FET Circuits - Rufus P. Turner PDF
FET Circuits - Rufus P. Turner PDF
FET Circuits - Rufus P. Turner PDF
PHOT
®
• FACT PUBLICATION 205B5
D C
D
PET Circuits
Rufus P. Turner, Ph.D.
RUFUS P. TURNER
Contenu
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
APPENDIX A
APPENDIX B
APPENDIX C
INDEX······································································································ l57
1
®-=- ®t;~
POWER SU PPLY
(A) Zero control voltage.
MEDIUM CURRENT
@ @
T.P@
B ~ONTROL vgLTAGE
(B) Medium control voltage.
-=-
POWER SUPPLY
LOW CURRENT
(A) N-channel.
C
P-TYPE SILICON BAR
A B (B) P-channel.
12
are termed the gates. (In most commercial FET's, the gates, if
two are used, are wired together internally and connected to a
single terminal.) The completed transistor is given the name N-
channel field-effect transistor ( NFET). If, instead, the silicon is P
type, as in Fig. l-2B, then the gates are N regions and the transis-
tor is named P-channel field-effect transistor ( PFET).
When a d-c voltage is applied between A and B, the current
carriers ( electrons in the N-channel and holes in the P-channel
FET) flowing through the bar must pass through the channel
between the two gate electrodes. The anode terminal (A) is termed
the drain, and the cathode terminal ( B) the source. In a symmetri-
cal FET, either terminal may be the source, and the other the
drain. The drain is equivalent to the plate of a tube or the collector
of a regular transistor; the source is equivalent to the cathode of a
DRAIN
DRAIN
GATE~
GATE
SOURCE SOURCE
(A) N-Channel. (B) P-channel.
DRAIN DRAIN
GATE l ~ G A T E 2
GATE~BSTRATE
SOURCE SOURCE
(C)MOS FET. (D) Tetrode.
Fig. 1-3. FET symbols.
RCE
lo------
' \ I,
,,,,,,
II
(B) High gate voltage.
Fig. 1-4 shows FET action. Here a reverse voltage, Vos, is applied
between gate and source. A second voltage, Vns, is applied between
drain and source. These are equivalent to the grid and plate
voltages, respectively, of a tube. An N-channel unit is shown; for a
P-channel, reverse both Vos and Vns, In Fig. l-4A, the shallow
depletion layers result from the low gate voltage, and the channel
between them therefore is wide ( permitting a large number of
electrons to How through the bar), so the drain current, In, is high.
In Fig. l-4B, the gate voltage is high and it deepens the depletion
layers, causing them to penetrate farther into the bar, narrowing
the channel and reducing the drain current. When the gate voltage
reaches a critical value, termed the pinch-off voltage, the depletion
14
layers meet, completely shutting off the current. Because the
control voltage, Vos, reverse-biases the gate junction, any gate
current, loss, is exceedingly tiny ( on the order of 0.1 nanoampere).
This accounts for the high input impedance of the FET and con-
sequently its behavior as a voltage-controlled device. Because the
resistance of the silicon bar is modified by the gate-voltage field,
the FET is a true field-effect device.
The FET is called unipolar from the fact that it uses only one
type of current carrier-majority carriers ( electrons in the N-channel
FET's, and holes in the P-channel). Similarly, the regular transistor
is called bipolar because it uses both types-majority and minority
carriers ( electrons internal, holes injected, in the NPN; holes inter-
nal, electrons injected, in the PNP).
FET PERFORMANCE
I I
I I
I I
-0.5V
.
I J
I
I
_ _ __:-::.1.w~--mrrr)
-1.5V
-2.IH
-2.5V ,.,.)
I
3.IH.-+1
:
-4.IN I
15
Because the FET is a voltage amplifier, its performance, like
that of a tube, may be rated in terms of transconductance. In the
FET, forward transconductance for the common-source circuit
( equivalent to the grounded-cathode tube circuit) is the ratio of a
change in drain current to the change in gate-to-source voltage
which produces it:
gcs = d I» X 1000
d-V
GS
where,
grs is the forward transconductance, in µ.mhos,
In is the drain current, in milliamperes,
VGs is the gate-to-source voltage, in volts.
+ 5to35W l
5K to -
L5meg
OUTPUT
INPUT
@ 0.5to lmeg
FET TYPES
It has already been noted that FETs may be classified as N-
channel or P-channel according to whether N-type or P-type semi-
conductor material is used in the channel. Alternate terminology is
NFET and PFET.
In addition to these two basic types, a newer FET employs a
metallic gate which is insulated from the semiconductor by a thin
oxide film. This device, which provides an extremely high input
impedance because of the near-zero loss and also gives good r-f
performance, is known by four names: IGFET ( insulated-gate field-
effect transistor), MOS (metal-oxide-semiconductor), MOS FET
( metal-oxide-semiconductor field-effect transistor), and MOST ( me-
tal-oxide-semiconductor transistor). The symbol for this FET is
given in Fig. l-3C.
Another development is the tetrode FET. This unit has two
gate terminals ( "front gate" and "back gate") and its symbol is
given in Fig. 1-3D. The tetrode, which acts like a variable-pinch-off
FET, provides a high gr,/C"'"" ratio and consequent superior per-
formance as a radio-frequency amplifier.
18
2
Amplifier Circuits
+ D·C SUPPL1
(SEE TEXT)
15V
@ 4ma ~
2K
2N3819
s
At a d-c supply voltage level of 6 volts ( 2.5 ma), the single stage
gives a no-load voltage gain of 2.5. At 9 vdc ( 3.1 ma), the gain is
3.7. And at 15 vdc ( 4.0 ma), the gain is 8. The maximum signal
input before output-peak clipping is approximately 0.58 volt rms.
Frequency response, referred to 1 kHz, is flat within 2 db from
50 Hz to 50 kHz. All gain figures are given on the basis of a !-
megohm output load.
The 2N3819 is encapsulated in plastic and gives no installation
problems. All wiring must be kept as short and direct as practicable,
for reduction of stray pickup at the low signal levels at which this
amplifier can operate.
The 2-megohm gate resistor ( Rl) and 2000-ohm drain resistor
( R2) both are 1/2 watt.
+ 15V
80K
8µa
l @
r·
A-f INPUT
@
@ lmeg
G
D@
2N4338
s
@
·7 A-f OUTPUT
3K 50mfd
l
15V
Ima
@ D
@
r·
A-F INPUT
®
@
2meg
l.5V
G
@
2N4340
s
IK
@
0.1
(
l
A-F OUTPUT
(Z•7001'll
where,
Ro is the output impedance (resistance), in ohms,
R. is the source resistance ( R2 in Fig. 2-4), in ohms,
gm is the forward transconductance of the FET, in mhos,
g is the output conductance, in mhos.
0
+
BV
200µa 1
@ sac@
·7
® @
r·
A-F INPUT @ lmeg
G
@
s
@
2N4338
@
A-F OUTPUT
@
5K 50mfd 50mfd
The total d-c drain is 200 µa at 15 volts. With this d-c supply,
the overall voltage gain of the amplifier is 1000 when potentiometer
R4 is set for full output. At this level, the maximum signal input
before output-peak clipping is 4 millivolts rms, and this corresponds
to a maximum signal output of 4 volts rms. Frequency response,
referred to 1 kHz, is down 4 db at 50 Hz and at 50 kHz. Gain and
frequency-response figures are given in terms of a 1-megohm load
across the output.
24
All resistors are 1/2 watt. Electrolytic capacitors C2 and C4 are
rated at 25 dcwv. All wiring must be kept as short and direct as
practicable, to minimize stray pickup at low signal levels. Care
must be taken also in the location of the 2N4338's, since the gate
electrode is internally connected to the metal case of this FET.
0.1
lOK
A-F A-F
RI l meg OUTPUT
INPUT +
@ @ 1.:Vma lOmfd
500 50mfd -
15V
l.04ma 1
.,,,,,
@ 471)( @
3.8 meg
G (SEE TEXT) ~
C@ 0.1
2N333
8
A-F
INPUT @ 2meg
A-F
OUTPUT
@
25mld
@
.15
@
r·
A-F
INPUT RI
1.5V
0.4ma
OUTPUT l
COMMON
OOTPUT2
@
.15
r,
QI
@
COMMON
G
@
OUTPUT 2
0.1
A-F INPUT @ Jmeg
.....
Fig. 2-9. Paraphase phase inverter.
+
20K
15V
Q35ma r @
@
r-~
A-F INPUT I
®
D®
2N4868
-~
s
@ 5K
@ SOmld
A-F OUTPUT
A-F INPUT 2
I meg
GAIN
CONTROL 2
29
DUAL-CHANNEL AUDIO MIXER
Fig. 2-10 shows a conventional circuit for mixing two a-f signals
or for selecting one or the other. Like the equivalent tube or
bipolar-transistor circuit, it provides separate inputs and a common
output. Separate gain controls ( !-megohm potentiometers Rl and
R2) are provided, and the resistances of these controls may be
increased to 5 megohms each, if a higher input impedance is
desired.
Using two 2N4868 FET's (Ql, Q2), the circuit gives maximum
voltage gain of 10 per half. This corresponds to a maximum signal
input of 15 millivolts rms for an output of 1.5 volts rms before
output-peak clipping. Current drain is 350 µ,a at 15 vdc.
All resistors are 1/2 watt, and electrolytic capacitor C3 is rated
at 25 dcwv. A fourth terminal of the 2N4868 is internally connected
to the metal case of this FET and should be grounded, for shielding.
r·
A-F
OUTPUT I
G
COMMON
A-F
OUTPUT 2
A-F
INPUT
(A) Circuit.
(B) Response. I
't
<
o-+-----+------<
500 l(XX) 2000
FREQUENCY (Hz)
+ 15V 1
l.65ma .,,,,,
@ @
32@I
C5 .01
32K @) 20K
@""@ @ @
@
"'®
C2
~I.. \®.
.,,,,,
@ (§)
l.Omfd
@
2N4340
0.1
2N4340
@ 0.1
rt
A-f@ @ lmeg
A-f
OUTPUT
INPUT 2K
(A) Circuit.
~ -10
...
~ -20+---+-+--------1
0.
V'I
~ -30 --+----#---+--------< (B) Response.
::l
~
~ -40
1000 2000
FREQUENCY (Hz)
$2
low distortion. The overall voltage gain ( with 1-megohm output
loading) is 42 db, with potentiometer Rll set for full output, and
the odd number of stages rotates the phase correctly for negative
feedback in the path through capacitor C6 back to the input.
Tuning is accomplished with a parallel-T network (C3, C4, C5,
R5, R6, R7). This is a null network ( r-c notch filter) connected
in the feedback loop between output transistor Q3 and input
transistor Ql. The 1-mfd capacitor, C6, provides d-c blocking for
this network, and 100,000-ohm resistor R2 limits the loading of the
network. Negative feedback through the loop is sufficient, at the
42-db gain of the amplifier, to cancel the amplifier gain. However,
the parellel-T network removes feedback voltage at the network
null frequency. The result is transmission by the amplifier very
sharply at that frequency, as shown by Fig. 2-12B. The values
given for capacitors C3, C4, and C5 and for resistors R5, R6, and
R7 are for 1-kHz tuning. Parallel-T networks may be set up for
other desired frequencies, provided that the following relationships
are maintained:
C,,
C3 = C4 = 2
1
f = 27rCR
where,
f is the pass frequency of the amplifier, in hertz,
C is the capacitance of C3, in farads,
R is the resistance of R5, in ohms.
The amplifier draws 1.65 ma at 15 vdc. All fixed resistors are 1/2
watt. The capacitors and resistors in the parallel-T network must
be rated at 1 percent accuracy.
