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The VFO board is tested without the Tuning Capacitor installed. This is done so the capacitor does not get banged around or makes Board 1 too heavy to easily complete soldering of the rest of the board. The Tuning Capacitor will be installed at the completion of Section 3. Only a touch up of the frequencies will be needed after the Tuning Capacitor is installed. Testing at this point makes it easy to correct mistakes on the VFO board that will be hidden after the Tuning Capacitor is installed. The VFO is the most important part of the receiver and the most complicated with all its relays and three frequencies, so spending special attention to this section makes further diagnosis of the receiver easier.
Frequency Counter A Frequency Counter, either your own bench Frequency Counter or the one you purchased with the kit, will be needed to test the VFO. A general coverage receiver with reasonable calibration can also be used by attaching 2' or more of wire to the "VFO OUT" connection within range of the antenna connection to the receiver. Make sure the signal from the VFO can be heard. If you have purchased the LED Frequency Counter, this would be a good time to build the Frequency Counter kit. Go to Propranolol generic brand page for instructions. After the kit is finished, short the "Osc In" to "Gnd" on the board so it will work as a regular counter. Use the "VFO In" and "Gnd" to make the measurements. This setup is shown in Kamagra 100mg soft tabs chewable tablets. The following procedure will set up the receiver for the first 130 kHz CW portion of the 40 and 20 meter bands of the receiver. The 14 MHz VFO, with a 180 KHz range, will cover all the 30 and 17 meter bands. See Generic for zoloft if you want to tune the SSB portion of the 40 and 20 meter bands. To have the 40 and 20 Meter VFO cover the entire band, see the Circuit Details, Tesla Oscillator, Metformin online order.
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Cut a 1 1/2" piece of Black Shrink tubing supplied with the kit in Bag 6. This will be used to block light to the Photodiode and Phototransistor when needed to set frequencies. First, the 14.000 MHz VFO FrequencyPlace the black tubing over the Phototransistor located between the VFO amplifiers so both LEDs are turned off at the relays - 10.545 and 10.455. See picture above. Be aware that a strong light shinning on the back of the Phototransistor will also turn it on, so if the tubing doesn't turn off the LEDs cover the back side of the Phototransistor also. Adjust the ceramic 2/8 trimmer to the frequency shown in the picture (14.468 or so). Adding the tuning capacitor will drop the 14.000 MHz VFO frequency by 400 kHz, so it is set 400 kHz high, When the stabilizer is used, the metal adjustment screw on the 2/8 ceramic trimmer is not grounded. When using a metal screwdriver, calculate how much it changes the frequency when you touch the adjustment screw and adjust accordingly. Spread apart or squeeze the windings on the VFO toroid to help reach the frequency. Try to get the setting with the 2/8 ceramic trimmer near its middle position. Line up the slot in the adjustment screw with the capacitor pins, with the rotor plate on the end with the arrow. The rotor plate is the part of the top with the metallic color. If you can't get above 13 MHz, remove one turn from the VFO toroid. If you wound only 18 turns on the toroid you will have to squeeze the windings together a bit. The toroid shown has 19 turns, which is the number recommended when using the stabilizer. Accuracy is not important, just get close. When the tuning capacitor is installed and the board is in its final mounting position the frequencies will be touched up. To immolate the stabilizer being connected, touch the "Stabilizer In" wire to the 5 Volt pin on the 5 volt regulator - the one on the left (toward the VFO) next to the 2.2mfd electrolytic capacitor. The frequency should raise 10 to 20 kHz. Place the wire back on the grounded regulator tab, the frequency should drop 10 to 20 kHz. By the way, accidentally touching the "Stabilizer In" wire to the 12 Volt pin on the 5 Volt regulator will not do any damage. Second, setting the 10.545 VFOMove the black tubing from the Phototransistor and place it over the Photodiode near the 10.455 relay. The LED at the 10.545 relay should be on and the LED at the 10.455 relay should be off. Notice the black tubing over the Photodiode at the far left bottom of the picture.Set the frequency to 10.808 MHz or so. The tuning cap drops the 10.545 MHz VFO approximately 263 kHz. Again, not critical at all, just close. Third, setting the 10.455 VFORemove the tubing from the Photodiode so both LEDs are on at the VFO. See picture below: Set the frequency to 10.701 MHz. The tuning capacitor drops the 10.455 MHz VFO approximately 247 kHz. Again, not critical, just get the setting close. To test the stabilizer varicaps, touch the "Stabilizer In" wire to the 5 Volt pin on the 5 volt regulator - the one on the left (toward the VFO) next to the 2.2mfd electrolytic capacitor. The frequency should raise approximately 130 kHz. Place the wire back on the grounded regulator tab, the frequency should drop back to 10.701 kHz. When the Stabilizer is connected and is reset, the voltage to the varicaps is 5 Volts. So the same c |