(the silver-coated shield is the antenna conductor). I also installed C501 and C502 and tuned the loop to resonance as indicated by an MFJ antenna tuner, loosely coupled to the loop antenna. I then wired the coupling loop directly to the BNC connector and plugged it into a GC receiver tuned to the lower end of the 80m band. Immediately I heard a full scale W1AW signal. The tuned loop appears to be adequately sensitive, but no performance measurements yet.
I went in search of some brazing rod for the sense antenna. Local stores I went to no longer sell uncoated bronze brazing rod, but at Lowes Home Improvement I found a 36-inch length of bronze rod for sale at a reasonable price. So the sense antenna has been installed as well, but none of the other circuitry is in place, so the sense antenna is not yet functional. The remaining components are truly experimental, and a good deal of trial and error will be required to determine the best way to wind the transformer that combines the tuned-loop signal with the sense antenna signal, and adjusts their relative phase and amplitude.
CONTROL HEAD BOARD
I'm populating the Control Head before the receiver and interface boards because it also serves as the power supply for the rest of the Receiver Development Platform, and because the LCD will serve as an essential piece of test equipment for debugging as assembly continues.
The LiPo charger and LiPo protection circuit, and the 7.5V switching supply have been built and tested, and they are functioning as expected. The LiPo protector hasn't been carefully tested to ensure that it limits battery current or under/over voltage at the right levels. But the undervoltage protection function has been shown to be operational: all you have to do is remove the LiPo battery, which the protector interprets as a low battery voltage condition, to have the protector isolate the battery from discharging further. The way this protector works, it will never allow the LiPo to be further discharged until it detects that a charger has been plugged in. So once you unplug the LiPo, plugging the LiPo back in will not apply power to the unit, even if the LiPo is fully charged. You must first plug a charger in, if only for a few seconds, and then the protector will once again allow battery current to flow even after the charger is removed.
Diodes Incorporated sells a version of the LiPo protector which will automatically re-enable discharging a charged battery, without first requiring the application of a charger. But DigiKey does not sell that version of the chip except in quantities of 3000 or more. But I think the spec'd version will suffice in this application... but one must remember not to unplug the LiPo unless a charging source is available, otherwise the Control Head will be inoperable. But even a juice pack plugged into the external micro-USB port will serve as a re-enabler.
Hi Charles,
It's super to see the progress going on. Can't wait for more :
)
Cheers,
Patrick
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The switch visible at the top is a temporary on/off solution: the switch plugs into a header for the cable that will attach to the Digital Interface board. A few "blue wires" and minor modifications were required in order to get the Li-Ion charging and protection circuits to play nicely together while powering the switching supply. As shown in the photo, the display is working. Also the Control Head is running off of a LiPo battery, so all the power supply circuitry is working. The headphone off/on circuit draws less than 4 uA while shut down, about 30% less than previous measurements, possibly because of the low-leakage diodes now being used. The real time clock has not been tested yet, and the digital compass module has not yet been installed.
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