All wiring must be kept as short, rigid, and direct as practicable,
for stable operation and minimum pickup of stray signals. The gate
electrode of the 2N4340 is internally connected to the metal case
33
of this FET, so the latter should be mounted out of contact with
other components.
@ @
321<,,;;;\ 32K
~I-01
@.,,.@
@ ,oo;~oo;
~164K·
rt
A-F RI
A-F
OUTPUT
INPUT @ ®
50mfd 50mfd
(A) Circuit.
2.0
/
---....... /
'\. I
~
~ 1.0
\ , I
I
I (B) Response.
I-
ii:' I
5 I
0 I
't-
< 0
100 1,000 !OK
FREQUENCY IHZI
34
TIS14 FETs (Ql, Q2). Fig. 2-13B shows the typical frequency re-
sponse that can be expected of the circuit. Note how a sharp drop
in output of one band of frequencies can be designed into the cir-
cuit.
The tuning network is a parallel-T filter ( C4, C5, C6, R4, R5, R6)
connected between the amplifier stages. The values given for the
filter capacitances and resistances in Fig. 2-13A are for I-kHz
elimination. Similar filters may be set up for other frequencies, pro-
vided that the following relationships are maintained:
1
f = 2-n-CR
where,
f is the null frequency, in hertz,
C is the capacitance of C4, in farads,
R is the resistance of R4, in ohms.
If the filter capacitors and resistors are closely selected and the
capacitors are high Q, the notch point ( see Fig. 2-13B) will be
very close to zero. At some distance on each side of the notch
frequency ( say at O.lf and lOf), the a-f output will be 2 volts rms
for a maximum a-f input of 3.75 millivolts rms before output-peak
clipping. This assumes that potentiometer RS is set for maximum
gain and that the amplifier is terminated with a I-megohm resistive
load.
All wiring must be kept as short, rigid, and direct as practicable,
to promote stability and to minimize stray pickup and stray
coupling. A fourth pigtail of the TIS14 is connected to the metal
case of this FET and should be grounded, for shielding. All fixed
resistors are 1/2 watt, and electrolytic capacitors C2 and CS are
rated at 25 dcwv.
The amplifier draws 0.2 ma at 9 volts de.
S5
VIDEO AMPLIFIER
Fig. 2-14 shows the circuit of a simple video amplifier using a
single 2N3819 FET. This circuit provides a voltage gain of 5: The
maximum signal input before output-peak clipping, at I-megohm
load, is 0.6 volt rms for 3 volts rms output. Stages may be cascaded
for increased gain.
SIGNAL
INPUT @ lmeg
SIGNAL
OUTPUT
1-f ~
~ 500K
@
INPUT
@ @
5K 0.1
The i-f amplifier shown in Fig. 2-15 avoids this difficulty by using
a 455-kHz ceramic filter (U.S. Sonics Type A25H4C, or equivalent)
instead of a transformer. This filter, being self-resonant, requires
no tuning, and is connected simply between two amplifier stages
in place of the usual coupling capacitor. Its voltage insertion loss
is approximately 1 db.
The amplifier employs two TIS14 FET's (Ql, Q2) and provides
an overall open-circuit gain of 400: The maximum i-f input is 2.5
millivolts rms before peak clipping occurs in the I-volt rms output.
Selectivity of the circuit corresponds very closely to that of the
filter alone, i.e., - 3 db at 2-kHz bandwidth to - 40 db at 160-kHz
bandwidth. Total current drain is 0.2 ma at 9 vdc.
All wiring must be kept as short, rigid, and direct as practicable,
to minimize i-f losses and to promote stable operation. A fourth
pigtail of the TIS14 is connected to the metal case of this FET and
should be grounded, for shielding.
r·
A-F
INPUT
@
VOLUME
CONTROL
+
Fig. 2-16. Auxiliary headphone amplifier.
@f~D
2N4868 ----7
lOK @
0.1
A-F OUTPUT
A-F INPUT
• @
50mfd
+
CONTROL-VOLTAGE INPUT
(ll-6Y de)
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt. The 50-mfd source bypass capaci-
tor, C2, is a 25-dcwv electrolytic, and the 0.1-mfd input and output
coupling capacitors, Cl and C3, are 100-volt plastic or paper units.
A fourth pigtail of the 2N4868 is connected to the metal case of this
FET and should be grounded as shown, for shielding.
The circuit has a great many uses other than conventional auto-
matic gain control in an audio amplifier. Any application is feasible
in which an adjustable or fluctuating d-c voltage ( at virtually zero
power) is available for varying the output of an audio channel.
When the control voltage is positive with respect to ground, use a
P-channel FET (such as a 2N3578), changing the values of R3 and
R4 as required and reversing capacitor C2.
- 1.
'N zero sk,Jnal: lma
l
@ ON-OFF
max. signal: Oma
G
+ D-C OUTPUT
D-C INPUT lmeg 0 to 8.5V
Otot5V @ GAIN
+
volts at the 2N3578 gate, the drain current is cut off, and the output
rises to - 8.5 volts. The output values given above are for zero load-
ing. This condition obtains only when the amplifier feeds a high-
resistance device, such as an oscilloscope, vtvm, or other amplifier.
( At 10,000-ohms load, the output drops to 5 volts de).
Because a positive input signal gives a negative output signal,
the amplifier is an inverter as well, and this feature will be welcome
in a number of applications. The unit is also a kind of current ampli-
fier: virtually all of the signal-input current is accounted for in gain-
control potentiometer Rl, ( 1.5 µ,a at 1.5 volts input), whereas the
output current flows through an external load as the result of the
amplified d-c voltage. This is 500 µ,a in a 10,000-ohm load-a cur-
rent gain of 332. ( The current and voltage gains referred to here
indicate a d-c power gain of 1,000,000 plus).
A simple d-c amplifier of this type is useful in control systems as
well as in instruments. For example, it will drive a 10,000-ohm.
40
5-volt d-c relay, with an input signal of only 1.5 volts at 1.5 micro-
amperes. Various thresholds of operation may be obtained simply
by adjustment of gain control Rl.
Layout of the amplifier is not critical. However, the 2N3578 must
be mounted clear of wiring and other components, as the gate lead
is internally connected to the metal case of this FET. Drain re-
sistor R2 is 1/2 watt.
41
3
Oscillator Circuitr
The high input impedance and high gain of the FET promote sim-
plicity and efficiency in many transistorized oscillator circuits. Fre-
quently, the FET may be used directly in tube-type circuits and
requires no special circuit components. This latter convenience is
important, especially in crystal-controlled, r-c-tuned, and capaci-
tance-feedback oscillators.
Negligible loading of 1-c-tuned circuits by the FET may result
in higher output and lower distortion than is usually obtained with
comparable bipolar transistors. This desirable characteristic also
removes the need to tap coils for transistor impedance matching,
and tends to preserve undisturbed the Q of the tank circuit. The
high gain obtainable with many FET's ensures that sufficient output
voltage will be available for efficient feedback.
FET's are proving to be useful in oscillators of all types. They
can be used across the frequency-spectrum-from low audio fre-
quencies to high radio frequencies. The oscillator output can be a
symmetrical sinusoidal waveform or a nonsinusoidal train of pulses.
43
TRANSFORMER-FEEDBACK A-F OSCILLATOR
Fig. 3-1 shows the circuit of an audio-frequency oscillator which
uses inductance-capacitance tuning and inductive feedback and em-
ploys one 2N2608 P-channel FET. This simple arrangement is useful
for general-purpose, single-frequency applications, such as bridge
excitation, tone signaling, signal injection and tracing, and amplifier
testing.
6V
l.Oma 1
SECONDARY
A-F OUTPUT
!Omfd
Feedback from the drain (output) circuit to the gate (input) cir-
cuit is provided by an interstage audio transformer, Tl, which sup-
plies a 2: 1 ( or higher) step-up turns ratio between primary and
secondary windings. This transformer must be polarized correctly
for regenerative feedback, by proper connection of the primary and
secondary.
The oscillation frequency is determined by capacitance Cx and
the inductance of the transformer secondary:
1
f= 21ryLC
where,
f is the oscillation frequency, in hertz,
L is the inductance of the transformer secondary, in henrys,
C is the capacitance of Cx, in farads.
44
Since transformer manufacturers do not usually specify the induc-
tance of windings, this value must be measured-or various ca-
pacitors may be tried as C, until the desired frequency is obtained.
Because of the self-capacitance of the secondary, oscillation will
occur at one frequency when no external capacitor is in the circuit.
and this is the highest frequency at which the circuit will operate.
The feedback amplitude is adjusted with potentiometer Rl. The
latter must be set for best sine-wave output shown by an oscillo-
scope connected to the A-F OUTPUT terminals. Excessive feed-
back overdrives the FET and clips the output-wave peaks; insuffi-
cient feedback causes instability and sluggish starting.
A U.T.C. Type S-8 transformer tested in this circuit gave a fre-
quency of 500 Hz with Cx = .002 mfd, and 1100 Hz with no ex-
ternal capacitor. The open-circuit output voltage was 1 volt rms at
500 Hz, and the current drain 1 ma at 6 vdc. Comparable operation
is possible with some of the smaller, transistor-type transformers.
Since the output is capacitance coupled from the drain circuit
which includes transformer Tl, the external load will tend to de-
tune the oscillator somewhat. This effect can be eliminated, how-
ever, by adding a source follower ( see Chapter 2) to isolate the
oscillator from the load.
The gate electrode of the 2N2608 is internally connected to the
metal case of this FET, so care must be taken in the mounting of the
FET to avoid contact between the case and other components or
wiring. Resistor R2 is 1/2 watt, and electrolytic capacitor Cl is rated
at25 dcwv.
1
f= 21r-../LC
where,
f is the frequency of oscillation, in hertz,
L is the inductance of Ll, in henrys,
C is the capacitance of Cx, in farads.
45
w
Q2ma I.,,,.
"®® @
® 5()()1(
G
@
0.1
@ 300K
G ·[ OUTPUT I
WAVEFORM
ADJUST
0.5 ®
0.1 OUTPUT 2
COMMON
@
+ 22.5V
0.2ma
70K
l
G
A-F OUTPUT
@ 100<
pacitors Cl, C2, and C3, and identical resistors Rl, R2, and R3.
Each leg of this network ( i.e., Cl-Rl, C2-R2, and C3-R3) produces
a 60-degree phase shift. The total 180-degree phase shift thus
introduced in the feedback path from drain to gate of the 2N4338
is correct for the positive feedback needed for oscillation. Oscil-
lation occurs at that frequency at which the phase angle of each
leg of the network is 60 degrees:
1
f = 10.88 RC
where,
f is the frequency of oscillation, in hertz,
R is the resistance of Rl, R2, or R3, in ohms,
C is the capacitance of Cl, C2, or C3, in farads.
47
From this relationship, C = 1/ ( 10.88fR) and R = 1/ ( 10.88fC).
All capacitors and resistors must be rated at 1 percent or better
accuracy.
The network values given in Fig. 3-3 ( Cl = C2 = C3 = .002
mfd, and Rl = R2 = R3 = 100,000 ohms) give a signal frequency
of approximately 460 Hz. The open-circuit output voltage of the cir-
cuit at this frequency is 8 volts rms. Current drain is 0.2 ma at 22.5
vdc.
In this single-stage circuit, the FET must be a strong amplifier
( i.e., its transconductance must be high), or no oscillation will be
obtained. Specifically, the voltage amplification of the circuit must
be high enough to override the insertion loss of the r-c network;
otherwise, the feedback voltage reaching the gate will be insufficient
to set up oscillation.
As in other simple oscillators, the output here is capacitance
coupled from the drain circuit which includes the input end of the
phase-shift network. Because of this, the external load may tend
to detune the oscillator somewhat. This defect may be corrected,
however, by adding a source follower ( see Chapter 2) to isolate
the oscillator from the load.
