>Your varicap might be conducting on part of the RF cycle.
Not according to the model. But I did check it, thanks.
I'm also trying this other circuit I've found from Forrest Mims shown in the attachment from page 46 of his Engineer's Mini Notebook - Communications Projects (C) 1987
He says this is an FM transmitter with an adjustable audio tone.
He actually has L1,L2 as a tapped homemade inductor. I used a calculator online to try to estimate the values of what each side would be. He says L1 is 5 turns of bare solid hookup wire wound around 3/8" diameter with a total length of 1/2". Tap is wire soldered at 1-1/2 turns point. I assumed by solid hookup wire he was referring to about 22 AWG (typical breadboard stuff) and calculated based off that. The antenna at 7" is supposed to be attached on the collector of Q1.
There's also another change to this circuit I'm trying. He runs a second 555 to control output pulses at 10 second intervals to meet FCC requirements. The second 555 pulls the voltage divider R2-R3 to 0V during the intervals disabling the RF output.
He goes on to explain that Q1 oscillates at a frequency controlled by C3 and L1,L2 and that you can temporarily disconnect the disabling timer for the RF adjustment.
I can, depending on some experimentation with L1 and L2's values get the circuit to oscillate in Spice but not at anything near 100 Mhz. Also, when the tone is generated on the timer the RF output is simply turned off. I don't get the frequency change during the tone output I would have expected.
Questions:
1) Are my L1 and L2 values wildly wrong?
2) Am I asking too much of LT SpiceIV?
3) This circuit in spice also shows Q1's base going into negative current. All the RF circuits I seem to model show this issue in SpiceIV. Has anyone seen this also?
4) If I want to convert this to 9V it looks like the only consideration I have to make is some more R1 resistance besides the cap voltage ratings. Correct?
5) Am I missing something in SPICE by not modeling the antenna's influence on the circuits?
TIA