Hello Crow, 
  
<<<   PS. I discovered Gary DeBock's big external ferrite on a PL-390, and it's 
a very cool idea too, but before I found that, I'd tried a cheap headphone 
cable cable extension and tried the supplied antenna through it. It worked 
fine, through a length of over 7 feet, and it turns out that the cable has an 
odd construction, red to ring, white to tip, reversing convention, and only the 
red is shielded! Meaning, that the white one used in this case had no shield. 
Despite this, the results were good, so I'm wondering if building a system to 
mount on a PL-360 is needed at all, it looks like a convenient remote antenna 
might be just as feasible, and less likely to stress a fragile radio. I have no 
idea how long a cable we might get away with though. The reason I'm considering 
all this is that my external antenna might eventually better be a loop than a 
longwire, as good SNR as ever makes a batter result, especially given the weird 
AGC in a Tecsun radio.   >>> 
  
I assume that you are referring to the 7.5" plug-in loopstick construction 
article for the Tecsun PL-360 model (posted at   
http://www.mediafire.com/view/2cqwsqj0bvajf6k/7.5%20inch-LS.doc  ), 
and not the PL-390 model. 
  
When the PL-360 was first introduced by Tecsun in 2010 there was serious 
interest in the compact model and its design, especially in the DSP chip and 
settings. A full disassembly of the model revealed that the same SiLabs Si4734 
DSP chip was used as in the PL-310 and PL-380 models, so since the 7.5" 
"hotrod" loopsticks (250 uH of 40/44 Litz wire on an Amidon Type 61 ferrite 
rod) had already proven to be extremely effective in those larger Tecsun 
radios, I set upon an all-out project to make a plug-in version which would be 
fully compatible with the PL-360's plug-in loopstick design. The final version 
does have a mechanically secure rubber hose locking system which not only 
avoids stress to the radio's plug-in jack, but makes it possible to even hold 
the radio upside down (with the 7.5" loopstick plugged in) without any issues. 
A total of 25 of these hot-rod loopsticks were constructed and sent out to 
various DXers, many of which are still in use today. 
  
Please be advised that the Tecsun PL-360's DSP selectivity is fixed at 3 kHz, 
so you will never be able to match that of the PL-310 or PL-380 models (1 kHz, 
selectable). In this aspect it is identical to that of the earlier PL-300WT 
model. 
  
73, Gary DeBock (in Puyallup, WA, USA) 
  
  
  
  
    

----- Original Message -----

From: "Lostgallifreyan" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Friday, September 4, 2015 8:45:57 AM 
Subject: [IRCA] Longwire for Tecsun PL-360 

Hello. I just signed up and already answered a message, but might do well to 
stick to a question, I'm not informed enough to give many answers... 

I already made a longwire modification for a PL-390, about 9o turns on the 
internal ferrite rod at the free end, wired between ground and the unused 
'ring' connector on the antenna socket. This works well, but apparently someone 
did better with as few as siz turns, closer to the main winding, I'll have to 
try that on the next one I modify. :) 

The PL-360 is a different matter. It has a (very cute) tiny internal ferrite, 
which gets cut out when plugging in the external supplied ferrite rod antenna. 
I've tried small loops of 10 to 20 turns, about an inch diameter, one close to 
the internal ferrite, with good(ish) results, better was around the external 
ferrite, by as much as 9dB more. I intend to mount it in an external case for 
better physical endurance, a full size phone jack, BNC antenna socket and such, 
and for the fastest way to set things up when ready, I aim to have one longwire 
serve all bands, using one socket to connect it. (possibly with a switch to 
select internally between SW/VHF and AM). 

To my question... Can I get good results using a small ferrite toroid (about an 
inch, permeability allegedly around 5000 to 5000) to satisfy the PL-360's need 
for about 350µH of inductance to tune on AM while dramatically reducing local 
EMI leaking into the doings? 

The idea seems good in concept, but I have trouble with it so far. I calculated 
(using three online sources to check with first) that 11 turns spaced around 
most of the toroid should get the required inductance on this core. I wound a 
bifilar winding, 1:1, so the other one got the longwire to ground. I found that 
selectivity was almost as poor as if I tried plugging the wire straignt to the 
socket leaving the radio with no inductance fit to tune with. :) This happened 
whether I commoned the two ground ends or not. I'm fairly sure the wire didn't 
get scraped and shorted though the ferrite, so I don't think that's why... 

My next move is to try to measure the inductance by a half-volt method for 
calulation with a method I researched yesterday, to see if I'm getting a wildly 
wrong result out of that toroid, but I also think askign here is a good idea. 

Crow. 

PS. I discovered Gary DeBock's big external ferrite on a PL-390, and it's a 
very cool idea too, but before I found that, I'd tried a cheap headphone cable 
cable extension and tried the supplied antenna through it. It worked fine, 
through a length of over 7 feet, and it turns out that the cable has an odd 
construction, red to ring, white to tip, reversing convention, and only the red 
is shielded! Meaning, that the white one used in this case had no shield. 
Despite this, the results were good, so I'm wondering if building a system to 
mount on a PL-360 is needed at all, it looks like a convenient remote antenna 
might be just as feasible, and less likely to stress a fragile radio. I have no 
idea how long a cable we might get away with though. The reason I'm considering 
all this is that my external antenna might eventually better be a loop than a 
longwire, as good SNR as ever makes a batter result, especially given the weird 
AGC in a Tecsun radio. 

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