All wiring must be kept short, rigid, and direct for maximum
stability and minimum stray pickup. However, complete shielding
is unnecessary unless the oscillator is operated in an environment
of strong magnetic fields. But care must be taken to mount the
2N4338 clear of other components and wiring, as the gate electrode
is internally connected to the metal case of this FET and is vulner-
able to capacitive pickup, as well as to short circuits and grounds.
All resistors are 1/2 watt, and electrolytic capacitor C4 is rated at
25 dcwv.
48
@ ® 30K
@
'1
32K l.Omfd
_oo;
@
®
2N4340
l.Omfd
@
2N4340
G
@ 8K @ lmeg D
@ OUTPUT!
WAVEFORM G s
ADJUST f----:9.
l.Omfd OUTPUT 2
@ ,oo;
@ 32K
~ COMMON
\!:V 4K
1
f = 21rRC
where,
f is the oscillation frequency, in hertz,
R is the resistance of Rl, in ohms,
C is the capacitance of Cl, in farads.
DRAIN-COUPLED MULTIVIBRATOR
• 15V
@ llX< ll.4ma
® llX<
@ ® @
@D
2N4340
s
•002
G
.002
G
o@
s
2N4340
·1 OUTPUT
@ IOOK @ IOOK
50
gate of Q2, and the drain of Q2 is coupled through capacitor C2
back to the gate of Ql.
As in the tube circuit, the generated frequency is governed by
the time constants of the cross-coupled r-c legs:
f = 1
2 C2R2
SOURCE-COUPLED MULTIVIBRATOR
ma
@
.001 @
300K
OUTPUT
@ 300K
@ lOK
@
.002
l
------------------0 6V
5.3 ma
1
Li= 39.5 PC
where,
C 1 is capacitance, in microfarads,
L 1 is inductance, in microhenries,
f is frequency, in megahertz.
58
@
C2 and ll: ~-FOUTPUT
@
@+
See Text
2N3823
@
0-C INPUT Ml CURRENT R-f OUTPUT
G (volts) (ma) (v rms)
6 l.40ma 0.40
9 1.41 0. 52
15 2.00 0.80
XTAL @ 22.5 2.50 1.40
® 470K 0-5 0-C
MILLIAIMIETER
D-C INPUT
where,
C2 is capacitance,in microfarads,
L1 is inductance, in microhenries,
f is frequency, in megahertz.
G ®·1RFC
2.5mh 0-C INPUT
(voltsl
6
INPUT
CURRENT
(mal
1.8
R-f OUTPUT
(v, peak)
5
R-f OUTPUT
@ lO(l( 9 2.0 6.6
15 2.6 11.0
D-C INPUT
55
~,!mid
RFC
2.Smh
I G
I
I
I R-F OUTPUT
I
I
I
I
56
henry inductor (United Transformer VIC-15, or equivalent) is used
as shown in Fig. 3-11.
@ lOK
@ I
@
5 hy
~lA-F OUTPUT
(4.5V RMS, NO-LOAD)
WAVEFORM
ADJUST
@ 4.7K
CODE-PRACTICE OSCILLATOR
An interesting application of the Colpitts circuit of the previous
section is the code-practice oscillator shown in Fig. 3-12. In this
unit, the magnetic headphones themselves supply the inductance of
57
the frequency-determining circuit, and no other coil or transformer
is needed.
This oscillator, which employs a single plastic-encapsulated
2N3819 FET (Ql), gives a hefty signal (a maximum output of
4.2 volts rms is developed across a pair of Trimm 2000-ohm mag-
netic headphones). Current drain is 0.8 ma at 9 vdc.
®
lOmeg
® VOWME G
2000 (l
MAGNETIC
HEAOPHO~S
@
@ 2.7K
'N
O.Bma
~----___, .1
With the Trimm phones and with Cl = .01 mfd and C2 = 0.1
mfd, the signal frequency is approximately 1000 Hz. This can be
changed by altering the Cl and C2 values while preserving their
10:1 capacitance ratio; however, limited frequency variation may
also be obtained, without killing oscillation, by varying only C2.
The lower the capacitances, the higher the frequency is and vice
versa.
The oscillator keys cleanly and has a good smooth tone. The
headphone volume may be varied, with only slight effect on the
frequency and waveform, by means of 10-megohm rheostat Rl.
Since there is no current unless the key is depressed, there is no
need for an ON-OFF switch.
Resistor R2 is 1/2 watt. The quality of capacitors Cl and C2 is
not critical in this application, so both capacitors may be of any
type that is convenient to the user. However, if frequency stability
and excellent waveform are demanded, Cl and C2 should be good
grade 100-volt plastic units.
58
4
INffi
@)
1t- 100
!:""'
8
r,t .~i; r.;;,,....
®t~ I ®1:01
l I~
[
I. I I ®±• "·
!I I .......... I
TUNING
@)!1- [ON~
l"
The self-contained ferrite antenna, Ll, is a Miller 2004 ( or
equivalent). Because the FET produces negligible loading, Q 1 is
connected across this entire antenna coil, and an outside antenna
(when used) is connected to the low-impedance tap (ANT), giving
a signal step-up through the autotransformer thus created. The
oscillator transformer, Tl, is a Miller 2020 transistor-type unit ( or
equivalent). Tuning throughout the standard-broadcast band is ac-
complished with dual 365-pf variable capacitor Cl-C3. Trimmer
capacitors C4 and C6 are part of the tuning capacitor, but C2 is
a separate padder with 1200-pf maximum capacitance. During
initial alignment of the receiver, the antenna and oscillator are
trimmed by means of C6 and C4, respectively, and the oscillator
adjusted additionally with the aid of the tuning slug of TL
The converter is coupled to the i-f amplifier through a conven-
tional transistor-type i-f transformer, T2, which is reverse connected,
as shown. The i-f amplifier is fixed-tuned and needs no alignment
adjustments. The self-tuning of the circuit to 455 kHz is provided
by a Clevite TF-OlA ceramic filter (Ml) which replaces the bypass
capacitor across source resistor R4, and by a U. S. Sonics A25H4C
ceramic filter ( M2) inserted between the two i-f stages.
The 1N295 diode, Xl, is a combined second detector and age
rectifier. The volume-control potentiometer ( R9) serves the addi-
tional function of d-c load resistor for this diode, and the age
voltage is taken from the top of the potentiometer and fed back
to the first i-f stage through filter C9-Rl0. The audio component of
the detector output is taken from the potentiometer through cou-
pling capacitor Cl3 and is presented to the gate of the FET driver
(Q4). The class-B coupling transformers are miniature transistor-
type units: Input transformer T3 (Allied Radio 54-D-2389, or
equivalent) has a lOK primary and 3K center-tapped secondary;
output transformer T4 (Allied Radio 54-D-2358, or equivalent) has
a 500-ohm center-tapped primary and a 4-ohm secondary.
The receiver delivers audio-output power of approximately llO
milliwatts to the speaker. With a d-c supply of 9 volts, the current
drain is ll ma at zero signal; the drain is 260 ma when a maximum
signal is received.
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt, and electrolytic capacitors Cl4
and Cl5 are rated at 25 dcwv. Each FET has a fourth pigtail which
is connected to the metal shell internally and must be grounded
as shown.
61
REGENERATIVE BROADCAST RECEIVER
The regenerative broadcast-band receiver circuit shown in Fig.
4-2 will interest experimenters and hobbyists. This circuit, employ-
ing one 2N3578 FET, makes a sensitive receiver which is surpris-
ingly selective for a regenerative setup. It picks up local stations
with a self-contained ferrite loop antenna, Ll, and can bring in
weak and distant stations with an outside antenna and ground.
RFC
ANT @
00-----111----,
2~1 - -......- - - - 1 l----1r---t-4-I
@!i::
FERR 1TE ANTENNA IiII ________ ___
@ 365
TUNING
@
_..
5meg ~f
!!
2000
GND
REGENERATION
The 365-pf variable capacitor, C2, tunes the loop antenna through-
out the standard-broadcast band ( 540-1650 kHz), and the 200-ohm
rheostat, R2, provides smooth control of regeneration from zero to
full oscillation. Very strong stations come in satisfactorily with no
regeneration at all ( i.e., with R2 set to its maximum resistance),
whereas weak stations are missing unless a good deal of regeneration
is used. When the listener is hunting for a very weak station, he
can use maximum regeneration, which will produce a whistle when
the station carrier is located. He then can reduce the regeneration
to the point at which the whistle just disappears.
The circuit operates at battery voltages between 9 volts and 22.5
volts, the higher voltages giving highest sensitivity and loudest sig-
nals. With 2000-ohm headphones in the circuit, the current drain is
3 ma at 9 volts, and 4 ma at 22.5 volts.
For increased volume, as for speaker operation, a suitable transis-
torized audio amplifier may be added to the receiver through a
coupling transformer substituted for the headphones.
62
ALL-WAVE REGENERATIVE RECEIVER
The simplest possible sensitive receiver for all-wave general-
coverage and amateur-band phone and c-w reception is the regen-
erative type. Fig. 4-3A shows the circuit of a receiver of this kind
which tunes from 3.5 to 35 MHz with five plug-in coils.
@
n~
ANT
RFC
(A) Circuit.
l"-DIAA'ETER, 4-PIN FORM
15V
l.6ma
XTAL
BEAT-FREQUENCY OSCILLATOR
In a standard superhet receiver, a beat-frequency oscillator
( bfo) is needed for c-w reception. The usual procedure is to
operate the bfo at the intermediate frequency and to couple its
output into the second detector. A slight detuning of the bfo then
will cause a beat note with the i-f carrier and will make the c-w
signal audible. Fig. 4-5 shows the circuit of a bfo, using a Ul83
FET, which may be used with a receiver having no bfo of its own.
This Colpitts-type circuit operates at 455 kHz, the oscillation
frequency being determined by 2.5-mh inductor Ll ( which may be
a conventional r-f choke of that inductance) and the series-parallel
arrangement of capacitors Cl, C2, and C3. The frequency is set
initially, with C3 set to midcapacitance, by adjustment of the tun-
ing slug in coil Ll ( Miller 21A223RBI, or equivalent). Subsequent
tuning of variable capacitor C3 adjusts the pitch of the beat note
to suit the operator's ear.
66
3-~ 1-FOUTPUT
@~
lK
®r"
I
@ PITCH CONTROL
(See text)
4- ® 5~
@ ~- ®
Ul83
+
6 to 15V
Q-MULTIPLIER
The Q-multiplier is a handy device for boosting the selectivity of
a receiver in either phone or c-w reception. This device is especially
valuable when the receiver has no crystal filter. Regeneration in the
Q-multiplier sharpens the response of the i-f channel so as to peak
a desired signal or reject an undesired one. Fig. 4-6 shows the circuit
67
RFC
TO MIXERrN RECEIVER
@ 5~1 @
@ @~I@
50K I
~
lOKWW +
REGENERATl ON V
6
6ma
""'"RECEIVER GROUND
68
"SELECTOJECT"
The "Selectoject," like the Q-multiplier and the crystal filter, per-
mits either the selection or rejection of a signal but on the basis
of the latter's audio frequency. The "Selectoject" is connected be-
tween a-f stages of a receiver, or between second detector and
audio channel.
Fig. 4-7A shows the circuit of a transistorized "Selectoject" em-
ploying four TIS14 FET's. Fig. 4-7B shows performance of the
circuit. In this arrangement, which is essentially a sharply tuned
a-f amplifier, a dual rheostat ( R4) serves as the tuning control. One
rotation of this control tunes the "Selectoject" from 100 Hz to 10
kHz. Potentiometer R9 serves as the selectivity control ( for adjust-
ing the sharpness of response to suit individual conditions) and
dpdt switch Sl serves as the function switch ( for selecting either
the pass or reject function of the circuit).
