The AM Receiver and Audio Amplification Project
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Transcript of The AM Receiver and Audio Amplification Project
Andrew RobsonTom HopwoodTracey Desalu
Alex Ha
Year 1 Media Technology
TECH 1002 Studies in Media Technology
The AM Receiver and Audio Amplifier Project
Andrew ClayThursday 2pm-3pm
CONTENTS
Page 2 - ContentsPage 3 - IntroductionPage 4 - AM radio receiver – equipment and components Page 5 - AM radio receiver – methodPage 6 - AM radio receiver – tuning, demodulation, and amplificationPage 7 - AM radio receiver – testing and resultsPage 8 - Audio Amplifier – equipment and components Page 9 - Audio Amplifier – testing, results, transistor and loudspeakerPage 10 - Audio Amplifier - loudspeaker Page 11 - AM transmission demonstrationPage 12 - ConclusionPage 13 - Bibliography
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INTRODUCTION
The aim of this project is to gain an understanding of how an AM radio and an Audio Amplifier
works, by building two circuits from electrical components supplied. The experience of doing this will
give a greater understanding to how a radio receives a signal and what it does to this to create an
audio signal that can be heard.
With the use of ongoing research and practical lab work, the theory of AM reception of a receiver
will be explained through a description of any results gained by testing these circuits.
Attention will be drawn to particular components of the circuits and how they operate within the
system and will also include a description of the two key components in the amplifier circuit and how
they work.
Finally, an explanation will be given to how AM transmission works paying attention to a
demonstration that was given in the university labs.
This report is also given as an online report using a number of resources on the Internet. By visiting
the website shown below, access to this report will be given.
https://sites.google.com/site/radio2radioproject/home
Throughout the project, members of the group were asked to research ideas and theory with
regards to AM radio and amplification.
This research can be found in the Group Wiki section of ‘Studies in Media Technology’ under the
heading – Radio Technology – Group Research
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AM Radio Receiver
Aims and Objectives
The aim is to gain practical experience of the AM radio reception system relating to the technique of
amplitude modulation by building and testing an AM radio.
The theory of AM reception will be applied to the actual sub-system of the receiver and results
gained by the testing will be explained.
Equipment and Components used –
Soldering equipment set
Printed circuit board
IC MK484, BC548B transistor, 150pF variable tuning capacitor, 100mm long
ferrite rod, 2.5m of 0.315mm enamelled copper wire, two 100k resistors, two
1k resistors, one 270R resistor, miniature slide switch, two 100nF capacitors,
one 10nF capacitor, one 47uF capacitor, headphone socket, AA battery
holder.
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Method
Using the enamelled copper wire and the ferrite rod, the aerial was first to be constructed.
Wrap a piece of card around the ferrite rod, to ensure movement of the wire and then wind the wire
around this approximately 55 turns, taking care not to overlap the windings. Use insulating tape to
keep the wire in place while you are doing this. The quality of reception may depend on the care
taken at this stage. Leave approximately 100mm of wire at each end of the coil to attach to the
PCB.
Using the soldering equipment, the resistors were soldered into place, followed in order by the small
capacitors, transistor, Integrated circuit (MK484), and the variable tuning capacitor. Connecting wire
was attached to the headphone socket, which was then soldered onto the PCB. The ends of the
aerial were rubbed with emery paper to ensure they were free of enamel and then soldered into
place. Finally, the AA battery holder was attached.
Testing and Results
With the radio circuit now completed, place an AA battery into the battery holder and plug some
headphones into the headphone socket. With power going to the circuit and by altering the value of
the variable capacitor, the frequency that the circuit responds to can now pick up a radio station.
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TUNING
The circuit that has now been built has 3 different sections, each doing a different job. Firstly the
variable capacitor picks up one signal from thousands that are given off from a transmitter. It is this
transmitter that has received the electrical signal from the radio station, which started off as an
audio signal (such as a DJ voice or music) and then combined with a carrier wave which has the job
of transmitting this signal as an electromagnetic wave. It is the carrier waves peaks that are made
bigger and smaller and therefore its amplitude (or size) is increased. This is Amplitude Modulation.
