This Class C AM transmitter uses a high-efficiency amplifier where the transistor conducts for less than half the signal cycle, achieving around 70–80% efficiency. It combines an oscillator, buffer, and IRF510 MOSFET power stage to deliver about 5 W RF output, making it suitable for compact amateur radio transmission.
If your receiver needs a higher level of signal across the entire matching network, this signal booster circuit can furnish the solution. This Signal booster circuit, built around a few transistors and support components, offers an RF gain of about 12 to 18 dB from about 100 kHz to over 30 MHz
Software Defined Radio technology has revolutionized base station infrastructure, laboratory-grade receivers, and bench equipment for years, yet handheld transceivers have stubbornly clung to traditional fixed-function architectures. The LinHT SDR shatters this paradigm entirely, delivering a genuine software-defined transceiver in a genuinely portable package.