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Signal amplifier
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young



Joined: 24 Jun 2004
Posts: 285

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Signal amplifier
PostPosted: Tue Apr 12, 2005 3:38 pm     Reply with quote

I am using a HT640 andHT648L and TWS434 and RWS434 for wireless communication, I found the signal is week, so I decided to use a RA07H4047M amplifier to ampilfy the signal. without amplifier, evertthing works fine (my connection is fine so far). then I put the amplifier between HT640 and TWS434. I connected the HT640 output to the input pin pin 1)of RA07H4047M, and add a gain voltage of over3.5V (pin 2), connected VDD (pin 3) to 12V, and output pin(pin 4) to TWS434 input pin, and also connected pin 5 to ground. however, I could not see any data transfer at all. what I might be wrong?
languer



Joined: 09 Jan 2004
Posts: 144
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You're kidding rigth!?!
PostPosted: Tue Apr 12, 2005 6:52 pm     Reply with quote

You are not really doing this (ouch!, I am pinching myself as I write this).

If I get this right, you system looks as follows:
HT640 -> RA07H4047M -> TWS434 -> Antenna

The RA07H4047M is the MITSUBISHI RF MOSFET MODULE right?

The good thing is you probably have not killed anything. If you are truly using this MITSUBISHI RF MOSFET MODULE the proper connection would be like this:
HT640 -> TWS434 -> RA07H4047M -> Antenna

That is because the output of the HT640 (encoder) is a baseband signal (data) with DC component. The RA07H4047M (amplifier) operates on an AC signal (internal decoupling caps) and is tuned to the 433MHz band (RF). So the amplifier sits in the RF path (between TWS434 output and Antenna).

However, this device can deliver 7W of output power. I do not think the FCC will see this kindly. You say "the signal is weak", by this you mean the RF signal into the receiver? You can try to better the match between the transmitter (TWS434) and the antenna. What is your antenna (in both TX and RX)? The better your antenna, the better your efficiency. The transmitter is usually limited by the FCC. So the better your antenna at both transmitt and receive, and the better your reciever sensitivity, the better the range of your link.
Guest








PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 6:52 am     Reply with quote

Thank you languer:

yes I am using the MITSUBISHI RF MOSFET MODULE.
I was using a pair of 50-Ohm "Whip" Antennas and another pair of antenna is 14 inch, 22 AWG, insulated antenna wires, they all provide just few feet of communication signal, I tried to adjust the antenna, but \,no much improvement. so I decide using the amplifier that you suggested.

I do mean it is the signal from RF signal into the receiver was weak. how to better match the antenna and transmitter, and what is FCC? thank you.

I will be much appreciated if I could follow you direction to get a success and strong wireless communication!!!
Mark



Joined: 07 Sep 2003
Posts: 2838
Location: Atlanta, GA

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 7:27 am     Reply with quote

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent United States government agency, directly responsible to Congress. The FCC was established by the Communications Act of 1934 and is charged with regulating interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite and cable. The FCC's jurisdiction covers the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. possessions.

The FCC is directed by five Commissioners appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate for 5-year terms, except when filling an unexpired term. The President designates one of the Commissioners to serve as Chairperson. Only three Commissioners may be members of the same political party. None of them can have a financial interest in any Commission-related business.

As the chief executive officer of the Commission, the Chairman delegates management and administrative responsibility to the Managing Director. The Commissioners supervise all FCC activities, delegating responsibilities to staff units and Bureaus.
young



Joined: 24 Jun 2004
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 7:30 am     Reply with quote

Hi languer:

I did as the connection you suggested, like this

HT640 (output pin)->(input pin) TWS434 (antenna output pin)-> (input pin)RA07H4047M (output pin)-> Antenna. at hte beginning I saw light turn on and off and then nothing happened. I checked the 12V power supply to the amplifier, without connection to the amplifier. it is 12V. when I connected to the amplifier, at the begining, it was 12V then it gradually dropped, Does that mean the amplifier was destroyed?
SherpaDoug



Joined: 07 Sep 2003
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 7:59 am     Reply with quote

I would like to add the the FCC in the USA has counterparts in most other countries. There may even be some UN regulations covering areas like international waters that lack local regulation.

