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Showing posts from February, 2018

Kaito WRX-911 aka Tecsun R-911

This radio is a one-chip wonder! The main active device appears to be a Sony CXA1691BM IC which was originally designed for radio-cassette recorders. Here it is with a strong signal from Pyongyang on 12015kHz. This particular one is a Kaito-branded model which I purchased from Universal Radio of Ohio whilst in the US And here is the schematic:

Tecsun R-9710 Teardown

Although I've been itching to get my hands on the Tecsun R-9700DX, I wasn't really aware of it's smaller sibling, the R-9710 until I saw this review on the Two Hands and a Radio YouTube channel. Two Hands made the observation that the shortwave bands tune in the opposite direction to the AM and FM bands, which made me go and do a quick check other Tecsun analog radios. I found the R-9700DX also has this inverted tuning feature so some Googling later and I've located a teardown of the R-9710 plus other sets. The original article is in Chinese but you can view it through the magic of Google Translate . R-9710 teardown from http://www.leowood.net/sbdp209.htm Note it has eight crystals around the bandswitch for that fixed-crequency first local oscillator. Add the schematic found at http://www.fmdiy.com/ReadNews.asp?NewsID=305 More dead links to maintain unfortunately.

Tecsun R-9700DX Teardown

I've seen a lot of favourable comments on this analogue SW radio via various YouTube channels, along with it's sibling the R-9710. Sold in some (USA?) markets as the Grundig Yacht Boy 250. Exact specifications and schematics have evaded me so far, however I did find a teardown and comparison at RadioIntel.com from which I've borrowed this photo: Photo from http://www.radiointel.com/review-review-tecsunr9700dx.htm It appears to use dual-conversion on shortwave with a fixed crystal local oscillator (see the 10 crystals above the bandswitch). One feature is that the tuning on the short wave bands tune the opposite direction to the AM and FM bands. Here's my (incorrect) guess of how it works. AM band IF is 450kHz (from the orange block filter)  AM local oscillator tunes 975kHz - 2160kHz. The image of the AM band (1425kHz - 2610kHz) is used as a tuneable first IF for the shortwave bands. Each band is 600kHz wide so it probably uses 2000kHz - 2600kHz. The SW ba...