DECLARATION
We hereby declare that the mini project report entitled, ‘FM BUGGER
CIRCUIT’ has been completed and written by us for the fulfillment of term
work of T.Y. B.Tech (Electronics & Communication Technology) of degree
of Bachelor of Technology in Electronics & Communication Technology,
of Department of Technology, Shivaji University, Kolhapur. The contents
of this report are written by us and are not copied from any source or
published anywhere in any form prior to the submission, for the award of
any graduate/ post graduate course.
                                          Miss. Asmita manohar bhosale.
                                                 ( Name and signature)
Date: 12/04/2019
Place: DOT, KOLHAPUR
(Mr. UDAY A. PATIL)
Mini Project Guide
                            CERTIFICATE
This is certified that following students of the B.Tech Electronics and
Communication Technology have completed their mini project work
entitled “ FM BUGGER CIRCUIT ”
This is in partial fulfillment of the term work required for T.Y.B.Tech
(Electronics & Communication Technology) of B.Tech Electronics and
Communication Technology degree offered by Department of Technology
, Shivaji University, Kolhapur.
NAME OF STUDENTS
      1] Miss. Asmita manohar bhosale.
Date: 12/04/2019
(Mr. Uday A. Patil )                             (Mr.S.B.Chavan)
Mini Project Guide                          Program Co-ordinator
                                  Page ii
                            CERTIFICATE
This is certified that the project work entitled ‘ FM BUGGER CIRCUIT ’
has assessed by me/us and found to be completed in all aspects for
fulfillment of work to be done under Mini Project head of Third Year
B.Tech (Electronics & Communication Technology) of degree of ‘Bachelor
of   Technology’   in   Electronics   and   Communication    Technology,
ofDepartment of Technology, Shivaji University, Kolhapur. It is the result
of the work completed by
      Miss. Asmita manohar bhosale.
Name & signatures of
MR. UDAY A. PATIL.
Date: 12/04/2019
Place: DOT, KOLHAPUR.
                                  Page
                                  iii
MINI PROJECTTITLE-
FM                   Bugger
circuit
                     Page
                     iv
ATTAINMENT OFCOURSE OUTCOMES
       CO statements                                                   Attainment levels
                                                                 Low         Medium      High
1      Understand fundamental stages in development of
       electronics engineering projects.
2      Apply    engineering       knowledge   for    providing
       technological solutions.
3      Simulate and design the circuits.
4      Work in team environment.
5      Prepare documentation and presentation.
6      Manage the project within time constraints.
Student signatures
1] Asmita Manohar Bhosale
Internal Examiner                    Project Guide                Program Coordinator
    B. Tech (E.C.T.)
                                              Page v
                                                                  ATTAINMENT OF PROGRAM OUTCOMES
PO                                       PO Statements                                                             Attainment level
No.                                                                                            Excellent   Very good     Good      Average    Poor
1     Apply the knowledge of fundamentals of mathematics, science and electronics
      engineering to solve the complex engineering problems.
2     Identify, formulate, review research literature and analyze the problem using
      knowledge of science and engineering.
3     Designing societal and environmental friendly systems and solutions for engineering
      problems.
4     Applying research based knowledge and methods to solve the complex problems.
5     Application and use of modern engineering tools and techniques to solve real world
      problems.
6     Applying knowledge for assessment of social, health, safety, legal and cultural issues
      related to professional engineering practice.
7     Understanding the impact of professional engineering solutions in societal and
      environmental contexts and to demonstrate the need of sustainable development.
8     Applying ethical principles and professional ethics while executing responsibilities.
9     Giving best performance as an individual and as a team member.
10    Effectively communicate the engineering activities with society and engineering
      community using design documents, reports, presentations etc.
11    Applying principles of engineering and management for managing the projects.
12    Ability of life-long learning and adapting the technological changes.
Student signatures
1] Asmita Manohar Bhosale
Internal Examiner                                                 Project Guide                                                Program Co-ordinator
             ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK PROFESSOR FOR BEING AN
OUTSTANDING ADVISOR AND DR. DENNIS DERRICKSON
   FOR HIS ENCOURAGEMENT THROUGHOUT THE
 PROJECT. WE WOULD ALSO LIKE TO THANK JAIME
   CARMO FOR ALL THE TOOLS, RESOURCES, AND
   SERVICES THAT HE PROVIDED US IN ORDER TO
           COMPLETE THIS PROJECT.