With the function switch in its PASS position, the response at the
frequency to which the "Selectoject" is tuned is shown by the solid
curve in Fig. 4-7B. With this switch in its REJECT position, the
response is shown by the dotted curve. The height of the pass curve
or the depth of the reject curve, and the width of either curve, are
controlled by the setting of potentiometer R9, highest selectivity in
either case resulting when R9 is set for maximum gain in FET Q4.
The select/reject response of the circuit results from the fact that
signal through the Q4 stage ( from input to output of the entire
circuit) is negative when the function switch is thrown to REJECT
and therefore cancels the tuned-in signal, whereas this feedback
( this time, from the source of FET Q3 to the input of the circuit)
is positive when the function switch is thrown to PASS, and there-
fore boosts the tuned-in signal. If potentiometer R9 is advanced far
enough when the function switch is set to PASS, the circuit will
oscillate, delivering a sine-wave signal at the frequency to which
tuning control R4 is set.
The resistance of R2 must be selected equal to the resistance of
R3 within 1 percent. Similarly, the resistance of R5 must be selected
equal to the resistance of R6 within 1 percent. Also, the capacitance
of C2 must equal the capacitance of C3 within 1 percent. All fixed
resistors are 1/2 watt.
For stability, all wiring must be kept as short, rigid, and direct as
practicable. A metal case, to which the circuit is grounded, will
69
+ 'N
2ma
1.-
'S'"
A-f OUTPUT
@ 2meg
500K'L------- -------- ___ j /
A-f
INPUT TUNING 500K
@ 2.5K @ 5K
@e
PASS
REJECT REJECT
@ G
SEI.ECTIVllY 500K
(A) Circuit.
,,,, ... , .
/,/REJECT
(B) Performance.
70
shield the "Selectoject" from external fields, and for additional
shielding the fourth pigtail of the TIS14 ( which is internally
connected to the metal case of this FET) must be grounded as
shown. Total current drain is 2 ma at 9 vdc.
A-F INPUT
@ IOK
·7A-F OUTPUT
@• 50mfd
-o------
D-C CONTROi. ON-OFF
@s
VOLTAGE INPUT
I L
6V
+o------
w
+ 54µa -
D-C THRESHOLD D.5ma
VOi.TAG£ INPUT
72
5
Transmitter and
Transmitter-Accessory Circuits
73
Operation of transmitters is regulated by the Federal Communica-
tions Commission (FCC). Be sure you are complying with their
rules and procedures before you attempt to put a signal "on the air."
@ @
G
TUNING
50pf
C
m:wm
'
I
I
@ 47()1( +
+
KEY
c XTAL
.001
0-5 D-C
MILLIAMMETER
L
D-C INPUT
74
adjustments made to the antenna coupler ( if one is used) to "load"
the drain current up to the highest value at which the oscillator
starts readily each time the key is closed. Drain current is 1.40 ma
at 6 vdc, 1.41 ma at 9 vdc, 2.0 ma at 15 vdc, and 2.5 ma at 22.5 vdc.
With an active crystal, the oscillator can be made to act as a
doubler, i.e., tank Ll-C2 may be tuned to twice the crystal fre-
quency. The r-f output will be lower, however, than in straight-
through operation.
In addition to serving as a single-stage transmitter, this circuit
may also be used as the crystal oscillator in a multistage transmitter.
Either inductive or capacitive output coupling may be used in the
latter application.
All wiring must be kept as short and rigid as practicable. And
the fourth pigtail of the 2N3823 (being internally connected to the
metal case of this FET) must be grounded as shown. Resistors Rl
and R2 are 1/2 watt; capacitors Cl and C3 are mica.
@ 100<
75
scribed in the preceding section, except that the U222 circuit em-
ploys shunt feed of the d-c supply through a 2.5-mh r-f choke (LS).
This allows the bottom of the tank circuit, Ll-C4, to be grounded.
Plug-in coil sets (Ll-L2) permit the transmitter to be tuned to any
frequency for which a crystal is available. Each plug-in set consists
of a tank coil (Ll) and link-coupling coil (L2) assembled as a unit.
The 11illen 40,000 series of low-powered single-ended coils provides
sets for the 10-, 20-, 40-, and 80-meter ham bands (the 20-meter set
can be used also for the 21-meter band). For nonham frequencies,
other Ll-L2 coils may be wound to suit individual demands.
The circuit is tuned, with the key depressed and with no antenna
or other load, by adjusting C4 for drain-current dip, as indicated by
0-50 d-c milliammeter Ml. Then, the antenna is connected and any
adjustments made to the antenna coupler (if one is used) to "load"
the drain current up to 35 ma minimum. At this point, the d-c
power input is 0.8 watt. The low-impedance output may be con-
nected directly to a coaxial antenna feeder or may operate into a
suitable antenna coupler.
Like the preceding single-stage transmitter (Fig. 5-1), this one may
serve either as a complete c-w transmitter or as the oscillator of a
multistage b·ansmitter.
Resistors Rl and R2 are 1/2 watt, and capacitors Cl, C2, and
CS are mica. All wiring must be short and rigid, for stability. The
gate electrode of the U222 is internally connected to the metal case
of this FET which accordingly must be kept out of contact with
other components.
TWO-STAGE TRANSMITTER
Fig. 5-3 shows the circuit of a crystal-controlled oscillator-ampli-
fier type of transmitter, employing single-ended stages. A 2N3823
FET is used in the oscillator (Ql) and a U222 FET in the r-f ampli-
fier (Q2). The d-c power input of the amplifier is 0.8 watt.
The oscillator is tuned by tank circuit Ll-C2. Here, Ll is a plug-
in coil chosen to resonate with C2 at the crystal frequency. The
amplifier is tuned by tank circuit L2-C6, and here a plug-in coil
set (L2-L3) is used: L2 resonates with C6 at the crystal frequency,
and LS is a link-coupling coil. For ham bands, the oscillator and
amplifier coils both may be commercial low-powered units, such
as the Millen 40,000 series of single-ended units. For Ll, the main
76
@
@ 2N3823 ,----------11--, ~-
@
0S CIUATOR D
C
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r:
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.001 :
®
0-1 D-C 22.5V
MILLIAMMETER 38ma
'-------------+---0 +
+
-
77
;
en
~
l=- R-F
~ ! I rj
rl®
s @)A1~5~f @
~
~ITTPITT
'= :@u222 @a-r-~
cxJ e: I ,..--.... s
[ I G
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f
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#.
15pl
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0-100 D-C
MILLIAMMETER +
+
22.5V 70ma
i·
ternally connected to the metal case of that FET, so the U222 must
be kept clear of all contact with other components and wiring. All
fixed resistors are 1/2 watt, and all fixed capacitors are mica.
@
®
R-F
INPUT
@ 22.5V
_ 35ma
PUSH-PUSH DOUBLER
The push-push doubler, using two tubes or transistors, gives ap-
proximately twice the r-f power output of the single-ended doubler.
81
@
®al4 R-F
@
--0-.- OUTPUT
,~ ! OUTPUT
@sEI.ECTOR
OSCILIATOR
@ u~
®LI @ 1ST DOUBI.ER
_ u_,@u~
@ 1
I~ .002
_ I(-,@ U222
€9
l .002
2ND D O U B ~ I . £ @ 3RD DOUBI.ER
.,..-t'o------.,
h@ U222i'-----i
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.002T ""
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OUTPUT
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~ I I I I I ( ~ I I I I ~ ~ I I I I ~ ~ I I I I @~l.3
METER SW ITCH
,___ _ _;.;;1D c;;2:.::,D_ _ _---J
0
osc 30
® ® 22.5V
u+
140mal
0-1 D-C MILLIAMMETER
FOUR-BAND EXCITER
Fig. 5-8 shows the circuit of a standard four-band exciter for
ham radio. This arrangement consists of a crystal oscillator (Ql)
followed by three doublers (Q2, Q3, Q4), each stage containing a
single U222 FET. The output (fl) of the oscillator or that of the
doublers (f2, f3, f4) is selected, as desired, by means of the single-
pole, 4-position rotary switch, S2. All r-f outputs are capacitance
coupled (through C4, C9, Cl4, and Cl9, respectively). In a
popular application of this type of exciter, the crystal oscillator
operates in the 80-meter band, and the doublers in the 40-, 20-, and
IO-meter bands, respectively.
The various stages are tuned by means of separate tank capaci-
tors: C2 for the oscillator; C7, first doubler; Cl2, second doubler;
and Cl7, third doubler. Each stage is tuned, in the conventional
manner, starting with the oscillator and progressing through the
exciter, for drain-current dip. For economy in this tuning, a single
0-1 d-c milliammeter (Ml) is switched (by means of Sl) across a
shunt resistor (RS, R6, R9, Rl2) in any stage being adjusted. These
resistances are low enough that they introduce only negligible loss
in the exciter, but multiply the meter to approximately 0-42 ma full
scale. The scheme is much simpler than would be required if the
lines had to be broken to insert the meter and closed after comple-
tion of the measurement. The 1.3-ohm resistors are stock 5 percent
units. Where economy is unimportant, however, a separate 0-50 d-c
milliammeter may be installed in each stage.
The d-c power input is approximately 0.8 watt per stage (35 ma
at 22.5 vdc). Total current drain for the exciter is 140 ma.
All wiring must be kept as short, direct, and rigid as practicable.
All resistors are 1/2 watt, and all fixed capacitors are mica. The
U222's must be kept clear of contact with each other and with wir-
ing and other components, since the gate electrode is internally con-
nected to the metal case of this FET.
BALANCED MODULATOR
For single-sideband operation, the FET makes possible a triode-
type balanced modulator which is compact and low powered. Fig.
5-9 shows such a balanced-modulator circuit employing two
matched 2N4340 FE T's. Note that the a-f (modulating) signal is
84
applied to the gates in push-pull through transformer Tl and that
the r-f (carrier) signal is applied to the sources in parallel through
capacitor C3.
Cancellation of the carrier in the output circuit (only the two
sidebands which result from the modulation remaining) results from
@) 2N4340.--------,
D
G
@ 15K
@ CARRIER
TO
SIDEBAND
!OK BALANCE
FILTER
@2N4340
s @ 15K
G
®r1~,
0
15V
R-F INPUT Lima
l i
Fig. 5-9. Balanced modulator.
85
C-W MONITOR
Fig. 5-10 shows the circuit of a simple monitor for c-w telegraphy.
Requiring no connection to the transmitter and containing its own
power supply, this device may be placed conveniently on the op-
erating desk. It will give a reliable aural check of signal quality, as
well as making the keying audible.
@) 2N3823 D
@ lOOK
'IV 3ma
SPEECH
AMPLIFIER/ MODULATOR
Tm
O-C SUPPLY
The only requirements are that the a-f power output of the mod-
ulator must be at least twice the d-c drain power input of the
transmitter, and that the impedance ( Z.,) of the modulator output
transformer, T 111 , match the impedance of the transmitter. Table 5-1
shows the values of impedance (for each of the applicable h·ans-
mitters in this chapter) which transformer Tm in the modulator must
match. It also shows the a-f output power needed to modulate each
of the transmitters 100 percent. The primary impedance ( Z of the 111 )
Note that the modulation must be applied to the final r-f stage
in the transmitter circuit given in Fig. 5-3.
MILLI AMMETER
KEY JACK @ JACK
.002
+
D-C POWER INPUT
(22.5V)
PHONE MONITOR
A tuned diode detector with headphones is often used to moni-
tor radiophone transmissions. The semiconductor diode has the
advantage in this application that, at least for large signals, its
response is linear, so that it gives a faithful check of the monitored
signal. But its output is relatively low, so that the headphone signal
cannot compete with room noise.
