There's no need for anything special and shielding is usually superfluous unless the receiver is near (6-8') an RF noise source. There are commercial antennas available cut for 433.92MHz or you can build your own - it depends on the range needed. A 6 inch piece of wire attached to pin 8 of the receiver may be adequate. Or you can use one like those sold by Bruce Reynolds...or build one like...which can be built with any insulated solid wire stiff enough to hold its shape. The phasing line can be made from 75-ohm coax if 93-ohm isn't available.
For the transmitter, a 6" wire is usually more than adequate.
If you need extra range, add a wide-band preamp between the receiving antenna and receiver. Getting 150-200' through a few walls is usually possible.
I've ordered one of the RX/TX pairs so I can test the receiver. In the meantime, can you tell me what the chip is on the receiver? I'm interested in the 24-pin chip - I can tell it's a HiMark chip but cannot read the number. I'm familiar with a HiMark 18-pin superheterodyne ASK receiver chip but cannot recall seeing a 24-pin chip.





Bookmarks