                       LIST OF FIGURES
Chapter Figure   Figure name                 Page No.
No.     No.
4       1        FM bugger circuit diagram   9
4       2        Fm waves                    11
4       3        Mic                         12
4       4        Telescopic antenna          14
                               Page 2
                           ABSTRACT
      We know that bugger is a device which gives the
information of one person to other person in the remote location.
Normally bugger is used for finding out the status of the person
like where he is going, what he is talking etc. This is illegal but
most of spy agencies use this bugger. Here is small circuit with
which you can listen to another people conversation from long
distance using the normal FM radio set. This FM bugger circuit is
kept in room where you want listen the conversation. You can
listen to this conversation using the normal FM radio set.
                             Page 3
                          INDEX
Chapter Name of Chapter            Page numbers
No.
1       INTRODUCTION               5
2       COMPONENTS REQUIED         6
3                                  7
        FM BUGGER BLOCK DIAGRAM
4                                  8 - 16
        DESCRIPTION
5       OVERVIEW                   17
6       USES                       18
7       ADVANTAGES, DISADVANTAGES19 - 20
        & APPLICATION
                          Page 4
                           CHAPTER 1
                       INTRODUCTION
 A FM Bugger is a low power FM radio bugger, which allows
listening music or any other audio message from user, portable
media player or any other audio system which is used to be played
by a nearby FM radio. FM bugger consist of mice from where an
audio signal is transmitted to different section of bugger, after
processing the signal from these section it will transmit through
antenna and these signal catch by receiver side antenna.
We know that bugger is a device which gives the information of
one person to other person in the remote location. Normally
bugger is used for finding out the status of the person like where
he is going, what he is talking etc. This is illegal but most of spy
agencies use this bugger. Here is small circuit with which you can
listen to another people conversation from long distance using the
normal FM radio set. This FM bugger circuit is kept in room where
you want listen the conversation. You can listen to this
conversation using the normal FM radio set.
                             Page 5
                         CHAPTER 2
                COMPONENTS REQUIED
   Q1 - BC 547
   Q2 – C 3355
   Q3 – 2N 3866
   TR1,2 – 2022PE TRIMMER
   MIC
   R1 – 10K
   R2 – 15K
   R3 – 4.7K
   R4 – 4.7K
   R5 – 82E
   R6 – 1K
   R7 – 22E
   R8 – 1K
   C1 – 2.2/50V
   C2 – 1KPF
   C3 – 10PF
   C4 – 1KPF
   C5 – 10PF
   C6 – 1KPF
   C7 – 15PF
   C8 – 1KPF
   C9 – 1KPF
   C10 – 10KPF
   C11 – 15PF
   L1 – 4 TURN + 1 JUMPER
   L2 – 7 TURN
   L3 – 7 TURN
   L4 – 5 TURN
   9V DC POWER
   ANTENNA
   PI 06 HEATSINK
                             Page 6
                     CHAPTER 3
           FM BUGGER BLOCK DIAGRAM
 TRANSMITTER SECTION :
                 Tank
                circuit
Mic             Mixer              Antenna
RECEIVER SECTION :
       Antenna                 FM Radio
                      Page 7
                            CHAPTER 4
                         DESCRIPTION
 The circuit uses analogue modulation in which the carrier signal is
  applied continuously to the message signal. Here, in our circuit, the
  conversation of people is received by the MIC and give to the circuit is
  modulated to the carrier signal and transmitted.
 There are different types of analogue modulation in which one type
  of modulation is amplitude modulation, in which single side band
  (SSB) modulation and double side band modulation will come and
  another type of modulation is angular modulation in which the
  frequency modulation, phase modulation will come. In this circuit FM
  modulation is used. In FM modulation, frequency of the carrier signal
  is varied in accordance to the instantaneous amplitude of the
  modulating signal. Normal FM radio will use this type of modulation
  to transmit there signals, frequency modulation will give high
  throughput and efficiency when compared to amplitude modulation.
 MIC is placed in the room in which you want to listen to the
  conversation of the people and MIC will decode the conversation in to
  the signal which is given to the capacitor C1 where C1 is used for
  removing the noise in and turn on the transistor.
 The tank circuit (capacitor C6 and L1) which produce the carrier
  signal for the conversation or message signal, the transistor will
  amplify the both the signals and send to air through the antenna. The
  capacitor C4 is used to remove the noise in the transmitted signal.