The solution is to use a headphone amplifier following the de-
tector. Fig. 5-13 shows an arrangement of this sort. The advantage
WHIP ANTENNA @)
@
PLUG-IN !OK
COIL @
25mfd
90
Table 5-2. Phone Monitor Coil Data
91
6
Control Circuits
93
D-C RELAY
@
500
G RELAY
10000
Ima
@ IK WIREWOUNO
BALANCE
@) @
lil•P--r---<f'
✓.0---~
6V ON-OFF
r-
500
RELAY
IOOOQ
Ima
BALANCE ~
@ ~
l1I • ~
6V ON--OFF
TOUCH-PLATE RELAY
The touch-plate relay has many commercial, industrial, and
household applications. Touch the metal plate lightly and the relay
closes; remove your finger and the relay opens. Call signals, safety
devices, intrusion alarms, and kindred devices are operated from
such relays.
METAL PLATE
RELAY
lOOOQ
lma
G
,.--------o
t TO
CONTROLLED
200
r
.____ _o
CIRCUIT
@
____,J
lOmeg ®
'N
ON-OFF
96
gible current through the relay ( Sigma 5F, 1000-ohm, 1-ma, or
equivalent). When the plate is touched, enough stray noise is
coupled into the 10-megohm gate circuit to boost the drain current
to approximately 1.7 ma and close the relay. (This assumes a firm
touch; a lighter touch will produce a lower current change, but the
relay will close as long as this current reaches a minimum value
of 1 ma.
If desired, a delayed dropout may be obtained by means of a
capacitor in parallel with the relay coil. With the 1000-ohm coil,
the hold-in is approximately 0.8 second per 1000 mfd of parallel
capacitance.
Resistors Rl and R2 are 1/2 watt. The 2N3819 is a plastic-
encapsulated FET which demands none of the installation pre-
cautions occasioned by metal-cased units.
AMPLIFIED PHOTOCELL
The silicon solar cell ( self-generating type) is basically a low-
voltage, high-current device. In some applications, especially where
high impedances are involved, more convenient control might be
effected if the d-c output voltage of the cell could be boosted and
the cell looked like a high-impedance source.
@
UK
G
'---------0+
D-C
OUTPUT
SOlAR
CELL
SlM
BAlANCE
@ ®
..._--l•l•~r------<l'r:r",
22• SV ON-OFF
97
to 1.6 volts by this arrangement. A particular advantage of a cir-
cuit such as this is the high-resistance load which the FET input
offers to the cell. On rapidly changing light signals and those
modulated at high frequencies, this input avoids the high damping
caused by the low resistances into which such silicon cells usually
operate.
The output half of the circuit is a resistance bridge whose four
arms are Rl, the internal drain-to-source resistance of the FET, and
the two halves of potentiometer R2. With the solar cell completely
darkened, R2 is set to balance the static voltage from the D-C
OUTPUT terminals ( a d-c vtvm temporarily connected to the
output terminals will serve as a balance indicator). At the balance
point, the indicator will read zero, and the bridge should then
remain balanced indefinitely without further attention.
Subsequent illumination of the cell will unbalance the bridge
because the d-c output voltage of the cell changes the drain-to-
source resistance of the FET. This will cause 1.6 volts to appear at
the D-C OUTPUT terminals. ( This level of output voltage will
maintain itself across a 20,000-ohm load.)
Wiring is uncritical. Resistor Rl is 1/2 watt, and potentiometer
R2 is 1 watt. The fourth pigtail of the U183 is internally connected
to the metal case of this FET and should be grounded as shown.
Total current drawn from the 22.5-volt source ( M 1) is 24 ma.
PHOTO-FET RELAY
The photo-FET ( photoelectric field-effect transistor) has several
advantages over photodiodes and bipolar phototransistors. It com-
bines, for example, the functions of self-generating photojunction
and high-impedance-input amplifier. And it provides high ampli-
fication at low noise level ( 0.5-db typical noise).
Fig. 6-5 shows the circuit of a light-sensitive relay employing a
P-102 photo-FET. Note that this is a P-type field-effect transistor.
The P-102 has a built-in lens, which greatly simplifies application.
In this arrangement, the dark current in the photo-FET drain
circuit is approximately 300 µa. When the FET is illuminated at
only 10 foot-candles, the drain current increases to approximately
1.6 ma, more than enough to close the 2500-ohm, 1.4-ma d-c relay
( Sigma 5F, or equivalent). If desired, a delayed dropout may be
obtained by means of a capacitor in parallel with the relay coil.
98
With the 2500-ohm coil shown, the hold-in is approximately 2.75
seconds per 1000 mfd of parallel capacitance. Current drain on the
1.5-volt gate-bias source, Ml, is less than 0.1 microampere.
REVIY
2500Q
l.4ma
D
0
® lOmeg
s
i TO
CONTROLLED
@11-1,zv 1
@)-;;-w
TIMER
Resistance-capacitance-controlled timers have been built with
vacuum tubes, thyratron tubes, bipolar transistors of all types, and
with no tubes or other active devices whatever. The bipolar-transis-
tor circuits, while offering the advantage of compactness, small size,
light weight, freedom from the power line, and zero heat generation,
have been troublesome to design because the low-impedance tran-
sistors load the r-c timing circuit and impose undesirable limitations
on it. The high input impedance of the field-effect transistor, how-
ever, allows vacuum-tube performance to be attained in solid-state
electronic timers.
Fig. 6-6 shows the circuit of a timer employing a single Ul83
FET. This is essentially a bridge-balanced d-c amplifier, with a
relay in its output circuit, which receives its driving signal from a
charged capacitor discharging through an adjustable resistor. It
provides a hold-in of the relay that ranges from 1 second to 80
seconds, as selected by adjustment of the resistance.
99
The timing interval is determined by the number of seconds taken
by 100-mfd capacitor Cl, after being fully charged, to discharge
through rheostat Rl to 0.4 of its charged voltage. This capacitor is
charged by momentarily depressing push-button switch SL This
connects Cl to a 1.5-volt tap on resistor R2. When released, the
push-button blade returns to its normal position against the upper
contact, and this connects the charged capacitor to rheostat Rl and
the gate of the FET.
The 1000-ohm, 1-ma d-c relay (Sigma 5F, or equivalent) is con-
nected in a resistance bridge whose four arms are R3, the internal
drain-to-source resistance of the FET, and the two halves of po-
tentiometer R4. With capacitor Cl completely discharged, R4 is
@
500
® G RELAY
10000
I Ima
PUSHBUTTON
TO
® + IOOmfd
lmeg
TIMING
CONTROLl£D
CIRCUIT
@ IK WIREWOUND
BALANCE
@ ®
'-----~l•i=-1*----✓
W ON--OFF
!Oma
Fig. 6-6. Timer.
set to balance the static FET current out of the relay ( at balance,
the relay opens firmly), and the bridge then should remain balanced
indefinitely without further attention.
To use the timer, depress Sl, charging capacitor Cl. Then re-
lease this switch, whereupon the relay will pick up immediately,
since the negative voltage presented to the FET gate by the
charged capacitor unbalances the bridge, causing current through
the relay. The relay will hold in until the capacitor has discharged
sufficiently ( through rheostat Rl) to reduce the gate voltage to
0.4 of its value at full charge of the capacitor. This time interval
100
depends on the resistance setting of Rl, and the rheostat accord-
ingly may be calibrated to read directly in seconds. This may be
done with a stopwatch, or the time ( t in seconds) may be calculated
approximately from the resistance setting ( Rl in ohms), the ca-
pacitance ( Cl in farads), and a multiplier ( 0.8 for the relay speci-
fied here). Thus:
101
negative. Some devices in which a voltage-variable resistor is
advantageous are voltage regulators, signal translators, voltage-
tuned frequency-sensitive r-c networks, voltage-tuned audio oscil-
lators, remote-control devices, temperature transducers, and remote
volume controls.
Fig. 6-7B shows performance of the resistor when the voltage
between C and D is 15 volts. Note that the resistance varies from
G
- A C + (A) Circuit.
D-C RESISTOR
CONTROL
VOLTAGE TERMINALS
+ B D -
10
,____VDS • 15vdc
lma=
8
7.5ma
...
<!)
lOma
~6 I
0
>
_, 18ma
§
z4 2lma
8
c.,
I
Q
2 26ma
0 30ma
100 lK 111(
RES ISTANCE (OHMS)
(B) Performance.
102
500 ohms ( when the control voltage is zero) to 15,000 ohms ( when
the control voltage is - 8 volts). Other resistance ranges are ob-
tained when the C-D voltage is some value other than 15 volts.
The power-handling capability of the variable FET resistor cor-
responds to the rated power dissipation of the FET. ( The manu-
facturer gives 300 mw as the absolute maximum device dissipation
for the U222 at 25°C free-air temperature). Note that the corres-
ponding drain-current values are given along the curve in Fig. 6-7B.
When using any FET as a voltage-variable resistor, keep well
within the maximum safe drain-to-source voltage, drain-current,
and device-dissipation ratings supplied by the FET manufacturer.
The "resistor" may be calibrated by successively applying the vari-
ous intended values of bias voltage and noting the corresponding
drain current. The resistance is calculated at each point as VD/In,
where VD is the instantaneous drain-to-source voltage ( in volts)
and ID is the corresponding drain current (in amperes).
CONSTANT-CURRENT SOURCE
The pentodelike drain-voltage/drain-current characteristic curves
of the FET suit this component for use as a constant-current
adapter. Fig. 6-8 shows the circuit of such an adapter employing a
TIX33 FET.
@
+
D-50 D-C
MILLIMIMrnR
ADAPTER
TERMINALS
B -
CURRENT
ADJUST
Go
r-c~~ROLI..ED
~ c u 1r
104
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt. Capacitors Cl, C3, C5, and C6
are 100-volt plastic units, and C2 and C4 are 25-dcwv electrolytics.
For stability, all wiring must be kept as short, direct, and rigid as
practicable, and the entire unit should be enclosed in a grounded
shield box if interfering fields are present. A fourth pigtail of the
2N4868 is internally connected to the metal shell of this FET and
must be grounded as shown, for shielding. In the 2N4340, the gate
electrode is internally connected to the metal case, so this FET
must be mounted clear of chassis, wiring, and other components.
Signal input leads to the A-C INPUT terminals should be shielded.
SOUND-OPERATED RELAY
Fig. 6-10 shows the circuit of a sound-operated relay based on
two 2N4868 FETs (Ql, Q2) and one 0183 FET (Q3). With this
arrangement, a microphone output signal of 1.8 millivolts rms
( -52.5 db) will close the 1-ma, 1000-ohm d-c relay (Kl) when
sensitivity control R4 is set to maximum.
®)
• 'NI
ON~~~-,,,-
R9
TO
CONTROU£D
(§ CIRCUIT
IKW.W,
ZERO SET
105
amplifier which drives a 1-ma, IOOO-ohm d-c relay ( Sigma 5F, or
equivalent). Current drain is 12 ma at 9 vdc.
Initial adjustment of the circuit consists of balancing the static
drain current of the Ul83 out of the relay:
- 'N
5.5ma 1
+
®) OtHlFF .,,,-
®
·~
A-F OUTPUT
@ lmeg @ 330
C2 + 50mfd
106
MODULATED-LIGHT DETECTOR/ AMPLIFIER
The P-102 photo-FET is a good detector of modulated light
( either chopped or smoothly modulated), and its a-f output is
easily amplified. Fig. 6-11 shows a circuit composed of a P-102
photo-FET (Ql) and a 2N3578 P-channel FET (Q2) as an a-f
amplifier.
The sensitivity of this circuit is such that 15 foot-candles of light
modulated or chopped at a 1000-Hz rate will produce 1 volt rms
(no load) at the A-F OUTPUT terminals when potentiometer R4
is set for maximum gain. Current drain is 5.5 ma at 9 vdc.
