I had some free time available this week, so I decided to take a break from my AF projects, and do some RF experimentation.
I've never done anything RF related on my own (appart from a very simple AM receiver, based on a germanium diode), so I found interesting and exciting building a simple FM circuit, and see how it works.
With this one I didn't get a nice sinusoidal oscillations.
I needed to replace the 4.7pF with a 10pF, or even higher.
Anyway, even though I managed to get some 90 MHz oscillations, I could hear its signal using an FM radio across a broad frequency range (more than 5 MHz). So it seems to be not very stable.
Then, tried ideas from:
The increased base resistor to supply voltage improved things, but the capacitor from emiter to ground just didn't work.
The collector-emitter capacitor has a great impact on frequency, not just the variable capacitor, which has minimal effect. This doesn't make much sense to me.
I'm building the circuit on a small solderless breadboard, using very (very, just minimal) short wires.
If I had to draw some conclusion from my couple of hours experimentation session, I'd say that these simple circuits just can't transmit at a very precise frequency, so they are not really suitable for me.
BUT, there's another thread on the topic:
https://www.electro-tech-online.com/threads/building-a-fm-transmitter.152104/
Audioguru posted a circuit he designed. If I look at the second transistor stage, it seems very similar, and I'm sure this one works well...
I'm not interested in good sound quality, and definitely not looking for a complex project, but just some circuit fun to fill spare time. So simplicity is priority. Just a circuit which can transmit a precise frequency (at least, which could not be heard over megahertzs!).
Is this possible, or should I have to go for more complex designs?