EA 1978 Accu-keyer improvements
Electronics Australia published an article describing an updated version of
the WB4VVF Accu-keyer around
1978.
The update was mainly adaptation to CMOS TTL chips.
The EA design suffered from a number of problems, some inherited to some
extent from the Accu-keyer design, the were:
- the clock oscillator (which stops after each character) has a shorter
period in its first cycle which results in clipping of the first element;
- the sidetone oscillator had a raw sound and used excessive current;
- the output circuit lacked the flexibility to operate a grid block keyed
transmitter, popular at the time.
This article describes modifications to fix / improved these defects.
Fig 1: Modified EA78 Accu-keyer
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Fig 1 shows the modified circuit. Click on the image for a full sized image
and use the zoom facilities in your browser to view the detail. Changed areas
are highlighted in yellow.
Clock oscillator
The oscillator was modified to improve the start up, and the output inverted
using a spare gate package to edge trigger the flip flops on the more
appropriate oscillator edge.
Sidetone oscillator
The raw sound from the side tone oscillator is cause by the NE555 current
limiter being triggered by the low impedance load. A small speaker output
transformer transforms the speaker impedance so that the NE555 doesn't go into
current limit, improving the sound and dramatically reducing the current
consumption, extending the life running on a 216 battery considerably. A revised
coupling capacitor also improves the sound.
Output circuit
The output circuit was modified to drive a reed relay for polarity
insensitive output, and capability to switch up to 200V. The reed relay does
draw more current than the original circuit, but the increased current
consumption is more than offset by the savings of the modified sidetone circuit
(above).
Links
Last update: 26 November 2006 13:08 |