The detector/amplifier has many uses, such as light-beam com-
munication, alarm signaling, intrusion alarm service, sound-on-film
pickup, and optoelectronic control. The virtually zero loading of the
photo-FET by the amplifier results in maximum efficiency of the
P-102, while the amplifier produces a useful output-signal ampli-
tude for direct application or further amplification.
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt. Capacitors Cl and C3 are 100-volt
plastic units, and C2 is a 25-dcwv electrolytic. In both the P-102
and the 2N3578, the gate electrode is internally connected to the
metal case of the FET, so each of these units must be mounted clear
of other components, chassis, and wiring. The P-102 must be posi-
tioned so that its nose-end lens faces the incoming light. All wiring
must be as short, rigid, and direct as practicable.
PHASE SHIFTER
The circuit given in Fig. 6-12, combining a triode phase inverter
and an adjustable r-c circuit, provides continuously variable phase
shift from O to 180 degrees while leaving the signal amplitude
virtually untouched.
This arrangement, based on one 2N3578 FET (Ql), has equal
fixed resistances ( R2 and R3, matched within 1 percent) in both
drain and source legs. When rheostat R4 is set to one end of its
range, the output is taken from the source of Q 1 and is in the same
phase as the input signal ( Ql is then acting as a source follower);
therefore, there is zero phase shift between output and input. But
when R4 is set to the opposite end of its range, the output is taken
from the drain of Q 1 and is of opposite phase from the input ( Q 1
then is acting as a conventional triode amplifier); therefore, there
107
is then 180 degrees phase shift between output and input. At in-
termediate settings of R4, the various phase angles between 0 and
180 degrees are obtained. Two identical stages may be cascaded for
0 to 360 degrees phase shift.
The circuit provides good, full-range operation between 150 Hz
and 5 kHz. Below 150 Hz and above 5 kHz, inherent phase shifts
in the circuit and components restrict the range to limits somewhat
higher than zero degrees on one end and somewhat lower than
180 degrees on the other. However, some improvement may be
obtained by careful attention to lead dress and shortness of leads,
and to minimizing stray capacitances.
For undistorted operation, the maximum input-signal amplitude
is 2 volts rms. With potentiometer Rl set for maximum gain the
corresponding output-signal amplitude is 0.75 volt rms. Current
drain is 1 ma at 9 vdc.
@ OUTPUT
----..-<SOOK
INPUT
® PHASE SHIFT
•CLOSELY MATCHED
108
degrees by means of Lissajous figures. For this purpose, connect
an audio-frequency signal generator to the INPUT terminals and
to the vertical-amplifier input terminals of an oscilloscope having
excellent phase characteristics, and connect the OUTPUT termi-
nals of the phase shifter to the horizontal-amplifier input of the
oscilloscope.
109
7
Instrument Circuits
Solid-state test equipment has long been prized for its complete
portability, electrically clean operation, and total isolation from
the power line. In all classes of such equipment, the bipolar transis-
tor, often in company with the semiconductor diode, brought about
many improvements. However, its use generally necessitated design
compromises. But the FET, being more nearly like the vacuum tube,
demands few compromises in the transistorizing of standard in-
strument circuits.
The electronic voltmeter is a clear example of successful tran-
sistorization via the field-effect transistor. Here, the FET has faith-
fully preserved the high input resistance ( 1 megohm or more per
volt) which is characteristic of the vacuum-tube voltmeter, whereas
transistorization via the bipolar transistor usul,llly afforded an input
resistance of only 100,000 ohms per volt. Another example is the
highly useful dip oscillator; in this instrument, the FET provides the
same high sensitivity and excellent selectivity that is characteristic
of the grid-dip oscillator.
This chapter describes several simple instruments which are made
efficient, reliable, and completely portable by the FET. For circuits
lll
in other chapters, which may be used for instrumentation, see Figs.
2-11, 2-12, 2-13, 3-1, 3-2, 3-3, 3-4, 3-7, 3-8, 3-9, 3-10, 4-7, 5-10, and
6-6.
.-------o0.5V
@ 5meg
IV
- J!@) 4meg @)
I +
I
I
5V
I 2K
I
I @ 500K
10,,@ @)
I
I
I Imeg G
@ CALI BRAT ION
I
I @ 400K RANGE s 50K
I
I
50,, WI REWOUND
iSHIELDED
i CABLE
I
@ 50K • ®r-002
I
I
HXN
I +
I
I
I
I
® 40K
500,,
I 0-50 D-C
I
I
I
@ 5K MI CROAMMETER
l(JO(JI/
I®
II
lmeg @ SK
II
II
II GND ZERO-SET
PROBE
- @ @
11•
1 ✓
9V ON-OFF
2.Sma
Fig. 7-1. Electronic d-c voltmeter (single FET).
The instrument covers Oto 1000 volts in eight ranges: 0-0.5, 0-1,
0-5, 0-10, 0-50, 0-100, 0-500, and 0-1000 selected with single-pole,
8-position, nonshorting rotary switch SL The range resistors ( R2
to R9) in the input voltage-divider string must be accurate to at
least I percent. Some of these ( 400K and 4 meg) are not stock
values and must be made up by series-connecting available resistors
( SOOK + IOOK, and 3 meg + I meg, respectively). Linearity of
response is within +2 percent of full scale.
112
Resistor RlO and capacitor Cl form a filter to remove any stray
fluctuations picked up by the test leads. Rheostat Rll is the
CALIBRATION control mounted safely inside the instrument case,
and potentiometer Rl3 is the front-panel ZERO-SET.
The 0-50-microampere scale of meter Ml reads direct on the 50-
volt range and is read on the 0.5-, 5-, 50-, and 500-volt ranges
by mentally shifting the decimal point, as required. On the 1-, 10-,
100-, and 1000-volt ranges, however, the readings must be mentally
multiplied by 2 or some multiple of 2 (by 0.02 for the 1-volt, by
0.2 for the 10-volt, by 2 for the 100-volt, and by 20 for the 1000-volt
range).
To calibrate the instrument:
113
0.5V
@ 5meg
"1 lV
~·
--1
~
I
t!l
;-
f-
If
11
11
11
11
1®®
"@
4meg
500<
5v® (§
RANGE lmeg G
D
I I• t ~ t -., ~BALANCE
11
@ 1 .001
& 11
11 10\/ @
HI
0 11
::, 11
f-""
f-""
i;·
i:i.
I,
11
11
11
11 50\/
1
"
CALIBRATION
0-50 D-C
,I>,. 11
<
0 i iSHIELDED. 50K MICROAMMETER
i i CABLE
f 11
100\/ @) lOK @ lOK
.
t'I>
it
c"
11
11
11
11
11 500\/ ZERO-SET
@~
9V
e. 11 l.2ma
Ii>
::, "@
RI
;
(')
1000\/
lmeg
11
II 5K
11 GND
PROBE
• MATCHED PAIR
preceding section. The balanced circuit exhibits less temperature
drift, and therefore requires fewer zero resettings than in the
simpler circuit. It also draws less current from the power supply
during normal operation.
Fig. 7-2 shows a balanced d-c voltmeter circuit employing two
2N4340 FET's. For best results, these FET's must be matched,
and may be so obtained from the manufacturer. The circuit is
essentially that of a resistance bridge, the four arms of which are
(1) the internal drain-to-source resistance of FET Ql, (2) the in-
ternal drain-to-source resistance of FET Q2, ( 3) Rll and that part
of Rl4 to the left of the slider, and ( 4) Rl3 and that part of Rl4
to the right of the slider. Adjustment of potentiometer Rl4 balances
the bridge and thus zeroes the meter. Application of a test voltage
to the gate of Q 1 ( through the input terminals of the instrument)
changes the internal resistance of Ql, unbalancing the bridge, and
causes the meter to deflect.
The instrument covers 0 to 1000 volts in eight ranges: 0-0.5, 0-1,
0-5, 0-10, 0-50, 0-100, 0-500, and 0-1000 volts selected with single-
pole, 8-position, nonshorting rotary switch SL The range resistors
( R2 to R9) must be accurate to at least 1 percent. Some of these
( 400K and 4 meg) are not stock values and must be made up by
series-connecting available resistors ( SOOK + lO0K, and 3 meg + 1
meg, respectively). Linearity of response is within + 2 percent of
full scale. The input resistance of the instrument is constant at ll
megohms on all ranges ( 1 megohm of this is accounted for by the
isolating resistor, Rl, in the test probe).
Resistor Rl0 and capacitor Cl form a filter to remove any stray
fluctuations picked up by the test leads. Rheostat Rl2 is the
CALIBRATION control mounted safely inside the instrument case,
and potentiometer Rl4 is the front-panel ZERO-SET. Potentiometer
Rl5 ( also mounted safely inside the case) is used to balance the
circuit by varying the grid bias on Q2 before the instrument is
placed into service.
The 0-50--microampere scale of meter Ml reads direct on the
0-50--volt range and is easily read on the 0.5-, 5-, 50-, and 500-volt
ranges by mentally shifting the decimal point, as required. On the
1-, 10-, 100-, and 1000-volt ranges, however, the reading must be
multiplied by 2 or some multiple of 2 (by 0.02 for the 1-volt, by 0.2
for the 10-volt, by 2 for the 100-volt, and by 20 for the 1000-volt
range).
ll5
The circuit must be initially balanced in the following manner:
116
All fixed resistors are 1 watt, variable resistors Rl2 and Rl4 both
are wirewound, and variable resistor Rl5 ( because of its high re-
sistance) is a composition type. Rl2 and Rl5 each should have a
slotted shaft for screwdriver adjustment. Capacitor Cl may be
mica or ceramic. The 2N4340's must be kept clear of contact with
each other or with the chassis, wiring, or other components, since
the gate electrode is internally connected to the metal case of this
FET. Current drain from the 9-volt battery, ~2, is 1.2 ma.
® ON-OFF
.-----<r
®
----.!,l•I•
o-o
'N 0.4ma
@ @ CALIBRATIO;
SrN
lrN
50V @
SK
@ 1N34A
0-50 D-C
!OrN
+ MI CROAMMETER
@ 4K
50rN
@ 500 @)
lOOrN
+
@ 500 @ Sllmfd
117
( Rl to RB) must be accurate to at least 1 percent. Two of these
( 400K and 4 meg) are not stock values and must be made up by
series-connecting available resistors ( 300K + lOOK, and 3 meg + 1
meg, respectively). Linearity of response is within 5 percent of
full scale. Frequency response, referred to 1 kHz, is down 3.5 db at
50 Hz and 2 db at 50 kHz.
The circuit is the conventional amplifier-rectifier arrangement: the
signal is amplified first by the FET and then is rectified by the two
germanium diodes ( Xl, X2). The d-c output of the diodes is more
than sufficient to drive meter Ml to full scale when a signal voltage
of 0.5 volt rms is applied to the A-C INPUT terminals. The meter
deflection is proportional to the average value of the a-c signal
voltage, but the meter may be calibrated to read rms voltage on a
sine-wave basis.
No zero adjustment is needed. Rheostat Rl2, the CALIBRATION
control, is mounted safely inside the instrument case to protect it
from tampering after the instrument has been calibrated.
The 0-50-microampere scale of the meter reads direct on the
0-50-volt range, and is easily read on the 0.5-, 5-, 50-, and 500-volt
ranges by mentally shifting the decimal point, as required. On the
1-, 10-, 100-, and 1000-volt ranges, however, the reading must be
mentally multiplied by 2 or some multiple of 2 ( by 0.02 for the 1-
volt, by 0.2 for the 10-volt, by 2 for the 100-volt, and by 20 for the
1000-volt range).
