Plate detector (radio)

A plate detector (or anode-bend detector) is a vacuum tube detector circuit used in A.M. radios, although the term is sometimes extended to transistor circuits that similarly rely upon distorted amplification to enhance one half of the received signal over the other. This circuit employs a tube with an indirectly heated cathode, typically a medium-mu triode, or a tetrode or pentode with a sharp cut-off control grid. Partial rectification of R.F. signals occurs in the plate of the detector tube if it is forced into its non-linear region at roughly the zero crossing point of the input signal. This differs from a grid-leak detector, which achieves rectification in the control grid. It also differs from the diode detector circuit commonly used to provide both R.F. rectification and automatic volume control (A.V.C.) bias to the R.F. amplifier tubes.

Overview

Enough negative bias is applied to the grid (or base, for a transistor implementation) to bring the device almost to cut-off point; an incoming signal will cause the device to conduct only on positive-going halves of the input signal... it cannot conduct significantly less during negative halves, so the plate voltage varies at the modulation frequency - going more negative as the input signal envelope increases with the Amplitude Modulation modulating signal.

Plate detectors are used in both T.R.F. and (less commonly) superheterodyne receivers. The grid is connected directly to the secondary of the final R.F. or I.F. transformer. The cathode is connected to ground through a circuit consisting of a parallel-connected bias resistor (usually 10 kΩ to 50 kΩ) and bypass capacitor (usually 0.25 µF to 0.5 µF). When sufficient negative bias is applied to the grid, the plate current is pushed almost to the cut-off point. When a modulated R.F. signal is applied to the grid under these conditions, a corresponding increase in plate current occurs. As the signal amplitude varies, the plate current also varies, causing the plate to act as a diode detector while the tube as a whole also acts as an audio amplifier. A plate bypass capacitor (usually 500 pF to 0.002 µF for triodes, or 250 pF to 0.001 µF for tetrodes and pentodes) is used to regulate plate current.

Like most A.F. amplifiers in radios, the plate voltage is usually less than 60 volts. When a tetrode or pentode is used, the screen grid voltage is usually about one-half the plate voltage.

Plate detector circuits were commonly used from the introduction of indirectly heated cathode tubes in the late 1920s until the start of World War II. As R.F. tubes became more sensitive, grid-leak detectors (which are more sensitive than plate detectors) became less practical. Diode detectors were popular because, unlike plate detector circuits, they could also provide A.V.C. bias. However, the dual-diode/triode and dual-diode/pentode tubes commonly used in these circuits had bulk wholesale costs that were as much as twice the cost of the tubes commonly used as plate detectors. This made plate detector circuits more practical for low-priced radios sold during the depths of the Great Depression.

Because an indirectly heated cathode is required (or a separate negative grid bias battery is needed) for this circuit to operate, it is not used in battery-operated radios.

Controlling volume levels

Plate detector circuits usually lack an A.V.C. bias circuit. In receivers equipped with A.V.C., volume levels are adjusted by a potentiometer (typically 500 kΩ to 2 MΩ audio taper) that controls audio signal levels at the control grid of the A.F. amplifier. In receivers not equipped with A.V.C., the most common connection of the volume control potentiometer (typically 4 kΩ to 15 kΩ linear taper) is as follows:

To assure that proper cathode bias is maintained, many non-A.V.C. volume controls are usually equipped with a "stop" that maintains a small amount of resistance between the center wiper and the high end connection.

Because the volume control in non-A.V.C. receivers adjusts R.F. signal levels rather than A.F. signal levels, the volume control must be manipulated while tuning the radio in order to find weak signals.

Tubes commonly used as plate detectors

Comparison with Alternative Envelope Detectors

Infinite-Impedance Detector

Infinite-Impedance Detector (JFET implementation)

The Infinite-Impedance Detector is essentially a plate detector where the output is taken from the cathode circuit (or emitter, or drain, for transistor implementations) and so has lower output voltage but low distortion.

As with the standard plate detector, the device is biased almost completely off, and positive-going halves of the input signal cause the device to quickly charge C2 up from the positive power supply but the capacitor can only be discharged slowly via R1, so the circuit acts as a peak detector.

The value of R1 would depend on the JFET or triode chosen, and perhaps be a 200 kilohm preset, adjusted to give lowest distortion in the output signal. The time constant of C2 with R1 would be chosen to fall somewhere between the highest audio (modulation) frequency but well below the lowest carrier (modulated) frequency encountered. The RF filter in the supply line, C4 and the RFC (RF Choke), is less essential than in the original plate detector, but can reduce inter-stage RF interference and instability.

Summary of Differences

Detector: Plate detector Infinite-impedance detector Grid-leak detector Diode detector Precision Rectifier
Suitable for Directly-Heated tubes No No Yes Yes Unlikely
Suitable for AGC production No
(offset voltage too high)
No
(positive-going)
No
(offset voltage too high)
Yes Yes
Typical Distortion Medium Low Medium Medium Low
Loading of tuned circuit Low
(unless Miller effect significant)
Very Low Medium High Medium (Usually)
Quiescent current Very low Very low High Low or None
(unless bias is applied to overcome Vf drop)
High
(depends on op-amp employed)
Voltage Gain Medium Unity
(but some gain from Q of unloaded LC circuit)
High Low Unity
(usually)
Maximum usable frequency High
(Miller effect limitations)
can be used at VHF High UHF and beyond
(with appropriate diodes)
Low
(slew rate limited)
Circuit Complexity Low Low Low Lowest Highest
Most commonly found in: Old short-wave receivers High fidelity AM tuners Single-tube regenerative receivers Most AM receivers
(from crystal sets to mass-produced transistor radios)
Test equipment

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/23/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.