At present, portable receivers generally use ferrite rod antennas for LF and MF (below 2 MHz), and whip antennas for HF (up to 30 MHz). Each type has proved effective in its particular application.
SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Pulse Electronics Corporation (NYS: PULS) , a leading provider of electronic components, introduces a near field communications (NFC) antenna that is 40% thinner than ...
SAN DIEGO--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Pulse Electronics Corporation (NYS: PULS) , a leading provider of electronic components, announces a new catalog selection of ferrite-loaded, stamp, and wire-on-carrier ...
A popular project among microcontroller aficionados is to build a radio-controlled clock. Tiny receiver boards are available, with a pre-adjusted ferrite antenna, that receive and demodulate the DCF77 ...
George Harris stands in an echoing warehouse in Lewiston explaining with obvious enthusiasm where one of his company’s high-powered antennas has wound up. “We’ve got one antenna on the Empire State ...
Pulse Electronics says its new near-field-communications (NFC) ferrite-sheet antenna is 40% thinner than comparable antennas, yet still complies with EMVCo specifications Pulse Electronics says its ...
Here's a simple DIY EMC measurement antenna that is adjustable from about 85 to 200 MHz (depending on the telescoping antennas used) and is small enough to throw into your EMC troubleshooting kit. It ...
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