Yeah - I have no idea how you managed to get it to run even in simulation! ;-) .... How far in time did you run the sim, and how did you set the start conditions? ... Wouldn't surprise me if what you were seeing was a transient anomaly..
The only "magic setting" needed was "start power supply at 0V". I let it run for 2ms, and at the beginning the oscillation was rather small and it increased to max soon (within 1/8 of the time maybe). On the left transistor's collector there was an almost clean sine (well my "let's try what happens if we do this" way of changing the circuit may not be beautiful ;) )
you could probably get the board to produce a few hundred cycles before it petered out if you whacked the supply just right ;-) .. did you check the amplitude of the oscillations? sure they weren't 50uV rather than "real" ?
Well the board actually runs "forever" with 5V after I changed all resistors to smaller ones - other than the resistance of the coil which I guess is the problem in my naive way of changing the circuit? But here it's the wrong coil (or at least it would be a coincidence otherwise) anyway and I might be lucky.
But it's enough voltage apparently to feed another transistor to buffer this so I can hook the scope to it.
If I knew a good place to upload such things to I'd post the ltspice file.
Actually, in spice, I also have a file where I added the reference oscillator and the detector and a lowpass filter, and looked at the result, while playing with the variable osc's capacitance, to see the heterodyne freq jump around in audible range. But it (the antenna capacitance having influence) worked only when I set the antenna coil from 40µH to 0.0000040µ or so i.e. basically nothing. And the needed changes in capacitance to really see something seemed rather large (tens of pF or more), on which an EE I know commented "spice and reality are not best friends, don't be fooled by fair weather harmony"
But dont go trying to make Bob's oscillator run at 5V!
Oh that's only for the experimenting board, since I didn't feel like hauling the bench PSU over here to the computer & scope place (yes very suboptimal "lab" setup, I don't have nearly enough space...) - I didn't touch the circuit for the PCB I was about to make, I even kept the ugly "let's use one half wave per rail!" dual 12V PSU :-D
Oh, you cannot add an EQ coil to this circuit,
Why is it called that, "EQ coil", btw?
A small solderless plug-in breadboard is extremely useful to have for quick tests.. Often I work with both at the same time, particularly if I dont know what im doing ;-) ... Build a small section on the plug board, F about with component values, measurements etc, move to breadboard when its working, build next doubtful section on plug-board, interface with wires to previously transferred section if building a complex circuit, and so on.
That sounds like a time saver for some situations, I might think about getting a small board then. I just think I might not trust to be able to control the quality of connections with more than 5 parts involved, which could result in eliminating the otherwise saved time vs. (de-)soldering everything, and numerous palm impressions on the forehead.