
and turn on the first transistor even more. This happens until Q1 cannot turn on any more and the
6n8 charges a little more. This turns off Q! a small amount and the to transistor begin to turn off.
The frequency of the tone is determined by the value of the 6n8. All the time that this is happening,
Q2 is oscillating at 27MHz and it is just being "DC shifted" up and down.
The tone consists of short spikes, unlike the tone produced by Circuit B, which has an almost even
mark-space ratio.
The second circuit comes from a GS Remote Control Car. It does not have the 2k2 current-limiting
resistor and you can experiment to see which circuit consumes the least current and has the best
range.
See GS Remote Control Car Receiver Circuit below.
A 27MHz transmitter
(receiver for this circuit HERE)
Circuit A - Birds Nest
Circuit A was quickly constructed on a piece of copper board to act as an earth plane and to make
sure it worked and to see if any improvements could be made. If a circuit works well in an open
format such as this, you can be sure it will work better when constructed on a printed circuit board
where the circuit is much "tighter" and the impedances are lower. The layout above is called a
"Birds Nest" and allows rapid modifications to be made and you can touch the parts to see if your
hand capacitance changes the frequency or stops the circuit working.
CIRCUIT B
Circuit B also produces a tone. But this time two transistors are used in a multivibrator arrangement,
in which one of the transistors is used to turn the third transistor on and off.
Circuit A is a very efficient and clever circuit and requires less components. That's why you must
study all types of circuits before producing your own design as simplicity is the secret to success.
The tone is used by a receiver to determine the signal is coming from the chosen transmitter. The
receiver can have a detector stage to detect the exact frequency or the tone can be used to change
the state of a stage. This is called integration, where the energy from the pulses from the tone are
added together to charge or discharge a capacitor.
Circuit B comes from a Russian design, and it uses Philips transistors!
We tested the output with our Field Strength Meter MkII and found it had a good output. Details of
Field Strength Meter MkII are discussed below.
But the circuit has some poor features. The poorest feature is the printed-circuit coil. This type of
coil has the lowest value of "Q." "Q" is the name for the "Quality factor" for a coil and it effectively
determines how much amplitude you will get. Quite often the output of a coil will be higher than the
voltage being supplied to it and this gives the value of "Q."
The other poor design is turning the emitter of the third transistor on and off. A better solution is to
drive the base as has been done in Circuit A. This allows full voltage to be applied to the stage.
Here is the circuit:
The topside of circuit B
The underside of circuit B
RECEIVERS
The following receiver matches up with Circuit B above.
27MHz Receiver
If a long tone is required to turn on the relay (to prevent false triggering), the following circuit can be
used. The 100u electrolytic takes about 2 seconds to discharge via the 10k resistor, as the 4k7
adds to the time-delay, since it is providing charging-current that the transistor has to overcome.
The following circuit allows a single channel transmitter/receiver to turn an appliance on and off by
sending a short pulse to turn a circuit on and a long pulse to turn a circuit off.
This is handy when you cannot see the result of your operation. A simple toggle operation is not
suitable as you do not know the state of the output at the start of the operation.
By sending a long pulse, you definitely know the output will be OFF and you can then control the
output remotely.
A short pulse is less than 0.25 sec and a long pulse can be any length longer than 1 second.
These times can be adjusted by changing the value of the components.
When a short tone is received, the lower 47u discharges and pulls the base of the BD136 towards
the 0v rail and turns the transistor ON. This activates the relay and the contacts take the 4k7 to the
0v rail to keep the transistor ON.
During this time the top 47u charges via the 100k but not enough voltage appears across it to turn
on the BC557 transistor.
If the tone appears for a long period of time, the top 47u charges and turns on the BC557 and the
voltage between the emitter/collector terminals is less than 0.3v. This voltage is too low for the
BD136 to remain on and it turns off.
When the tone is turned off, the BC557 remains on for 1 second and then turns off.
The circuit is then ready to be activated again.
The circuit above can be added to many different receiver circuits, thus using only one output to
provide an on/off function.
2 CHANNEL TRANSMITTER
The next circuit is a 2 channel transmitter.
This circuit does not use a crystal but has a clever feature of using the two push buttons to turn the
circuit on when it is required to transmit.
Click HERE for RX-3 IC datasheet .pdf
We have already discussed the operation of a circuit such as this, with a multivibrator and RF
oscillator. The only new feature is the arrangement for producing two different tones.
The receiver requires a 1kHz and 250Hz tone for the forward and reverse outputs. The frequency of
the multivibrator is determined by the value of resistance on the base of each transistor. The
multivibrator is driven directly from the supply with the forward button and via a 150k for the reverse
frequency.
