Actually, for all concerned (regardless of the homework aspect), I would be
interested in hearing this circuit being explained and discected too?
I've tried building these things in the past and they just don't work.
Stage by stage explanation would be brilliant, as well as design caveats
such as grounding. The issue is that almost all of the radio explanations
out there explain in terms for the complete layman, rather than how to
practically do it right there in front of you and why.
The description that page is fairly good, if it's not enough then
you should ask specific questions based on what doesn't make sense
to you.
The first thing I tried to build, when I was 11 years old, was an
"AM wireless microphone", actually it sent morse code. It never
did work, but then I didn't know enough about anything to figure
out where I went wrong. IN retrospect, it might have been as
simple as my lack of soldering skill, or the parts they offered
at the parts store as substitutes (I wouldn't have known whether
they were suitable replacements or not), or the coil had the pinouts
different from the magazine article so I never wired it in properly.
Or I may have simply made a wiring error, and just too inexperienced
to see the error when I looked over the wiring, and not having a clue
about the theory to work through what might be wrong.
In some ways you have to throw away a few early projects, but you
do learn from them. At least I did.
"FM wireless microphones" have the further disadvantage of being
higher in frequency, where wiring becomes a little more of a concern.
Keep the leads short, or don't expect it to work. Also, most people
don't have receivers that cover a lot of the spectrum up there,
so if the thing is mistuned (because the coil isn't done properly
or a capacitor is wrong, or some other factor), the transmitter
might be working fine but the signal not be in the FM broadcast band.
If all you've tried to make are "FM wireless microphones", it makes
sense to start with something simpler. Make a simpler audio oscillator,
so you can work on soldering skills and get a feel for everything. The
wiring and parts won't be so crucial, and the success will likely help
with the next step.
That circuit offered up, you might connect an audio amplifier (a boombox
with external inputs, or your stereo system) to the collector of the
first stage (on the left, where the 10K resistor connects to the
transistor), and see if you hear something when you speak into
the microphone. Simplifying limits the variables, and if you have
success, then you can deal with the second stage. If you get no
audio, then you have to make sure the wiring is right and the microphone
is good, etc.
Michael