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Assembling a Niftymitter v0.24 board - a short range FM transmitter

Assembling a Niftymitter v0.24 board - a short range FM transmitter
This Instructable will guide you through assembling the circuit for Niftymitter, an open source mini FM transmitter. The circuit uses a free running oscillator and is based on Tetsuo Kogawa's Simplest FM transmitter.

The project is housed at www.openthing.org/products/niftymitter
 
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Step 1What you need

What you need

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36 comments
Mar 8, 2012. 3:53 PMjtc10512 says:
is that pink thing in the center the tuner?
May 17, 2011. 12:44 AMalexanderall says:
Where does the switch go on the on the pcb?
Apr 13, 2011. 1:04 PMburdockwing says:
so wait what does this exactly do?
Mar 16, 2011. 12:48 AMtechnozook says:
could you post a scamatic cus i cant etch my own board
Feb 26, 2011. 9:06 AMdanger man 1 says:
is it possible to make this work with out a battery?
Jan 19, 2010. 4:28 PMcoolacid says:
What goes in the Y-ish symbol between the 9V and the GND?
Dec 15, 2010. 4:14 AMcliffyd says:
its for an antenna wire.
Nov 26, 2010. 9:07 AM______ says:
check out my new reciving and/or transmitting antenna Ins. soon today
Nov 26, 2010. 9:21 AM______ says:
The slide show is out
Nov 26, 2010. 9:00 AM______ says:
Yup
Feb 15, 2010. 8:11 PMcoolacid says:
Nice! I made mine and tested it. I really works. It's kind of tricky to tune it, but it's awesome anyhow.
But there's an annoying buzz in the audio. I was wondering if it's something I did or if it's a known issue.
Nov 2, 2010. 2:39 PMexpert_vision says:
I also experience a buzz in the audio and it persist even if I unplug audio input. As a power source I use a PC PSU's 12V line with a 2.7V zener, so i get 9.3V. May be I should try a 9 V battery or 3V zener or a stabilizer.
Nov 5, 2010. 7:27 AMexpert_vision says:
The buzz was because of the PC fans .. LOL. Also any PC activity cause small disturbance on the PSU DC voltage lines. So the VCC has to be pretty stable(like a battery).
Nov 26, 2010. 8:59 AM______ says:
Has anybody but me built it and tested range. Range is 1 foot to 250 feet!
Oct 13, 2010. 2:31 PMguitarmaster101 says:
Is there mabye A possible way to make it transmit farther
Dec 26, 2009. 1:34 AMt.rohner says:
These types of oscillators are very unstable. There are better designs, which are only a little more complicated to build.
If it's your first transmitter, it's ok to play around with. (My first ones were of similar designs. That was at age 12, at age 17 i made my HAM license.)

But i don't think this one is of much practical use.

May 21, 2010. 1:51 AMt.rohner says:
On this site you can find different schematics of basic transmitters.

http://www.zen22142.zen.co.uk/Circuits/rf/lrfmtx.htm
or the main rf-page
http://www.zen22142.zen.co.uk/Circuits/rf/rf.html

The first circuit uses a capacitive diode for modulation, where your design uses the the varying capacity of the transistor for modulation. Secondly, there is a amplifying stage, which not only amplifies the rf, but also decouples the oscillator a little bit from the antenna.
But if you want something real stable, you need a crystal-controlled oscillator or a PLL circuit. These designs are much more complicated, but lately you find these small transmitters for feeding your mp3-player sound to your car stereo via FM-radio. So there are definitely some highly integrated circuits to do this in such a small size.(maybe it's easier to buy one of them, but then it's not home-brewed...)
Mar 1, 2010. 10:04 AMhitachi8 says:
what is the Trimmer Cap ? UF ? 
Apr 30, 2010. 5:52 AMBeduk says:
I dont know what a trimmer cap is.uf stands for microfarad
Apr 30, 2010. 1:15 PMhitachi8 says:
i know , i was just asking for the capacity .
exemple : 20 UF  
Mar 3, 2010. 5:29 AMhitachi8 says:
Thank you , 
Mar 26, 2010. 2:16 AMengr.tahir says:
 Hello! plz tell me how much area it covers???
Mar 25, 2010. 10:28 PMoc80 says:
could you use 12 volt instead of 9?
Jan 29, 2010. 9:30 AMspacetarget says:
Good work! I like the simple board layout.  This is a great low parts count transmitter.  Yes, the more parts the more stable, but the whole idea here is simple and eazy. I have made a lot of these. Lots of fun.

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Author:royshearer
I am a freelance design engineer and drummer. My business site is at http://www.zero-waste.co.uk and is often concerned with appropriate technologies, open source design and design for sustainability.