2 CHANNEL RECEIVER
Circuit for the RX-3 IC
The circuit for the receiver has not been taken off the printed circuit board, however a general circuit
is provided in the datasheet for the IC and this has been reproduced above.
Both output of the chip cannot be HIGH at the same time as this will destroy the transistors in the
"H-bridge."
For the forward direction, the forward output is HIGH and this turns on Q9, Q11 and Q13.
For the reverse direction, the backward output is HIGH and this turns on Q8, Q10 and Q12.
This toy remote control car cost less than $8.00, but a defect in the design was noted.
The motor would reverse approx every 2 minutes for a short period of time, even though no
transmitter button was pressed and the motor would operate in bursts when the car was distant
from the transmitter. The interference was not from any electronic device in the home as the
receiver was taken to an open space and it still faulted. The first transistor was removed and the
fault did not occur. This means the RF transistor is generating a fault that is detected by the chip to
turn on an output.
This could be due to the chip detecting a frequency of 1kHz or 250Hz to turn on an output. Random
noise could be in this range and that's why the RX-3 receiver chip is unreliable.
Maybe that's why the car was $8.00!
Another point of comparison: the RX-3 receiver circuit consumed 4.4mA at 4.5v, while the RX-2B
receiver consumed 0.7mA at 3v.
4 CHANNEL TRANSMITTER
This circuit uses the TX-2B RX-2B chipset discussed on the previous page. The chip has 5
channels and the circuit uses 4.
Click HERE for TX-2B RX-2B chipset datasheet .pdf
1. LED Power Meter, Detects RF energy and indicates the result on a multimeter set to 2v or 10v
scale.
2. Field Strength Meter MkI. FSM MkI detects RF energy and indicates the result on a multimeter
set to 10v scale.
3. Field Strength Meter MkII. FSM MkII has a scale 26MHz to 50MHz. By turning a pointer
connected to an air trimmer, the frequency of a transmitter can be determined.
4. Field Strength Meter MkIII - uses a 600 ohm Balance Movement.
5. 27MHz Walkie Talkie - purchase from a toy store.
When working with a transmitter, the first thing you will want to do is determine if the transmitter is
producing RF.
Talking Electronics has three kits for this.
1. The LED Power Meter costs less than $2.00 and connects to a multimeter set to 2v or 10v range
or you can use the 0.5mA range. It connects directly to the antenna of the transmitter and a LED
illuminates if the transmitter is producing more than about 30milliwatts. If the transmitter is
producing less than 30mW, the needle on the multimeter will deflect, but the LED will not illuminate.
The photo below shows the LED Power Meter connected to a mini Multimeter. These are available
from "$2.00 shops" for less than $10.00
3. Field Strength Meter MkII can be modified to detect transmitters in the range 27MHz to 49MHz by
placing a 12 turn inductor on the bottom of the board. This is made by winding 12 turns of 0.25mm
wire on a 2mm x 5mm ferrite slug. The 47p capacitor in series with the 47p air trimmer is "shorted
out" under the board as can be seen in the photo above. The link to the coil on the board is
removed so that it effectively comes out of circuit. No other parts on the board are changed.
You will need a transmitter with a crystal to calibrate the Field Strength Meter. You can then use the
FSM to adjust any of the transmitters that do not have a crystal.
Field Strength Meter MkII can also be used to determine the relative output of each transmitter by
using the same length antenna on each transmitter and holding FSM MkII at the same distance
from the transmitter. The three LEDs on the PC board will show the relative signal strength.
4. You can buy a Remote Control Car or Walkie Talkie to get a transmitter and receiver.
5. Field Strength Meter MkIII uses a 600 ohm movement (1mA FSD) but almost any movement will
be suitable.
The size and shape of the coil is extremely important and the photo shows slight stretching on the
last turn to peak the circuit.
FIELD STRENGTH METER MIII
The 100p and 18 turn coil form a tuned circuit that oscillates at a particular frequency. The
frequency at which the components oscillate is changed slightly by the 47p air trimmer. The signal
then passes into a 2-diode rectifier with one diode passing the voltage to the meter and the other
diode discharging the 47p on the negative half of the waveform. The 100n across the meter stores
and smoothes the voltage for the 1mA (Full Scale Deflection) movement.
This circuit shows the amazing ability for two passive components to "amplify." The 100p and 18
turn coil form a TUNED CIRCUIT and when the incoming frequency is exactly the frequency at
which these two components oscillate, the output rises considerably.
If you have transmitter, you can set up the circuit to detect an exact frequency by winding the 10cm
tinned copper wire antenna around the antenna of the transmitter. Each centimetre gives about 2p
of capacitance and this is sufficient to connect the two together "RF wise."