 The capacitor C6 is variable because you can adjust the capacitor for
  producing your own carrier signal. Remember carrier signal should
  be in range of 88 to 105 MHz so that FM radio receiver set can receive
  your transmitted signal.
   The FM radio receiver set is adjusted your frequency for listening to
    the conversation.
                               Page 8
Fig.1 FM bugger circuit diagram
           Page 9
1 . THEORY OF FM
From the block diagram we can easily understand that the message signal
or conversation signal is modulated with the carrier frequency which is
generated by the tank circuit. The message signal and carrier signal is
modulated by the transistor and transmit the modulated signal in the air
through the antenna. The modulated signal is received by the receiver
antenna and gives to the FM radio where the user can listen to the
conversation. User should adjust the receiver frequency in the radio for
receiving the signal from the bugger
The FM Bugger uses FM waves (frequency modulated waves) to send
sound. Frequency modulation transmits data (in our case an audio signal)
over a carrier wave by changing the frequency of the carrier wave, where
the frequency of the carrier wave corresponds to the voltage level of the
audio signal. In order to use electromagnetic transmission, the audio signal
must first be converted into an electric signal. The conversion is
accomplished by a transducer, in our case the microphone. After
conversion, the audio signal is used to modulate a carrier signal.
                                  Page
                                  10
                               Fig.2 FM waves
The process of modulation means to systematically use the information
signal (what you want to transmit) to vary some parameter of the carrier
signal. The carrier signal can be a sinusoidal, as shown above, but in our
case the carrier signal will be a square-wave that is generated by a voltage-
controlled oscillator (VCO).
                                  Page
                                  11
2. MIC
A microphone, colloquially nicknamed mic or mike is a transducer that
converts sound into an electrical signal.
Microphones are used in many applications such as telephones, hearing
aids, public address systems for concert halls and public events, motion
picture production, live and recorded audio engineering, sound recording,
two-way radios, megaphones, radio and television broadcasting, and in
computers for recording voice, speech recognition, VoIP, and for non-
acoustic purposes such as ultrasonic sensors or knock sensors.
Several different types of microphone are in use, which employ different
methods to convert the air pressure variations of a sound wave to an
electrical signal. The most common are the dynamic microphone, which
uses a coil of wire suspended in a magnetic field; the condenser
microphone, which uses the vibrating diaphragm as a capacitor plate, and
the piezoelectric microphone, which uses a crystal of piezoelectric material.
Microphones typically need to be connected to a preamplifier before the
signal can be recorded or reproduced.
                                 Fig.3 Mic
                                 Page
                                 12
3. ANTENNA
Telescopic Antenna
An antenna whose receiving or radiating elements, such as the arms of a
dipole, are made in the form of an extensible system of metal tubes or rods
of approximately equal length. Such a design facilitates changing the length
of the antenna elements during tuning and permits the size of the antenna
to be reduced when it is not in operation—for example, during transport or
storage.
For each pair of telescoping tubes, the interior diameter of the outer tube is
approximately equal to the exterior diameter of the inner tube. The tubes fit
into one another with some friction, which is needed to provide electrical
contact and to maintain the required length of each element of the
telescopic antenna under operating conditions—that is, under the action of
gravity or exposure to shaking or vibration. In some cases the required
position of the tubes may be fixed by additional means. For example, collet
chucks or springs may be employed.
Telescopic antennas are used principally in conjunction with radio
receivers, radio bugger-receivers, portable television receivers, and
television receivers installed in moving objects, such as automotive
vehicles; such antennas are also used as indoor television antennas.
                                  Page
                                  13
Fig .4 Telescopic Antenna
        Page
        14
4. Receiver
Radio or cell phone radio
A radio receiver is the opposite of a radio bugger. It uses an antenna to
capture radio waves, processes those waves to extract only those waves
that are vibrating at the desired frequency, extracts the audio signals that
were added to those waves, amplifies the audio signals, and finally plays
them on a speaker.
      Antenna: Captures the radio waves. Typically, the antenna is simply a
       length of wire. When this wire is exposed to radio waves, the waves
       induce a very small alternating current in the antenna.
      RF amplifier: A sensitive amplifier that amplifies the very weak radio
       frequency (RF) signal from the antenna so that the signal can be
       processed by the tuner.
      Tuner: A circuit that can extract signals of a particular frequency
       from a mix of signals of different frequencies. On its own, the antenna
       captures radio waves of all frequencies and sends them to the RF
       amplifier, which dutifully amplifies them all.
