4 Transistor FM Tracking Transmitter

The following diagram is the FM tracking transmitter based on 4 transistors. No additional notes for this tracking transmitter diagram, try to discover this circuit by yourself.. 🙂 Components list: R1 = 100K Ohms R2 = 10 Ohms R3 = 47K Ohms R4 = 220 Ohms C1 = 4.7uF/16V C2, C5 = 1nF C3 =… Read More »

Easy FM Tracking Transmitter

This is an easy FM tracking transmitter circuit project :). The scheme designed by Tony van Roon, and here the FM transmitter tracker diagram: Components List: R1 = 10K C1 = 100uF/10V C2 = 10nF C3 = 4-40pF trimmer capacitor C4 = 4.7pF IC1 = LM3909 Q1 = 2N3904 NPN transistor LED1 = Red LED/or… Read More »

Three Stage 9V FM Transmitter

This circuit is a powerful three stage, 9V FM transmitter (Tx) with a range of up to 1 kilometer in the open. It uses an RF transistor in its output stage and two BC547″s for the first two stages. Distance of trans-mission is critically dependent on the operating Conditions (in a building or out on… Read More »

FM Wireless Microphone

Below is the circuit diagram and PCB layout of FM wireless microphone: The range of frequencies for the FM broadcast band is 90MHz (MHz = Megahertz or 90 million cycles per second). Because the FM microphone has a variable tuned circuit, it can be tuned to a quiet spot on your local FM broadcast band… Read More »

15W FM Transmitter using BLY88C

This is long range FM transmitter with transmision power output is up to 15W. This 15W FM transmitter use power transistor BLY88C as the main transmitter amplifier. Building a good FM transmitter(88-110Mhz) begins with getting a good schematic. You don’t have to understand the precise working of the transmitter to build it. But some basic… Read More »

Mini FM Transmitter

This is a mini fm transmitter circuit. I think this is the simplest one. Simple, easy and of course… inexpensive… The supply voltage is between 1.1 – 3 Volts with power consumption is 1.8 mA at 1.5 Volts. This circuit should be able to cover  30 – 50 meters of range max. at 1.5 Volts.… Read More »