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Noise Bridge Instructions PDF

This document describes the construction and use of a noise bridge circuit to measure the resonant frequency of antenna traps. The noise bridge circuit uses common electronic components like capacitors, resistors, transistors and a toroidal inductor to generate noise that is fed into a receiver. Adjusting the trim capacitors and potentiometer tunes the circuit to produce a "null" where noise is minimized. Connecting a test inductor-capacitor trap circuit at the "unknown" terminals allows the trap's resonant frequency to be identified by where noise increases as the receiver frequency is tuned off the null point. The noise bridge provides an easy way to accurately measure trap resonant frequencies for antenna tuning applications without expensive specialized equipment. Proper
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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
345 views3 pages

Noise Bridge Instructions PDF

This document describes the construction and use of a noise bridge circuit to measure the resonant frequency of antenna traps. The noise bridge circuit uses common electronic components like capacitors, resistors, transistors and a toroidal inductor to generate noise that is fed into a receiver. Adjusting the trim capacitors and potentiometer tunes the circuit to produce a "null" where noise is minimized. Connecting a test inductor-capacitor trap circuit at the "unknown" terminals allows the trap's resonant frequency to be identified by where noise increases as the receiver frequency is tuned off the null point. The noise bridge provides an easy way to accurately measure trap resonant frequencies for antenna tuning applications without expensive specialized equipment. Proper
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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New England QRP Club

C1
50 pF

V+ (8-15V)

R5

C3
.01
R2
4.7K

C2
.01

C5
.01

R6
10K

C4
.01

D1
5.1V

R1
200

680

R4
1.5K
R3 22K

Noise Bridge Project

T1

'B'

Q2
'U'

Q1

RCVR

D. Benson, K1SWL 12/7/2001

R5

Detail A:
T1 construction

V-

.01

T1

27

.01

C6

C4

C2

Description
8-50 pF trim cap, 5mm
.01 uF ceramic disk cap
27 pF cer. disk cap, NPO
0.5W Zener diode, 1N5231B
2N4401 NPN transistor
200-ohm 6mm trim pot
4.7K, 1/4W (ylw-viol.-red-gold)
22K, "
(red-red-org-gold)
1.5K, "
(brn-grn-red-gold)
680 ohm, " (blu-grey-brn-gold)
10K, "
(brn-blk-org-gold)
FT50-43 toroid
6-32 screw, nut, lockwasher
nylon cable clamp, 1/8"
printed-circuit board
4" length ribbon cable (3-wire)
16" RG-174 w/ BNC connector.
9V battery (snap) connector

680

10K

R4
R6

1.5K

R2

C5

Q1

'Unknown'

27
NPO

V+

D1
.01

1N5231B

C3

22K

4.7K

R3

.01

C6

Qty.
Ref. Desig.
1
C1
4
C2-C5
1
C6
1
D1
2
Q1,Q2
1
R1
1
R2
1
R3
1
R4
1
R5
1
R6
1
T1
1 ea - 1
-1
-1
-1
-1
--

Q2

C1

UNKNOWN

R1

Recommended Assembly Sequence:


1) Install all resistors, capacitors and semiconductors as illustrated above. All components mount on the top
(silkscreened ) side of the board. Caution: the following components are installation orientation-sensitive:
C1, D1, Q1, Q2. Match the flat side or banded end of those components to the orientation shown in the
drawing above.
2) Wind 4 turns of the supplied length of 3-wire ribbon cable. When complete, it will match the
appearance of the toroid sketch above at right. Colors will vary and are non-critical, but ensure that each
turn lies flat on the core. Split the wire trio apart with a sharp knife (back to the toroid body). Trim lead
lengths to 1/2" (1.5 cm), strip all 6 wire ends. Orient the toroid so that matches the rectangular outline on
the printed-circuit board. Install all 6 wires into corresponding through-holes and then solder onto the
board.
3) Install battery snap leads for an external 9V battery (not included). Observe the red/black lead polarity as
shown. Note: you may use an external DC power supply if you prefer- maximum recommended supply
voltage is 15VDC nominal.

4) Using a sharp knife, carefully strip 1" (2.5 cm) of outer jacket from the cut end of the supplied RG-174
cable. Gently unbraid the outer (shield) layer, pull it to one side and twist it into a bundle. Remove a length
of the dialectric jacket surrounding the center conductor. Install as shown above with the twisted shield
shield installed in the larger-diameter hole as shown. Note: Inspect your work closely- a single stray strand
of braid is sufficent to short out the coax and render the circuit inoperative. Use minimum heat when
soldering - the (poly) dialectric material will deform with excess heat.
5) Install the cable clamp over the RG-174 coax and secure with the supplied machine screw, locknut and
hex nut.
6) If you haven't done so as you've installed and soldered components onto the boards, remove excess lead
protrusions from the solder side of the board with diagonal cutters.
***

Typical Application:
Antenna trap adjustment: Connect a 100-ohm 1/4W resistor across the unknown terminals and connect
to your receiver with a length of coax. Apply DC power (8-15V) to the noise bridge circuit and you should
hear a loud rushing noise in the receiver. Adjust control R1 for minimum S-meter indication and then
C1. Once these are both adjusted carefully, the noise level in the receiver should drop to its internal noise
level alone. The noise bridge is now adjusted for a null- the impedance presented by the 100-ohm
resistance and stray capacitance is now balanced by the bridge's 'R1' and 'C1' settings.
Noise Bridge hookup
9V

NOISE BRIDGE

RCVR

'Unknown'
100

(T

When you add the trap- a parallel L-C circuit- at its resonance frequency across that 100-ohm resistor,
there'd be no disturbance to the null since its impedance at the intended operating frequency is theoretically
infinite. Away from the resonance frequency, the noise level will rise as the receiver is tuned off to either
side. Finding the traps resonant frequency amounts to tuning your receiver until you've located the noise
null. This null will be fairly broad; however, it should be easy to locate using 1-Mhz tuning steps and then
tuning more closely for the deepest portion of the null.
Once youve found the null, the trap may be adjusted by changing either inductance or capacitance to
modify its resonant frequency to suit your operating preferences. For a trap antenna, you'd normally adjust
a resonant trap to the center of the band portion you most often use.

Caution:
Its critical to make the leads from the unknown terminals on the bridge to the traps as rigid as is
practical. Use short length 2 (cm) lengths of solid wire to the 100-ohm parallel load- you may install
solder lugs outboard of that resistor. This allows the traps to be added and removed with a minimum of
change in stray capacitance, which affects the resonance measurement significantly. Unless this
precautions is taken, measurements may not be repeatable. Note- once these trap hookup connections are
ready to go and prior to adding the traps, be sure to readjust C1 for a noise null- this effectively tunes out
the test setup stray capacitance.

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