Antenna receiving amplifier for HF and VHF 1 to 400 MHz built without coils. PCB and LTspice simulation provided.
The following receiving amplifier can be used for any kind of signal in the HF and VHF bands from about 1 MHz to 400 MHz. It offers quite linear gain across this band width without using any LC tuned circuits. Therefore it can be used for shortwave, FM and VHF signals and even AM band can be received, because the gain at 500 kHz is not less than 18dB. The circuit does not use coils. However, a choke will be required if you will power the amplifier through the feed cable. The circuit uses five RF transistors with a cut-off frequency of at least 600 MHz. The PCB is designed for the (S)S9018 transistors (EBC pinout), but you can use any kind of low power RF NPN transistors, like MPSH10 and even the old types like BF200 or BF214 (pay attention to pinout). S9018 transistors are cheap and widely available (you can find them in transistor packs).
The amplifier's input is unbalanced and it can be connected to any kind of antenna (after the balun if it is necessary). Because Q5 is placed in a common base configuration, the input impedance is high, thus the amplifier can be used with whip antennas too (they usually have high impedance at low frequencies). The output is 75 ohms unbalanced. The overall gain of this amplifier is 20 dB.
Here is the schematic of the amplifier. All capacitors are ceramic disc type. L1 RF choke can be omitted if you want to power the amplifier from a separate cable. If you will use the RF coaxial cable to power the amplifier (when it is mounted near the antenna), the RF choke is required.
Schematic of antenna amplifier without coils
It can be built on a single sided PCB of approximatively 32 x 76 mm. The PCB should be enclosed in a metal case and the entire amplifier should be mounted near the antenna for best performance. If you use L1, it can be built by winding 15-25 turns of 0.2-0.5 mm diameter copper wire on a 3-4 mm diameter ferrite rod. Or you can use a 5-10 microHenry inductor.
This is the component outline on PCB. My prototype photo above looks a bit different because it is a previous version.
Antenna amplifier PCB outline
The amplifier needs 6...12 V from a regulated power supply (max. 50 mA current draw). The gain is about 20 dB (according to LTspice simulation with MPSH10 transistor model).
Gain of antenna amplifier
The above circuit is based on an article from Romanian electronics magazine Tehnium.Resources
- KiCad project containing schematic and PCB
- LTspice simulation file
- Kit of 600 transistors including S9018
Hello sir, i amd low on circuits. Can i use it as gsm repeater?
ReplyDeleteNo, you can't.
DeleteIs it used to amplify RF signals and retransmit it ?
ReplyDeleteI have a low powered FM transmitter, so can use this amplifier to increase the power of it?
No! This is a receiving amplifier. You use it to boost signals from antenna and improve reception.
DeleteHola Cornelio, puedo usar para amplificar la recepción en un BFO?
ReplyDeleteHi friend, Nice circuit, have you tested with FM tuners and can you detail the performance/improvement, is it significant
ReplyDeleteHello, do the antenna in connect to antena or to radio?
ReplyDeleteThe antenna connects to ANT_IN port. OUT connects to radio.
Deletecan we use this circuit to boost SSB HF signals for ham radio
ReplyDeleteYes, this works for HF band.
DeleteHi can this circuit improve tv reception
ReplyDeleteOnly in the lower VHF band.
DeleteHello sir you did not diode for +and- power
ReplyDeleteWhat diode?
DeleteJ2 and j3 port use
ReplyDeletePorts are labeled on schematic.
DeletePower 6 volt / 12 volt dc?
ReplyDeleteAnything between 6 and 12 V will work.
Deletediode for negative and positive power supply
ReplyDeletePin out for negative and positive supply
ReplyDeleteHello, I'm very interested. I would like to use it for an FM radio. Is it possible to vary the gain so as not to have reception disturbances?
ReplyDeleteNo, this amplifier has a fixed gain.
DeleteMany thanks! I tried to look for these (S)S9018 transistors but they are only on digikey ( far from Italy) or ebay. What types can I use as equivalents?
ReplyDeleteBF199 is an old transistor which can be used as replacement (but I don't know if the pin order is exactly the same). Basically any small-signal NPN transistor with a cutoff frequency higher than 500-600 MHz will work. Otherwise, instead of ordering transistors to build this, you might order some SPF5189(z) LNA boards which offer much better performance (higher gain, low noise, extended frequency range).
DeleteThank you very much, best regards
ReplyDeleteHello, why did you put only one PIN for the input of the antenna? An antenna input is composed of positive and negative, and also in the output, there is only one embedded negative and positive output.
ReplyDeleteIt is supposed that the PCB is encased in a metal case connected to ground. All "negative" terminals connect to this metal case.
Deleteplease clarify ,choke location to be near antenna( rf amp )
ReplyDeleteor near receiver antenna( power supply injection point through coax cable )
Choke should be near RF amp, or you can use a bias tee circuit.
Deletenoted . thank you
ReplyDeleteHow to replace components value for use uhf tv band, there's a formula?
ReplyDeleteOne question, what about SSB, can it be used to receive SSB signal?
ReplyDeleteSure, as long is the SSB signal is within the amplifier frequency range.
DeleteCan you please provide the source material(the article)?
ReplyDelete