HAMTRONICS LNW-144 Скачать руководство пользователя страница 2

©1995 Hamtronics, Inc.; Hilton NY; USA.  All rights reserved.  Hamtronics is a registered trademark.    Revised: 10/23/02 

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with solder as long as the three 
leads are all soldered at the top. 

e.  Solder metal shield to ground 

plane on top of pc board in position 
shown in figure 2.  Keep the shield 
as close as possible to the transistor 
to leave room for output coil L2.  
First, tack solder the shield to the 
board at each end.  Once the shield 
is aligned properly, run a bead of sol-
der the whole  length of the shield.  
Then, run a second bead of solder on 
the other side of the shield.  Solder-
ing on both sides of the shield pr o-
vides maximum mechanical support 
for the shield. 

f.  Install output coil L2 in  the po-

sition shown.  Form the lead to be 
soldered to the pc board so the coil 
fits within the edges of the board.  
Insert the other lead in the center of 
ft cap C8.  Solder both leads of L2.  

g.  Install C1, C2, and C3, keeping 

leads short as possible.  C2 should 
have the rounded end to ground. 

h.  Install C7 and U1 in the holes 

shown.  The leads of C7 must be 
formed to the narrower spacing of the 
pads on the board. 

i.  Turn the preamp over, and ori-

ent it as shown in figure 3.  Position 
ferrite bead Z1 as shown.  Note that 
positioning the body of the bead 
against the feedthrough capacitor 
prevents its leads from shorting to 
anything.  Solder one lead to the in-
side metalization of ft cap C8, and 
tack solder the other lead to the pad 
for the left-hand lead of U1 as 
shown.  If there already is solder on 
the bottom of C8, melt it and slide 
the lead in. 

j.  Using #22 bus wire supplied 

and the shank of a 1/8 inch drill bit 
as a tool, wind coil L1 as shown.  (It 
doesn't matter which direction you 
wind.)  Consult the parts list for the 
correct number of turns.  Count com-
plete turns, from bottom to bottom.  
For reference, the sample in figure 3 
shows 5 turns. 

After winding, use a knife to sepa-

rate the turns so they are not short-
ing together.  The turns should be 
barely spaced apart, just enough to 
prevent shorting.  Then, form the 
ends of the leads so that the wire 
coming off the bottom of the coil is 
bent to go directly over to the holes 
in the board.  The bottom of the coil 

should be 1/16 inch from the surface 
of the board. 

Be sure that  the coil leads are in-

stalled in the correct holes: the one on the 
left should connect to the junction of C1, 
C2, and gate 1 of the transistor; the one 
on the right should connect to the ground 
plane.  

Then, solder both leads.

 

k.  This completes construction.  

Look over all components and solder 
connections.  Check for shorts or 
parts in the wrong places. 

INSTALLATION.   

The preamp can be mounted to 

any flat surface.  Simply drill two 1/8 
inch holes 1-7/16 inch apart, and at-
tach the preamp with the 4-40 
screws and standoffs or spacers as 
desired. 

Complete shielding of the preamp 

is not required.  However, some care 
should be given to selection of the 
mounting location with regard to 
feedback from adjacent receiver cir-
cuits or rf pickup if mounted very 
close to a transmitter circuit.  Be-
cause the unit is small, make sure 
that it isn't installed tight against 

the rf ampl ifier or first mixer of the 
receiver to minimize feedback ef-
fects. 

Connect the input and output ter-

minals in the receive signal path 
with miniature coax, such as RG-
174/u, as shown in figure 2.  Be sure 
to keep the stripped pigtails as short 
as possible to maintain a 50

 path. 

Connections are made by inserting 
the stripped ends of the pigtails into 
the pads on the board and soldering.  
Normally,  the preamp is mounted in 
some sort of enclosure with UHF or 
similar connectors on the enclosure 
and miniature coax installed be-
tween the preamp and the large coax 
connectors.  In some cases, the out-
put of the preamp can go directly to 
the receiver with the miniature coax. 

L

 

Caution:  Don't connect the preamp 

in the transmit signal path.   

Connect power supply lead to E5.  

The LNW requires fi10 to 15 
Vdc.  Current drain is about 10 mA.   

Caution is advised in selecting a 

power source.  Solid state amplifiers 
can be damaged by large voltage 
transients and reverse polarity.  Al-

Figure 2.  Top View of LNW Board

E1

E2

C2

C1

C3

LONG DRAIN LEAD

SHIELD

C8

L2

Q1

R1

R2

U1

C7

GATE 2

SOURCE

GATE 1

E3

E4

E5

RF OUTPUT

COAX

RF INPUT

COAX

POWER

C5

 

 

Figure 3.  Bottom View of LNW Board

 

Z1

 

L1

 

C8

 

C5

 

U1

 

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