In a nutshell, you can't just go spewing RF from an antenna without interfering with other people's equipment. These regulations are our friends, not our enemies as they let us all play together productively.
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The search for better is endless. Instead simply find very good and get the job done.
young



Joined: 24 Jun 2004
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 8:09 am     Reply with quote

I tested resistance between each pin of the amplifier and compared with another new amplifier, they the corresponding resistance between each pair of pin is same, so I think that the amplifier may be good, so whey the voltage dropped and what I might be wrong?

If I paly this 433 RF, do I have to get permission from FCC from a short distance wirless communication?
young



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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 8:28 am     Reply with quote

I found out, Ibefore I connected amplifier pin 5 to the ground, which the datasheet shown that it goes to ground, when I accidentally disconnected it, the voltage became normal, and the circuit is working, and it clearly shoes that signal has been amplified, because I could received signal at a longer distance. but just a few inches better, which I am not feel good at all. maybe there is really some other thing disturb from better communication. please provide advice!
SherpaDoug



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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 9:07 am     Reply with quote

young wrote:

If I paly this 433 RF, do I have to get permission from FCC from a short distance wirless communication?


Is this a commercial product, or a home project? If it is a home project check with the Amateur Radio Relay League (www.arrl.org) about getting a Ham license to play with RF.
If it is going to be a commercial product you will need to get it qualified by the FCC (or its forign equivalent). The ARRL can probably tell you where to go for commercial products too. This is a major hassle if the transmitter is over 100mW. Under 100mW the rules are much more relaxed, but you still need approval. You should be able to get at least 100 meters from 100mW.
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The search for better is endless. Instead simply find very good and get the job done.
jds-pic



Joined: 17 Sep 2003
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 10:01 am     Reply with quote

young wrote:
maybe there is really some other thing disturb from better communication. please provide advice!

my advice, as already posted in the last thread you started on this topic,
http://www.ccsinfo.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22123
is to first understand that you need VERY LITTLE POWER to go modest distances (100mW will be plenty for home lab experiments).

second, it would appear that you have limited or no background in analog RF circuits. stop trying to design one and first read about how they work. right now my bet is that the transmitter output is so strong that it is saturating the receiver input, which is causing poor performance due to desense. moreover, with a bad antenna match, poor decoupling, and 7W output, you probably have stray RF everywhere on your board.

all of these problems are RF design basics. put down the soldering iron and google for a few days. RF design is not plug-n-play -- there is a reason that motorola (et al) employs lots of well paid engineers.
as i noted prior, 7W @ 450MHz and a proper antenna will get you 20 miles, we hams do this all the time. do you really need 7W?

answer these questions please:
what is your project?
how far do you need your devices to communicate?
is the communications unidirectional or bidirectional?
what are the design limitations? (battery power, enclosure size, etc)
do you have a spectrum analyzer with a bandwidth of 500MHz?
do you have a 500MHz scope with a 50ohm front end?
do you have a RF power meter capable of measuring 1mW to 10W?
do you have a few sets of BNC or SMA cables with adapters and various RF attenuators?
do you understand your local regulations pertaining to intentional radiator devices?
do you understand why these regulations exist, and how they protect life-critical communications at airports and hospitals?

jds-pic
young



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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 10:57 am     Reply with quote

Hi jds-pic:

I really appreciate your answers. so far this this the most valuable suggestion and advice that I have ever got for the RF communication.

According to the several suggestion you provided, I really do not need that high power of RF communication. a 100mw will be good enough because I am building a project for indoor data collection, it will be just unidirectional. I believe a 300 meter will be good enough (large factory building).

a 9v battery will be ideal for my project, the size should be very small ( no larger than 2.5 inch by 2.5 inches.