The circuit requires 18 turns but if you add one turn, you can stretch the coil to get the circuit to
peak then remove it later.
Finding the resonant frequency of the coil and capacitor is a very difficult thing to do as the peak
comes and goes in less than 1/10mm of stretching the coil.
In addition, you cannot touch the coil or be anywhere near the circuit when making the adjustments
as you body completely "soaks away" the energy.
You have to use a plastic knitting needle and move the end turn very slowly while watching the
meter.
You will see it move from zero to more than half way as the adjustment is made.
You now have a piece of test equipment that will indicate when a transmitter is operating at an
exact frequency.
If you want to know if the transmitter is producing RF, you will need Field Strength Meter MkI as it
purely detects RF.
Talking electronics has designed a PC board with Field Strength Meter circuit to detect 27MHz.
Most of these transmitters are very low power and getting a reading on a meter (actually called a
"movement") is very difficult.
To help get a reading we have added a transistor amplifier.
The result is:
27MHz FSM
Click HERE to go to the project.
P1 P2 P3(303MHz)
P1 P2 P3
2N3563.pdf 9014.pdf 9018.pdf
Home
We have covered 27MHz (and 49MHz) links on P1 and P2 of this article and shown how to produce
a simple circuit (or buy a toy for less than $10.00) and get 4 or 5 channels.
We also showed how to produce on/off from a single channel and how to detect 27MHz with a Field
Strength Meter.
27MHz can transmit at least 100 metres and provide a reliable link as proven by the countless
garage-door openers on the market.
But 27MHz transmitters are fairly bulky and need a short antenna to produce a good range.
They are not suitable for short range applications where an antenna is not wanted. These include
anything you want to put in your pocket, such as emergency call-buttons, garage door openers,
remote car locking, alarm activation/deactivation etc.
The two things you will want to do when working on 303MHz transmitters are:
The oscillator coil is also the radiator of the signal and the 1.5uH inductor on the "centre tap" of the
coil can be as high as 10uH or as low as 1.5uH, with little difference in output.
The frequency may have to be adjusted slightly if the inductor is changed.
We changed it for a 40 turn air-would coil using .25mm wire on a 2mm former. This increased the
range by 1 metre.
A 60 turn coil increased the range a further 3 metres and when it was spread out it added to the
effect of the antenna. The two photos below show the placement of these air-inductors.
303MHz RECEIVER
This circuit is almost identical to the Wireless Doorbell article, only the pin numbering has been
changed to suit the layout on the PC board. I suppose, when you are onto a good circuit, stick to it!
This doorbell cost less than $8.00 and you cannot buy the components individually for less than
that.
This type of circuit makes an ideal basis for experimentation. You can experiment with the RF side
of the circuit as well as the high impedance sections. Each gate is capable of providing a very high
gain and by putting a 1M from output to input the gate is kept in a state of excitement, oscillating at
approx 500kHz, if no other components surround the gate to control the frequency. This is designed
to keep the gate active so that the smallest signal will be processed.
In the case of the gate between pins 13 and 12, the 1n capacitor between the input and ground will
reduce the frequency enormously, as well as the effect of the 2n2 and 5k6 resistor.
The second and third gates simply increase the amplitude of the signal and do not provide any form
of removal of unwanted signals.
The end result is a full amplitude signal at the left-side of the crystal with all sorts of hash and
background noise, but unless the signal has a 32kHz component, it will not start to oscillate and the
right side will have no signal. The crystal is the component that does most of the "detection work"
and prevents false triggering as it magically picks out the 32kHz signal from the "hash" and delivers
a very clean signal to the transistor for further amplification.
This signal is amplified further to full rail and charges an electrolytic to activate a sound chip.
Receiver circuit topside with sound module
Receiver circuit underside
Since none of the transmitters have the frequency set via a crystal, you will need to use a
transmitter with a known frequency to calibrate the Field Strength Meter. Once this is done you can
use it to check the frequency and output of other transmitters.
Place the loop near the transmitter and adjust the air trimmer for a maximum.
The position of the pointer will indicate if the transmitter is near the required frequency.
FIELD TESTING
Since the range of these transmitters is fairly short, the only real way to set the exact frequency is to
do a "field test."
Take the transmitter say 20 metres and press the transmit button. Keep moving away and
remember the maximum range.
Adjust the coil on the receiver and re-test. If the range increases, you are peaking the coil in the
right direction. If the range decreases, turn the slug in the opposite direction.
It will take only a few degrees of adjustment to peak the receiving frequency.
In this way you can compare one transmitter with another.