Hi Eduard, Sounds like you are making good progress - one failure and two successes. I used to work with circuit design groups, so it demystified the process for me. Although the purchased circuit assembly is intellectual property, the filter circuit (for example) is in the public domain, often associated with integrated circuits in data books describing typical IC applications. Then someone searches through the data books for parts and applications. Data books used to be provided for free, since parts manufacturers wanted people to use their parts. I suppose now they are online? but I haven’t looked.
Now it’s time to build and test a prototype, so you have to worry about issues like ground loops and impedance. That copper foil strip bypass perhaps created an extra circuit … element??? but it’s a choice of priorities to just move on. The circuit designer stops and figures that out; the radio astronomer moves on.
I have a book called Noise Reduction Techniques in Electronic Systems by Henry W. Ott that I cadged off a retiring engineer, but it was published in 1976, so I’m sure that current technology has moved on!
Since you are looking at such tiny signals, and building just one (or three) prototypes, you can afford to spend money on more accurate capacitors, maybe 20 cents instead of 3 cents each, and other parts. If you contact a component sales representative, they might actually provide you with a tighter-spec integrated circuit for experimental purposes. The markup for tight-spec components is exorbitant; they can afford to farm out a few for testing. Now that I think about it, you could probably replace parts on the existing board, but at some point you’d do something irrevocable - you’d sneeze and vaporize it with your phaser - I always like to keep a functioning original around. If your prototype gets destroyed, it’s not such a loss.
Another benefit in building your own is the quality of soldering. If you can solder reasonably well, or can find such a person, it will make a huge difference in RF compared to what you can get from a commercial manufacturer.
After all this, if you test your prototype and it responds the same or better than the original, why not? If it’s worse, it’s probably just some little error.
I can understand why a person might not choose to spend their time this way. I’ve spent half my life doing things I don’t enjoy doing, often for financial reasons. I just believe in learning by doing. The person who builds a crystal radio has one level of understanding before he begins, and another after he finishes. Anyway, you are already doing it, in a way.
Wende