I am sorry to say for all the other question I have to say no.

I will explore the following topic that you adviced:

1. limited or no background in analog RF circuits?
2. transmitter output is so strong that it is saturating the receiver input, which is causing poor performance due to desense
3. antenna match, poor decoupling, and 7W output, you probably have stray RF everywhere on your board.

Sincerely
jds-pic



Joined: 17 Sep 2003
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 11:43 am     Reply with quote

young wrote:
Hi jds-pic:
I really appreciate your answers. so far this this the most valuable suggestion and advice that I have ever got for the RF communication.


based on your project desription and limited RF experience and equipment, right now my advice to you would be to simplify the design. remove the power amplifier from the circuit. see note below. get the matched receiver and transmitter sorted out, and use the correct antenna and feedline.

jds-pic

ps:
one more reason to simplify things:
i reviewed the data sheets for the parts you are using.
the transmitter/receiver pair uses ASK, which is basically AM for digital data.
the power amplifier part you are trying to use is designed for FM applications.

without special attention to the design, the amplifier part will not work for increasing the output from your data transmitter part. it will introduce non-linearities and data recovery at the other end will be very difficult. note the last paragraph of the "DESCRIPTION" section of the amplifier datasheet:
http://www.jmnic.com/pdf/newpdf/ra07h4047m.pdf
Guest








PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 2:11 pm     Reply with quote

Thank you jds-pic:

so far I have used the
Quote:

2.4K bps data-rates
TWS-434A 434MHz RF Transmitter Module
RWS-434 434MHz RF Receiver Module
TWS/RWS 50-OHM Whip Style Antenna

from the http://www.rentron.com/PicBasic/RemoteControl.htm and use the circuit that they provided, but I did not reach good result (just abou 20 feet communication distance. you mentationed about the feed line, I believe that I connected correctly according to the circuit they provided. what else mightbe the reason that limited my communication distance?

regards
languer



Joined: 09 Jan 2004
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 2:15 pm     Reply with quote

Young,

I am glad nothing caught fire Twisted Evil . I do believe you do not need the amp (and if you did, then it would probably be easier to go for different modulation, ISM band, or modules).

One of the best places I've found for those modules is here:
http://www.rentron.com/PicBasic/RemoteControl.htm
http://www.rentron.com/ruf-bot.htm

I think you've seen this before, but it never hurts to doublecheck. I have no experience with these modules, but have used similar ones from Radiotronix. With those I have achieved 30-40ft (outdoors, with resistive attenuation/loss in the TX) without much complication.

Laipac has similar modules (most of these LC-modules are based on same design) and have some better performance numbers (i.e. more available data) here:
http://www.laipac.com/easy_434_eng.htm

Basic key points to good RF performance:
    Good grounding -> grounds are critical (connections to ground should be kept as short as possible)
    Good bypassing -> caps to ground should be placed as close as possible to the pins (again connection to ground as short as possible)
    Good antenna match/efficiency -> most of these modules will put about the same output power, the key is to transfer as much of this power from the transmitter to the antenna and from the antenna to the receiver


Many more things come to mind, but hopefully these should get your interest going.

It was also mentioned the application of your wireless link. A simple on/off link is very well served by encoders/decoders (like the HOLTEK type). A link intended to pass some data (i.e. temperature, preassure -> sensors in general) is better suited to a stronger protocol (synchronization bytes, machester coding, etc.).

Feel free to comment on this.
TooMuchRF
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PostPosted: Wed Apr 13, 2005 2:29 pm     Reply with quote

>In a nutshell, you can't just go spewing RF from an antenna.....

Sure you can - the electrons won't refuse to flow just because it's wrong... It sure would be nice if they didn't flow, but they do.

I see people doing this all the time - some cat in LA sells BIG amps for the ISM bands on ebay all the time. It's wrong to be sure, and is only covering up a poor transmission line or antenna system - but that's how folks fix these problems....

Very Happy
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