Showing posts with label 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2014

2 5A 1 25 To 25V Regulated Power Supply Circuit Diagram

This power supply uses an LM317J adjustable regulator and an MJ2955 pass transistor. Ql and U2 as well as Ul should be heats inked. A suitable heat-sink would typically be 4` 4` 1` fins, extruded type, because up to 65 W dissipation can occur. R8 and R9 should be 1% types or selected from 5% film types with an accurate ohmmeter. Capacitors are disc ceramic except for those with polarity marked, which are electrolytic. D1, D2—1-A, 100-PIV rectifier diode. DS1—Red LED. F1 —1,5-A, 3AG fuse in chassis-mount holder. J1, J2—Standard five-way binding post, one red, one black. M1—Milli-ammeter, 0-1 mA dc. Q1—NPN power transistor MJ2955 (Radio Shack) or equiv device with a + 70-V, 10-A, 150-W rating in a -204 case. R1, R2, R7—5-W wire-wound resistor. See Notes 3 and 4 for source, or, use 17 inches of no. 28 enam wire, single-layer wound, on a 10-KOhmhm, 1-W carbon-composition resistor for R1 and R7. For R2, use 36 inches of no. 30 enam wire on a 10-KOhmhm, 1-W carbon composition resistor (scramble wound). R-4—Panel-mount, 5-kfi, 2-W or 5-W potentiometer, carbon or wire wound (See Note 8). R8, R9—See text. 51—SPST toggle switch. 52—DPDT toggle or rotary wafer switch. T1—25.2-V, 2.75-A power transformer (see text). U1—6-A, 200 PIV bridge rectifier with heat sink. See text. U2—LM317T +1.25- to 30-V, 1.5-A 7-220 regulator. Use an LM317HVK (T0-204 case) for dc output voltage greater than 40. See text.

2.5A-1.25 To 25V Regulated Power Supply Circuit Diagram

2.5A-1.25 To 25V Regulated Power Supply Circuit Diagram

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

1 Watt QRP Power Transmitter

1 Watt QRP Power Transmitter


The 1 watt 20 meter QRP transmitter with VXO. This is a nice QRP
transmitter that can be used in combination of one of the simple
receivers. Normally these designs have only two transistors: one is the
X-tal oscillator and the second the final amplifier. A good example is
my first QRP rig that is also described somewhere on this site. Here
the VXO (Variabele X-tal Oscillator) has a tuning range of 16 kHz. This
VXO is buffered with an extra driver stage for a better frequency
stability and a varicap diode is used instead of a variabele capacitor.
An extra transistor is added for keying the transmitter with a low
keying current. What you can do with such a simple 1 watt QRP power
transmitter. This is a real low power transmitter, so do not expect that
you can do everything with it but... When conditions are normal, you
can easily make many QSOs during one afternoon with stations with
distances upto 2000 km with a simple inverted V wire dipole antenna!
From Europe, I did even make QSOs across the Ocean!
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