       Unless you want to listen to every radio channel at the same time, you
       need a circuit that can pick out just the signals for the channel you
       want to hear. That’s the role of the tuner.
       The tuner usually employs the combination of an inductor (for
       example, a coil) and a capacitor to form a circuit that resonates at a
       particular frequency. This frequency, called the resonant frequency, is
       determined by the values chosen for the coil and the capacitor. This
       type of circuit tends to block any AC signals at a frequency above or
       below the resonant frequency.
       You can adjust the resonant frequency by varying the amount of
       inductance in the coil or the capacitance of the capacitor. In simple
       radio receiver circuits, the tuning is adjusted by varying the number
       of turns of wire in the coil. More sophisticated tuners use a variable
       capacitor (also called a tuning capacitor) to vary the frequency.
      Detector: Responsible for separating the audio information from the
       carrier wave. For AM signals, this can be done with a diode that just
       rectifies the alternating current signal. What’s left after the diode has
       its way with the alternating current signal is a direct current signal
                                   Page
                                   15
       that can be fed to an audio amplifier circuit. For FM signals, the
       detector circuit is a little more complicated.
      Audio amplifier: This component’s job is to amplify the weak signal
       that comes from the detector so that it can be heard. This can be done
       using a simple transistor amplifier circuit.
Of course, there are many variations on this basic radio receiver design.
Many receivers include additional filtering and tuning circuits to better lock
on to the intended frequency — or to produce better-quality audio output
— and exclude other signals. Still, these basic elements are found in most
receiver circuits.
                                  Page
                                  16
                                CHAPTER 5
                                OVERVIEW
A personal FM bugger is a low-power FM radio bugger that broadcasts a
signal from a portable audio device (such as an MP3 player) to a standard FM
radio. Most of these buggers plug into the device's headphone jack and then
broadcast the signal over an FM broadcast band frequency, so that it can be
picked up by any nearby radio. This allows portable audio devices to make use
of the louder or better sound quality of a home audio system or car stereo
without requiring a wired connection. They are often used in cars but may also
be in fixed locations such as broadcasting from a computer sound card
throughout a building.
Being low-powered, most buggers typically have a short range of 100–300 feet
(30–100 metres), depending on the quality of the receiver, obstructions and
elevation. Typically they broadcast on any FM frequency from 87.5 to 108.0
MHz in most of the world, 76.0 - 95.0 MHz for Japan, 65.0 - 74.2 MHz for
Russia (or 88.1 to 107.9 MHz in the US and Canada).
                                   Page
                                   17
                               CHAPTER 6
                                    Uses
Personal FM buggers are commonly used as a workaround for playing portable
audio devices on car radios that don't have an Auxiliary "AUX" input jack or
Bluetooth audio connectivity. They are also used to broadcast a stationary
audio source, like a computer or a television, around a home. They can also be
used for low-power broadcasting and pirate radio but only to a very limited
audience in near proximity. They can also be used as a "talking sign" in real
estate sales or similar.
                                  Page
                                  18
                                CHAPTER 7
Advantages:
     Easy to carry
     Low cost
     High mobility
     The efficiency of the transmitter is very high
     It has a large operating range
     This transmitter will reject the noise signal from an amplitude variation.
Disadvantages :
     Limited distance.
     The FM transmitter and receiver will tend to be more complex.
     Due to some interference there is poor quality in the received signals
                                   Page
                                   19
Application :
     The FM bugger are used in the homes like sound systems in halls to fill
      the sound with the audio source.
     These are also used in the cars and fitness centers.
     It gives information of communicating persons without knowing that
      persons.
                                 Page
                                 20
                             EXPENDITURE ON MINI PROJECT
Sr.    Item name                                 Cost per unit   Total cost
No.
1      PCB                                       250             250
2      TRANSISTOR                                15              45
3      MIC                                       200             200
4      REGISTER                                  1               8
5      CAPASITOR                                 1               11
6      INDUCTOR                                  2               6
7      POWER SUPPLY                              25              100
8      HEATSINK                                  15              15
9      ANTENNA                                   270             270
                                                 Total           905.00
Total expenditure on mini project is = Rs. 905.00/-
                                        Page
                                        21
                             REFERENCES
[1] www.electronicshub.org
[2]www.wikipedia.org
                              Page
                              22