The radio circuits TUNING section (variable capacitor & ferrite rod) picks up this signal.
Fig 1 shows a diagram of a signal (audio) and the carrier wave (or sine wave) and then the
combining of the two (modulation)
Fig 1
DEMODULATION
After the radio circuit has received the electrical signal, this needs to be changed back into audio.
Because this signal was first MODULATED as it combined with the carrier wave, it now needs to be
DEMODULATED. This is where the original sound is extracted form the carrier wave and is done by
the Integrated Circuit MK484 component.
AMPLIFICATION
The signal (or sound) that has been removed from the carrier wave is very weak and needs to be
amplified so we can hear it. The BC548 transistor does this and by sending this audio signal to
speakers or headphones can be heard clearly.
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Due to time constraints, although the radio worked and a radio station was picked up the frequency
at which this station was operating on was unknown. However, according to past experiments and
other groups, the station would have been one of two local stations.
837 Asian Network or 1260 Sabras
Referring to http://frequencyfinder.org.uk/tc/leicester.html and looking at radio stations in the local
area, it shown that these two stations and their transmission signals were being sent from a
transmitter less than a mile away at Freeman’s Common (Leicester).
As a group we asked why it was only these two stations we could pick up when a number of them
on the list of stations were in between the frequency range of 837MHz and 1260Mhz.
A number of reasons could determine this –
The quality of the coil aerial that was made
The strength of signal that the aerial was trying to pick up
The location of the transmitter in relation to where the radio circuit is
Weather conditions
Buildings can affect a signal received, so being inside may make a difference
Both the local Asian radio stations mentioned are being transmitted locally, which has a low
transmission rate, so those stations will only be available in a local area unless transmitted digitally.
According to http://www.mediumwaveradio.com/uk.php BBC Asian Network transmits at 50 Watts
and Sabras 290 Watts.
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Audio Amplifier
Aims and Objectives
The aim is to gain experience of an audio amplification system by means of building a circuit with
electrical components and results gained by testing it with the radio circuit will be explained.
Equipment and Components used –
Soldering equipment set
Printed circuit board
IC TBA 820M (Integrated circuit), three 1K resistors, two 470R resistors, one
1R resistor, two 330uF electrolytic capacitors, one 10uF electrolytic capacitor,
one 150pF ceramic capacitor, one 100nF polyester capacitor, one 47nF
polyester capacitor, one 8Ohm speaker, 100mm of speaker cable, one slide
switch, one PP3 battery snap, one 3.5mm plug to plug cable, one 3.5mm
stereo jack socket
.
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Method
Solder all the electrical components into place ensuring ones with positive and negative connections
are fixed correctly. Solder connecting wire onto the 8 Ohm speaker and connect to the circuit. The
final component to be fitted is the TBA820M, which can be placed in the IC socket. Attach the
battery and connect to the radio circuit using the 3.5mm plug to plug cable.
Testing and Results
When the audio amplifier circuit is completed, connect to a battery and to the radio circuit. At first no
signal was amplified which may have been to do with the quality of soldering etc…but after a
moment a faint signal was heard. The circuit constructed is capable of 1.2 Watts output, but despite
the correct procedure in the soldering and positioning of components, the audio signal amplified
was very faint. The fine-tuning of the radio didn’t make a lot of difference to this, although a signal
was coming through which proved that it was working.
The job of an amplifier (in this case) is to receive an electrical signal from a radio, which has been
de-modulated and already amplified, and to amplify it even more so it can be heard through a
loudspeaker.
Transistor and Loudspeaker
The main component in the circuit is a transistor, which takes the input current (small current) and
allows it to control the size of the output current. This output current needs constant power to
continually flow which is provided by a power supply (battery or mains). It is the output current that
is the amplified signal.