Calibrate the instrument in the following manner:
f'
A-C
INPUT
@
@
@
HN
100,I
@ 0.5meg @ IN34A
@
0-50 o-c
@ + MICROAMMETER
1000,I @ @ 3.3K
+
@ @ 50mfd
Based on one 2N4868 FET (Ql) and one 2N4340 FET (Q2),
the instrument covers O to 1000 volts rms in five ranges: 0-0.1, 0-1,
0-10, 0-100, and 0-1000, selected with the single-pole, 5-position,
nonshorting rotary switch S1. The range resistors ( Rl to R5) must
be accurate to at least 1 percent. One of these ( R5) is not a stock
value and must be made up by series-connecting one 100- and one
11-ohm resistor. (This odd resistance makes it possible to hold the
other four resistors to stock values. ) Frequency response, referred to
1 kHz, is down 4 db at 50 Hz and 3 db at 50 kHz. Linearity is
within 5 percent of full scale on each range.
119
Like the simpler a-c voltmeter (Fig. 7-3 ), this instrument uses
the conventional amplifier-rectifier arrangement: the signal is ampli-
fied by the two FET's (Ql, Q2), then is rectified by two germanium
diodes (Xl, X2) whose d-c output drives microammeter Ml. De-
flection of the meter is proportional to the average value of the
a-c signal voltage, but the meter may be calibrated to read rms
voltage on a sine-wave basis.
No zero adjustment is needed. Rheostat Rll, the CALIBRATION
control, is mounted safely inside the instrument case to protect it
from tampering after the meter has been calibrated.
Unless special scales are drawn for the meter, voltages must be
determined from the 0-50-microampere scale by mentally multiply-
ing the deflection by some multiple of 2 (by 0.002 for the 0.1-volt,
by 0.02 for the 1 volt, by 0.2 for the 10-volt, by 2 for the 100-volt
and by 20 for the 1000-volt range).
Calibrate the instrument in the following manner:
G
@
@ 470K 1.7-2. 9 µh 19-4lµh
l(XXJ kHz
IOOkHz R-f
@A _FREQUENCY SELECTOR _______________ _ OUTPUT
!OOkHz !OOOkHz
@s ®
ON-0~
XTAL-1
OOOkHzl .001
Q16V
\51-=- 0.8ma
121
of the signals. Capacitors C3, C4, and C7 are mica; C5 and C6 are
silvered mica. The fourth pigtail of the 2N3823 is internally con-
nected to the metal case of this FET and must be grounded as
shown. Current drain from the 6-volt battery, Ml, is 0.8 ma.
122
IOO-kH z OUTPUT ID-kHz OUTPUT
l'!j
qa·
~
I
!')
....
g (rii)
11 ®t«D~
@T.oooI
@
~® MIIITll/1::TnD ® ~~ M?
~
'....0
~ G " @.L @ IS~ I I '-/IS
N .001 1. 7-1
~ "'
~r !
(I)
I') 2.9ph
l @ 470K @.L ®
~ TOOl ~ @ 25K IO-kHz
ON-OFF
XTAL _
;f (IOOdizl
g Kc1 J:;::.s~
!
g
Q.,
~ l 1 -~ µ·"'
C2 J:OOl j l j j@
~~F
®
are silvered mica. Potentiometer R5 is wirewound and provided
with a slotted shaft for screwdriver adjustment; it should be
mounted safely inside the instrument case to protect it from tamper-
ing. The fourth pigtail of the 2N3823 is internally connected to the
metal case of this FET and must be grounded as shown. The gate
electrode of the 2N4340 is internally connected to the metal case in
the latter FET, however, so both 2N4340's must be kept clear of
contact with each other or with wiring, chassis, or other components.
Total current drain from the 6-volt battery, Ml, is 2.2 ma.
CALIBRATION CONTROLS
A.
RANGES
OtolOOHz
@ @
B. oto 1 kHz f--:o A
C. Oto 10 kHz @0.1
D. Oto 100 kHz f--<, B
2K @)"°1
----I
f:ool°C RANGE
@ D ,,-----7
r-. @
s
®
.0001
ON--OFF@
@A
l
SIGNAL 1N34A
INPUT
@ lmeg@ 5K @_ 9V
@ -uma
50mfd
124
meter Ml, and the indication is independent of signal amplitude
from 1.7 volts rms upward and is independent of waveform over a
wide range. The response is linear; hence, only one point need be
calibrated in each frequency range.
The circuit exploits the same principle employed in some tube-
type frequency meters: It is essentially two overdriven amplifier
stages in cascade. The output of the last stage accordingly is a
square wave which is applied to an r-c circuit ( R6-R9 and C4-C7)
and diode rectifiers Xl and X2. Since the square wave is limited
( i.e., of constant amplitude), the deflection of meter Ml depends
only on the number of pulses passing through this meter during
each second, so is directly proportional to the pulse frequency.
The frequency meter must be calibrated at one point in each of
its four ranges ( the best point is the top frequency in each range).
Rheostats R6, R7, RS, and R9 are the CALIBRATION controls,
and these units are provided with slotted shafts for a screwdriver.
They are also mounted safely inside the instrument case to protect
them from tampering. Follow this calibration procedure:
125
should be reasonably accurate, any deviation in capacitance will be
compensated by adjustment of the calibration controls ( R6 to R9).
The fourth pigtail of the 2N4868 is internally connected to the
metal case of this FET and must be grounded as shown. In the
2N4340, however, the metal case is internally connected to the
gate electrode, so this latter FET must be kept clear of contact
with wiring, other components, or chassis. Current drain from the
9-volt battery, M2, is 1.4 ma.
XTAL
G ,!1
@
19-41 µh
@ 470K
@ 2K + 6V
@ @
.001 • 001
I G
'
A' ,,
I
I
I
B C D
FEEDBACK
@
20meg
@@
200K 2(1( @) 4K
ADJUST
@ ©
IK
PWG-IN COIL
lSEE TABLE 7-U
0-50 D-C
+ MI CROAIMIETER
130
range. Adjustment of rheostat Rl, however, enables the operator to
set the pointer of Ml to a desirable point on the scale before tuning
for dip. This rheostat also provides some degree of volume control
when the instrument is used with headphones.
A-F MILLIAMMETER
Fig. 7-11 shows the circuit of an audio-frequency milliammeter,
based on a single 2N4868 FET ( Q1), which covers the current
range 0 to 500 ma in seven full-scale ranges: 0.5, 1, 5, 10, 50, 100,
and 500 milliamperes. A 2-pole, 7-position, rotary selector switch
( Sl) switches in the appropriate values of shunt resistance ( Rl to
R7). The double-pole switching guarantees that the circuit is never
RANGE
,------------------, ®
J +
9V
0.4ma1
ON-OFF.
-
@A/ @s/
® 500 0.5ma@
Ima I
meg
@ 400
5ma
@ 50
A-F !Oma
INPUT @ 40
50ma
® IN34A
0-50
@5
o-c
Ml CROAMMETER
!OOma
@4
500ma
® 5K
.@
@ 1.0
50mfd
\
\
'\ ~
\
0.001 0.1 10 1000
134
4. Starting at the botom of the lowest frequency range, tune the
oscillator slowly throughout its ranges until a sharp deflection
of meter Ml occurs. Adjust the oscillator output control and
gain-control potentiometer Rl to bring this deflection close to
full scale of the meter.
5. At this point of peak deflection, read the frequency from the
oscillator dial.
6. For close results, calculate the inductance:
1
L, = -(-3-95-f~2 -X-l~0--9 ~)
where,
Lx is the unknown inductance, in henrys,
f is the oscillator frequency, in hertz.
7. For approximate results, eliminating calculations, use the chart
given in Fig. 7-13.
@ MAIN ADJUSTMENT
X
TO UNKNOWN
@ CAPACITANCE
. 0001 X
@
® ON-OFF
XTAL
1MHz
@~,,,
t -_ _ _....,_ _ _ ._
001_ _
12ma
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,MICROAMMETER
0-50 D-C
135
This arrangement employs a 1-MHz crystal oscillator based on a
2N3823 FET (Ql). The fix-tuned oscillator tank (Ll-C2) is link-
coupled to the resonant measuring circuit, which is composed of
inductor L4, trimmer C4, variable capacitor C5, and unknown ca-
pacitance Cx connected to terminals X-X. A simple r-f voltmeter
( consisting of germanium diode Xl, rheostat RS, microammeter
Ml, and r-f bypass capacitor C6) is connected across the measuring
circuit as a resonance indicator. Both C4 and C5 are provided with
calibrated dials reading directly in picofarads. The oscillator coil
( Ll) and the measuring-circuit coil ( L4) are slug-tuned units
(Ll, adjusted to 250 µ,h, Miller No. 20A224RBI; L4, adjusted to 60
µ,h, Miller No. 41A685CBI). L2 and LS are link-coupling coils which
must be provided by the builder; each consists of 2 turns of insu-
lated hookup wire closewound near the bottom ends of Ll and L4,
respectively.
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt. Capacitors Cl, CS, and C6 are
mica; C2 is silvered mica. All wiring must be short, direct, and
rigid. Moreover, the wiring in the measuring circuit ( i.e., between
L4, C4, C5, and terminals X-X) must be straight, solid No. 14 bus.
A fourth pigtail of the 2N3823 is internally connected to the metal
case of this FET and must be grounded as shown, for shielding.
Total current drain is 12 ma at 15 vdc.
After the assembly has been completed and the wiring verified,
the crystal oscillator must be initially adjusted:
IMPEDANCE METER
Fig. 7-15 shows the circuit of an impedance meter which employs
a widely used principle of measurement: an a-f voltage is applied
137
to an unknown impedance ( Z) in series with a calibrated variable
resistor ( R), and the voltage drops ( Ez and Er) across Z and R,
respectively, are checked separately with an electronic voltmeter
while R is varied. When the voltage drops are equal ( i.e., Ez =
Er), Z = R and may be read directly from the calibrated dial of
the variable resistor.
MAIN
CONTROL
®
® @ IN34A l.Omfd @@ A
@ 1----o---:-B
"811
!OK W.W. .I
INPUT lmeg
@ IN34A
@.
®
ON-
@ 5K
.@@
lmeg
SENSITIVITY
OFF 50mld
MI CROAMMETER
X X +
9V
TO 0.4ma
UNKNOWN IMPEDANCE
138
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt. Rheostat Rl is wirewound and
must have a dial reading directly in ohms. Capacitors Cl and C3
are 100-volt plastic units; C2 is a 25-dcwv electrolytic. Transformer
Tl may be any convenient unit having a 1:1, 2:1, or 3:1 turns ratio,
and preferably should be shielded.
All wiring must be as short, rigid, and direct as practicable.
Overall shielding is desirable but not mandatory. A fourth pigtail
of the 2N4868 is internally connected to the metal case of this FET
and must be grounded as shown, for shielding.
Use this instrument in the following manner:
® 0
RFC 1 2.5 mh
@
TUNING
® ON-Off
I
+ 'N -
6.5ma
The oscillator output is coupled, through L2, into the diode mixer
simultaneously with the unknown r-f signal ( coupled through ca-
pacitor C5). A beat note between the two signals is generated in
the mixer and is transmitted to the a-f amplifier through coupling
capacitor C7. The latter also serves to block the diode d-c com-
ponent from the TIS14 gate. Magnetic headphones, plugged into
jack Jl, complete the TIS14 drain circuit and make the beat note
audible. Other beat-note indicators, such as a vtvm, oscilloscope,
140
magic-eye tube, or audio-frequency meter, may be used, provided
Jl is shunted by a 2000-ohm resistor to complete the TIS14 d-c
circuit.
The instrument draws 6.5 ma at 9 vdc. This value is constant for
zero signal and maximum signal.
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt. Capacitors Cl, C5, and C6 are
mica; C2 is silvered mica. C7 is a 100-volt plastic unit, and C8 a
25-dcwv electrolytic.
