Dear Bill,
Please my apologies for my late update on our DCR project. We started with the course in the semester break and once the semester started only a handful of students were able to finish their receiver. A long shelf of shame ....
Here is what we've got so far (those were finished at the end of April already). 3 nice DCRs completely sufficient to copy CW indoors without additional antennas starting from late afternoon. Strong stations can be heard all day. I found that coupling some 6m of wire with one or two windings to the ferrite core can boost the signal dramatically but can also increase noise.
The PTO is based on your design (Bill Meara N26QR & Dean KK4DAS) which was sparked by Farhan (VU2ESE) , except that I've swapped the FET for a NPN. The input amplifier and antenna is from the JUMA active ferrite antenna by Matti Hohtola (OH7SV), the band pass filter is from Hans Summers (G0UPL), the mixer and the headphone amplifier is inspired by Pete Juliano (N6QW), you told me that the diplexer (as well as the whole DCR idea) is attributed to Wes Hayward (W7ZOI) and the perfect schematics of Rick Scott (N3FJZ) where crucial to get me started in the first place. I enjoy keeping track of original sources, as I would do in science. This shows that even little achievements are based on the ideas of many other great people - and this is nothing to be ashamed of.
This was a lot of fun! Thank You!
Best and yours sincerely,
Andreas
Wow, the direct conversion re-engineering of education continues, this time at graduate-school level with biologists in Munich! Amazing.
Andreas points out that his group was also plagued by semester-related problems that caused many additions to the German shelf of shame. Let's hope that someday soon these builders will come to their senses and join the ranks of those who have finished their homebrew projects.
Looking at the schematic (below) of Andreas's project, there are a couple of significant differences from ours:
-- Their AF amp used a transformer-less push-pull design. We had considered this but abandoned it thinking that it would be too complicated to explain the workings of this circuit to our students.
-- Most significant, is Andreas's use of a ferrite rod antenna and an RF amplifier. I think a simple 33 foot quarter wave antenna (with a ground or a counterpoise) might work better. But hey, to each his own! The important thing is that a number of these receivers were successfully built. They look beautiful.
Congratulations to Andreas and the successful Munich homebrewers!