Stable LNB Oscillator solution
Posted: Thu Nov 12, 2020 4:58 pm
This is another of my 'great gods of surplus giving again' posts, plus a bit of inspiration from Martin, G4FKK.
It started with a purchase of '3.5GHz WiMax antenna and circuitry, a pair' from Mainline Electronics - always worth a browse. I took a chance and bought a pair. On dismantling I found the 16 Element flat-plate was an acceptable match at 3.4GHz (no precise test gear here, so buyer beware....). By adding a suitable SMA a handy portable solution was available. Closer inspection of the control and RF circuitry showed some interesting bits - many far too small for my SMD skills but including a good spec 10MHz TXCO - data found on the www. I unsoldered it, powered it up (3.3V) and listened to it on 10MHz. Very solid. As it has a 'trim' option I added a 10K pot and gave it a tweak. +/- 10kHz so possible to control in a locking setup perhaps? This thought train was triggered by Martin, G4FKK telling me about his GPS disciplined 10MHz TXCO and what he used it for.
Basically he locked a TXCO (10MHz) to a GPS and then used that signal to clock a SI5351 DDS board (under £3 each on eBay, remove the 25MHz crystal). Despite the data sheet saying it was too low a frequency, it works reliably. Common sense says stuff will work below their design frequency, fair enough not much above it although this chip does both! It was then a simple task (for Martin, not me) to write a little Arduino Nano code to send the desired setup/frequencies. I modified the LNB as per the instructions here https://wiki.batc.org.uk/Es%27hail-2_LNBs_and_Antennaes and fed the signal up a suitable coax. It works and the beacon is as solid as a rock. I have wrapped it in some sponge and once it's all reached equilibrium (about an hour), it wanders very little - only kHz on the beacon from cold. It certainly is an acceptable solution with scope for GPS locking - additional investigation is planned.....
If you fancy the same thing, search eBay for "Wifi max Aerial 3.5GHZ transmitter and Receiver PRICE for 2 Bargain"
You get a pair, so two TXCO, 2 panel antennas and lots of SM, including what looks like a pair of low power 3.5GHz transmit chains. The chips are all identifiable and mostly by RFMagic.
Gareth
It started with a purchase of '3.5GHz WiMax antenna and circuitry, a pair' from Mainline Electronics - always worth a browse. I took a chance and bought a pair. On dismantling I found the 16 Element flat-plate was an acceptable match at 3.4GHz (no precise test gear here, so buyer beware....). By adding a suitable SMA a handy portable solution was available. Closer inspection of the control and RF circuitry showed some interesting bits - many far too small for my SMD skills but including a good spec 10MHz TXCO - data found on the www. I unsoldered it, powered it up (3.3V) and listened to it on 10MHz. Very solid. As it has a 'trim' option I added a 10K pot and gave it a tweak. +/- 10kHz so possible to control in a locking setup perhaps? This thought train was triggered by Martin, G4FKK telling me about his GPS disciplined 10MHz TXCO and what he used it for.
Basically he locked a TXCO (10MHz) to a GPS and then used that signal to clock a SI5351 DDS board (under £3 each on eBay, remove the 25MHz crystal). Despite the data sheet saying it was too low a frequency, it works reliably. Common sense says stuff will work below their design frequency, fair enough not much above it although this chip does both! It was then a simple task (for Martin, not me) to write a little Arduino Nano code to send the desired setup/frequencies. I modified the LNB as per the instructions here https://wiki.batc.org.uk/Es%27hail-2_LNBs_and_Antennaes and fed the signal up a suitable coax. It works and the beacon is as solid as a rock. I have wrapped it in some sponge and once it's all reached equilibrium (about an hour), it wanders very little - only kHz on the beacon from cold. It certainly is an acceptable solution with scope for GPS locking - additional investigation is planned.....
If you fancy the same thing, search eBay for "Wifi max Aerial 3.5GHZ transmitter and Receiver PRICE for 2 Bargain"
You get a pair, so two TXCO, 2 panel antennas and lots of SM, including what looks like a pair of low power 3.5GHz transmit chains. The chips are all identifiable and mostly by RFMagic.
Gareth