The oscillator tuning unit ( Ll-C3-C4) must be stoutly built, and
the entire oscillator stage should be enclosed in a grounded shield
box. All wiring must be as short, direct, and rigid as practicable. A
fourth pigtail of both the 2N3823 and the TIS14 is internally con-
nected to the metal case of these FET's and must be grounded as
shown, for shielding.
Main tuning capacitor C4 must be provided with a dial calibrated
to read directly in frequency-1000 to 2000 kHz. One way to cali-
brate this dial is to feed an accurate, unmodulated r-f signal-
generator output into the R-F SIGNAL INPUT terminals, set C3 to
midcapacitance, set the generator successively to as many frequen-
cies as practicable between 1000 and 2000 kHz, and at each
frequency set C4 to zero beat ( as indicated by headphone signal)
and inscribe the C4 dial with the corresponding frequency. This
calibration then may be checked more precisely by replacing the
generator with a 100-kHz crystal oscillator, which will set up an
accurate spot frequency each 100 kHz across the C4 dial. To
standardize the oscillator in the future, it is only necessary to feed
in the 100-kHz oscillator, set the C4 dial to its 1000-kHz point, and
adjust trimmer C3 for zero beat. Since C3 needs no constant adjust-
ment, it should be mounted inside the instrument case, where it
will be safe from disturbance, and should be provided with a slotted
shaft for screwdriver adjustment.
On second harmonics, the 1 to 2-MHz C4 dial covers 2 to 4 MHz,
on twentieth harmonics 20 to 40 MHz, and so on. Similarly, on the
second "subharmonic" the dial covers 500 to 1000 kHz.
HARMONIC-DISTORTION METER
A harmonic-distortion meter is convenient for measuring the total
distortion of an audio amplifier, a component, or a network. A pure
sine-wave signal is applied to the input of the device under test and
141
I
+ 12V -
®C· 2.2mal
--------------------r------------7
VOLTMETER Q
CALIBRATION l!9,
~
®fQ( W.W.
@.20meg ©
!:l
~
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.... @ @@
r·
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@)20meg I !meg
i ,i.
•-······-1 •B@ I
I
400 pf
@2meg B
'VOLTMETER
RANGE
8 @ @ZOQ( @s
51 A-F
lmeg C
a INPUT
SENSITIVITY
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Il)
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1.0
mid
@~2K
l RANGES
@~2K
f
A. 20-200 Hz
. t
@~2K
I
B. 200-2000 Hz
C. 2-20 kHz
the distortion meter is connected to the output. The meter is tuned
to suppress the fundamental frequency of the test signal. The self-
contained electronic-voltmeter section of the instrument then is used
to sample the output-signal voltage before and after the suppression.
The first voltage contains the fundamental and harmonics, whereas
the second one contains only the harmonics ( distortion components
introduced by the device under test). The total distortion therefore
is the ratio of the second voltage to the first, and can be expressed
either as a decimal or as a percentage.
Fig. 7-17 shows the circuit of a complete distortion meter employ-
ing these principles. This instrument covers the frequency range of
20 Hz to 20 kHz in three bands: (A) 20-200 Hz, ( B) 200-2000 Hz,
and ( C) 2-20 kHz. Ranges are selected by double-pole, 3-position
switch S2. The filter circuit is composed of range resistors R7 to R12
and dual 400-pf tuning capacitor C3. Within the amplifier comprised
by FET's Ql, Q2, and Q3, this r-c network nulls sharply at the fre-
quency to which it is tuned, and allows signals at other frequencies
to pass relatively untouched in amplitude. The r-c network alone
tunes broadly, but its response is sharpened by overall negative
feedback around the amplifier through capacitor C4 and resistor
Rl3. The voltmeter section comprises FET Q4, input range selector
S4 and R16-R19, and rectifier-type microammeter ( Ml-Xl-X2).
Total current drain is 2.2 ma at 12 vdc.
The amplifier section is based on three 2N4340 FET's ( Ql, Q2,
Q3). This section is followed by an a-f voltmeter based on a single
2N4868 FET ( Q4). When switch S3 is in Position A, the voltmeter
checks the signal voltage before the filter; and when S3 is in Posi-
tion B, the meter checks the signal voltage after the filter.
All fixed resistors are 1 watt. Resistors R2, R3, R5, R6 to Rl2, and
R14 to R19 must be rated at 1 percent. In an individual layout, Rl3
may need adjustment for sharpest null response of the circuit. Ca-
pacitors Cl, C2, C4, C5, and C7 are 100-volt plastic units; C6 is a
25-dcwv electrolytic. Each section of the dual 400-pf tuning capaci-
tor ( C3) has a built-in trimmer for initial adjustment.
After the instrument has been completed and the wiring verified,
first the voltmeter section should be calibrated:
143
3. Set switch S4 to its 5-volt position.
4. Connect an accurately known 5-volt (rms) source to the A-F
INPUT terminals.
5. Close switch Sl.
6. Adjust rheostat R23 for exact full-scale deflection of microam-
meter Ml.
D % = 100 _§_
E1
Under certain conditions, the instrument may be direct reading in
distortion percentage, requiring no calculations. Thus, if E 1 is 1
volt, this point may be regarded as 100 percent. The distortion per-
centages at null then may be read directly; e.g .. 0.01 volt = 1 per-
cent, 0.1 volt = 10 percent, and so on.
. . .,. 4'"'"
-j =1]~PLUG
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ON-1+
lOK
I-'
,I>,.
a:,
.t
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tw
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fi" l.Omfd 1N34A
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:" INPUT
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0-50 o-c
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llcd 8f1
SPEAKER
® + MICROAMMETER @
/ @ lmeg
@ 27K
CON-
CENTRIC
JACK
@ 5K @
1N34A
@
2700
(§Lo B
All fixed resistors are 1/2 watt. Capacitor Cl is a 500-volt ceramic
unit, while C2, C4, C6, and C7 are 100-volt plastic or paper units.
C3 and C5 are 25-dcwv electrolytics.
The layout is not critical; however, all wiring must be as short
and direct as possible, to minimize stray coupling and interlerence.
For shielding, the entire unit must be enclosed in a metal box.
The instrument needs no calibration; since response of the meter
section is linear, the readings of microammeter ~l may be taken
directly as indications of signal strength, as long as the setting of
gain-control potentiometer R5 is undisturbed during a measurement.
@
lK
0-100 o-c
@ lOmeg Ml CROAMNCTER
@ lOK W.W.
ZERO SET
o ®Af-----~--Off
+
l.5V
------
---- @a
_
....
o------o+ 'N -
dark current: 1. 2ma
max. signal current: 2ma
Since there is some static drain current through the P-102, po-
tentiometer R2 has been provided for setting the meter to zero. The
operation consists simply of darkening the P-102 and adjusting R2
for zero deflection of meter M 1.
147
Current drain of the circuit is 1.2 ma at 9 vdc when the P-102 is
darkened, and 2 ma when the light input deflects the meter to full
scale.
Layout of the instrument is not critical. However, the P-102 has
a lens in its nose, so this photo-FET must be mounted so as to
point toward the light source. And since the gate electrode is in-
ternally connected to the case of the P-102, the FET must be
mounted clear of wiring, chassis, and other components. Both fixed
resistors are 1/2 watt, and potentiometer R2 is a wirewound unit.
GEIGER COUNTER
Fig. 7-20 shows the circuit of a simple Geiger counter based on
one 2N4338 FET (Ql) and one 2N4868 FET (Q2). Basically, this
instrument is a high-gain r-~oupled a-f amplifier followed by an
a-c meter circuit ( coupling capacitor C4, germanium diodes Xl and
X2, microammeter Ml, and high-capacitance meter capacitor C6).
f o~~ma Y
®i/' 00-0FF -,1,-
@
PHEADPHONE JACK
0-50
0-C
MICROAMNETER
IN34A
149
APPENDIX A
Bo Go Go
2N333 2N260! 2N2712 2N3S78
C 0 D
(CASE) (CASE)
E s s
V
S GD
DOCASE DOCASE oC)
s s s
151
2N4340 2N4868 P-102 C632
Do G(CASEI
s
G
•OCASE
s
(CAS~lo
D
s
s
,Q,
SIM TIS14 TIX33
G G
REDn
BLACK~
DOCASE •OCASE
s s
U222
.Q"
s
152
APPENDIX B
Manufacturers of Semiconduaors
153
APPENDIX C
Directory of Manufacturers
156
Index
157
Audio age amplifier, 38-39 Depletion layer, 13
mixer, 30 Detector, diode, 90-91
oscillator, 127 -128 modulated-light, 107
squelch amplifier, 71-72 Diode detector, 90-91
Audio-frequency meter, 124-126 Dip oscillator, 129-131
Auxiliary amplifier, 37-38 Dissipation, 18
Distortion meter, harmonic, 141-145
B Doubler, push-push, 81-82
Drain-coupled multivibrator, 50-51
Background, FET, 11-12
Balanced modulator, 84-85
Bandpass a-f amplifier, 30-34 E
Band-suppression a-f amplifier, 34-35
Effect, field, 10-11
Beat-frequency oscillator (bfo), 66-67
Electronic a-c voltmeter, 117-118,
Bipolar, definition of, 15
119-120
Bipolar-transistor amplifier, 26-27
Breakdown voltage, 17 d-c voltmeter, 112-113, 114-117
Broadcast receiver, 59-61, 62 Exciter, four-band, 84
C F
158
H N
Harmonic-distortion meter, 141-145 NF; see noise figure
Headphone amplifier, 37-38 NFET, definition of, 13
Heterodyne frequency meter, 139- Noise figure, 18
141 Notch a-f amplifier, 34-35
I 0
159
R T
Ratings, FET, 17-18 Terminal guide, FET, 151
R-c--controlled timer, 99-101 Tetrode FET, 18
R-c--coupled a-f amplifier, 24-25 Theory, field-effect, 10-11
Receiver, all-wave, 63-64 Timer, 99-101
broadcast, 59-61, 62 "TNT" transmitter, 88-90
regenerative, 62, 63-64 Touch-plate relay, 96-97
superheterodyne, 59-61 Tracer, signal, 145-147
Regenerative receiver, 62, 63-64 Transconductance, forward, 16, 17
Relay, a-c, 95-96 Transfer capacitance, reverse, 17
a-c a-f, 104-105 Transformer-coupled a-f amplifier, 25-
d-c, 94 26
photo-FET, 98-99
Transformer-feedback oscillator, 44-
r-f, 95-96
45
sound-operated, 105-107
touch plate, 96-97 Transmitter, crystal-controlled, 74-75,
Resistor, FET as variable, 101-103 76, 77-79
Reverse current, 17 single-control, 88-90
transfer capacitance, 17 "TNT," 88-90
R-f amplifier, 79-80 Transmitters, modulating, 87 -88
oscillator, 52-53
relay, 95-96 u
signal tracer, 145-147
Unipolar, definition of, 15
s
V
"Selectojet," 69-71
Shifter, phase, 107-109 Variable phase shifter, 107-109
Signal tracer, a-f r-f, 145-147 resistor, FET as, 101-103
Single-control transmitter, 88-90 Variable-frequency oscillator, 127-128
Sound-marker generator, 126 Vldeo amplifier, 36
Sound-operated relay, 105-107 Voltage, pinch-off, 14-15
Source, constant-cwrent, 103-104 Voltage-variable resistor, 101-103
Source follower, a-f, 22-24 Voltmeter, electronic, a-c, 117-118,
Source-coupled multivibrator, 51-52 119-120
Squelch amplifier, 71-72 d-c, 112-113, 114-117
Standard, frequency, 121, 122-123
Structure, FET, 12-15
Superheterodyne receiver, 59-61
w
Symmetrical FET, 13 Wien-bridge oscillator, 48-50
160