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Schomandl is famous for it's time-related
instruments (frequency meters, frequency decades). The FD1 is a somewhat hard
to imagine instrument. It's built around 1970, where high-speed counters were
common for frequency measurement. The advantage is that even the carrier
frequency of a strong modulated signal can be measured troublefree. Another
welcome effect is that the instrument may be used as simple cw signal
source.
The basic principle of operation is to tune
the instrument to the same frequency as the unknown signal and get the result
on three dials, one each for 'MHz', '10kHz' and 'kHz'. Two meters help
syncronizing to the input. A loudspeaker and a magic eye indicate the beat
frequency.
The circuit is mixed tube, transistor and
even ic. I belive (or do I hope!) that the initial version was all tube and the
transistors and ic's did come with later revisions. The instrument was owned by
the german army and used for checking and calibrating military transmitters and
receivers.
After finishing restauration, the large knob
for 'kHz' was broken during transportation in my car! Fortunately I was able to
locate a new one (smaller diameter than original but same
style). |