Hi,
have found an old commercial example of what I mean:
it's heatkit DF-1 model of transistor radio direction finder , used also for navigation (before GPS age
, so it's grandpa's GSM !).
This model used the commercial AM broadcast band so: 540KHz to 1620KHz.
I think is really similar to what we see there at passive receiver
Look at the enclosed ferrite stick on top... can be rotated by the control knob on front panel to desired angle to find maximum instrument deviation, so maximum signal strenght.
Best regards,
Max
have found an old commercial example of what I mean:
it's heatkit DF-1 model of transistor radio direction finder , used also for navigation (before GPS age
, so it's grandpa's GSM !).This model used the commercial AM broadcast band so: 540KHz to 1620KHz.
I think is really similar to what we see there at passive receiver

Look at the enclosed ferrite stick on top... can be rotated by the control knob on front panel to desired angle to find maximum instrument deviation, so maximum signal strenght.
Best regards,
Max


I was wondering when you would show up.
Comment