Amplifier circuits can contain many transistors to do this or these can be combined into an
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integrated circuit, and therefore a single component. In the case of the amplifier circuit made in this
project a TBA820M integrated circuit was used in conjunction with an 8 Ohm loudspeaker to
produce the sound, which has been converted from an electrical signal.
It is this electrical (audio) signal coming from the amplification circuit, which flows through a fixed
magnet and an electromagnetic (or voice coil). The signal is an alternating current, and therefore
changing direction all the time caused by polarity of the magnets and in turn moves the voice coil
quickly, back and forth.
This will then vibrate the air in front of the speaker and create sound waves that will travel through
the air to the ear.
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AM Transmission Demonstration
Equipment
Function Generator (which generates the signals)
Oscilloscope
A wire aerial
An AM radio receiver
The Aim
To generate an AM signal and pick it up on the radio and to prove that is how an AM transmission signal is produced.
Testing and Results
The Carrier wave used was 600 KHz (which is in the medium wave band), and combining it
with an audio information signal, produced inside the generator, which is 500Hz, then
modulated this carrier wave.
The results of this could be seen on the Oscilloscope. The line on the outside was the
500Hz signal, and the one on the inside moving rapidly was the 600KHz original wave.
The last thing that needed to be done was to prove that the audio information signal is being
transmitted, by receiving it on a radio. The radio was switched on and then tuned to 600KHz
in the AM band. A sound could then be heard which was the 500Hz signal. If it were a
human voice, the amplitude would change so it wouldn’t be the same regular sound. To
prove that was what was being picked up, the signal was switched off and then the sound
produced from the radio stopped.
This was proof that what was being transmitted from the generator, via the aerial, was being
picked up on the radio.
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CONCLUSION
Two simple electronic circuits were built and the testing of the results gained from these helped to explain their inner workings.
Looking at the radio circuit, and starting with an audio signal at a radio station its journey was followed through a number of stages, which were -
Modulation Amplification Transmission Tuning Demodulation Amplification
The results obtained by testing the circuit and actually hearing what radio station (or frequency) was picked up, helped with the explanation to how this whole system works.
The building of an audio amplifier and the testing gave experience of how this system also works, paying particular attention to the two key components, the transistor (or IC component) and the loudspeaker. By doing this an understanding of how these actually work was gained.
The explanation of AM Transmission was given after a demonstration was shown in the university labs. The objective here was to prove the theory of AM modulation for a radio transmission.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Woodford, Chris (2007) ‘Radio’ at http://www.explainthatstuff.com/radio.html (accessed 27th January 2010)
Radio communication at http://www.ofcom.org.uk/sitefinder/glossary/how/ (accessed 27th January 2010)
Wikipedia (2010) Carrier Wave at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrier_wave (accessed 27thJanuary 2010)
Brain, Marshall ‘How Radio Works’ at http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/radio8.htm (accessed 27th January 2010)
Frequency Finder at http://frequencyfinder.org.uk/tc/leicester.html#am_top (accessed 29th January 2010)
Harris, Tom ‘How Amplifiers Work’ at http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/amplifier.htm (accessed 29th January 2010)
AW ‘Audio Amplifiers 582’ at http://www.howeverythingworks.org/pages.php?topic=audio_amplifiers&page=2 (accessed 29th January 2010)
SatCure ‘How do Transistors Work?’ at http://www.satcure-focus.com/tutor/page4.htm (accessed 29th January 2010)
eHow ‘ How do Amplifiers Work?’ at http://www.ehow.com/how-does_4587836_amplifiers-work.html (accessed 29th January 2010)
DJ Society ‘ Everything you wanted to know about speakers’ at http://www.djsociety.org/Speaker_1.htm (accessed 30th January 2010)
Harris, Tom ‘How Speakers Work’ at http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/speaker6.htm (accessed 30th January 2010)
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‘Image of Carrier Wave’ at http://www.yourdictionary.com/images/computer/_PMMOD.GIF (accessed 27th January 2010)
‘Image of a Speaker’ at http://p-hardware.blogspot.com/2008/04/speaker.html (accessed 30th January 2010)
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