" I observed that when I blow towards the linearization coils, the pitch goes up relatively quickly. Does anybody have any idea what might be causing that?"- Blala
Yeah -
What happens when you blow on something? If the something is warmer than your breath, it will cool - if its cold, it could get warmer.
I think this is the most likely cause of that problem ... So the question.. What coils did you use?
Extreme drift is more likely if there is a lot of current through a component ( coil ) causing it to dissipate a lot of heat - under these conditions blowing on it can quickly cool it substantially - are the coils warm to touch? (they shouldn't be - they should be ~ room temperature) - If they are, you could have another fault.
But it may not be anything related to the above - there may be a diode or something that's getting cooled by a side-draft, or it may just be the position of your face when blowing that's adding capacitance and shifting the frequency.
"When I keep my hand at a steady distance from the pitch antenna, the pitch doesn't stay the same but it changes smoothly and unperiodically."
Perhaps try closing the box or wrapping the board in thermal insulator.. (NOT "Space Blanket" !!! ;-) [Polyurethane foam or similar sheets of white closed-cell foam or even a thick piece of cloth wrapped ' round the board should prove something.] In an enclosed container temperatures tend to be more stable - I wrapped my inductors (or encapsulated them) in polyurethane foam, because they (both the antenna inductors and the ones on the board) are IMO the biggest source of thermal drift... The most significant are the antenna coils - IF you havent used specified Bourns 63xx or Miller coils (or other good coils with minimum inductance change as a function of temperature) these are likely to drift like hell unless you insulate them and / or compensate in some other way.. And even the specified parts need to be 'isolated' from extreme (a few degrees!) temperature changes
Note - wrapping the inductors doesn't really provide a comprehensive solution, but it does help - it slows the rate of temperature change at least, so in an environment where temperature us varying, rather than having to re-tune every few minutes you may only need to re-tune every hour (if at all).. it all depends on a load of factors - how much heat the component is producing, how good the thermal insulator is and what other thermal conduction paths exist, what other local components are dissipating, air flows / convection paths, the outside temperature etc.
Fred.
Please help me to understand something - Why did you "blow towards the linearization coils" ? ... There must have been some thought process behind this act... ? I ask this because I am finding a lot of this type of thing recently, and I dont understand.. I am trying to understand how other people think / relate to the world, because its becoming obvious to me that I am "odd" ! If I blew on a coil my thought process would be to test the effect of air current (even if I didnt think before I did it) - the only reasonable conclusion I could draw if it had an effect would be that temperature was a possible factor - and I would then act to verify or dispel this hypothesis.
But a lot of people seem to do things that make some sense, but fail to act as if they had any idea about why they did it! Is there a huge gulf between "engineers" and "scientific thinkers" and "normal" people? Do "normal" people do things like whacking a boiler when it wont ignite, or shake their leg when they get pins+needles, or blow on a coil "instinctively" without knowing the (possibly) sensible reason behind what they are doing, and then get stuck when they get results they dont understand?
Please understand that this is a genuine, non-judgmental question - I am just really interested in thought processes of other humans and myself.