A fun little project inspired by playing around with an rtl-sdr dongle.
An FM bandstop filter or "trap" is a circuit that severely attenuates frequencies in the FM broadcast band (88-108MHz) while ideally allowing other frequencies to pass through unabated. This is my first attempt to design and build one.
I started off by playing around with a few circuit ideas in LTSpice, eventually settling on the design below:

The parallel LC circuit on the left has a resonant frequency of about 108MHz, i.e. the end of the FM band.
Similarly, the parallel LC circuit on the right has a resonant frequency of about 88MHz, or the beginning of the FM band.
Each of these parallel LC circuits presents an (ideally) infinite impedance at resonance, strongly attenuating signals in the vicinity of 108MHz and 88MHz, respectively. These circuits should have relatively high Q in order to give a nice, sharp roll-off.
The series LC circuit in the centre has a resonant frequency of about 98MHz, which is right in the middle of the FM band.
This circuit has a low impedance to most signals in the FM band, and shunts them to ground. The Q for this circuit should be a little lower to make sure it can present a low impedance to the majority of the FM band.
Here's the prototype:

The board is single-sided copper clad FR4 (or at least something similar to FR4 that I got for cheap on eBay). I used a hobby knife to scratch away the copper to form islands, which I could then solder to.
The yellow trimmer capacitors can be adjusted between 10 and 40pF, which is just right for this circuit. Coils are 5 to 6 turns of 28AWG magnet wire on a 1/8" drill bit. The coils are easily adjusted by stretching out or compressing the turns.
Here's a sweep of the thing from 50MHz to 150MHz after a quick adjustment (source power 0dBm):

Attenuation is between 35dB and 50dB, which I think is pretty alright!

Here's a sweep from 10 to 990MHz:

Loss at the higher frequencies is about 3dB, which isn't great, but not as bad as it could be.
I'll eventually put this thing into a nice little aluminum box for shielding purposes.
Any tips / suggestions on how to improve the performance of this circuit? I'm still quite new to RF stuff, so any and all advice is greatly appreciated!
