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Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Watching the Hubble Space Telescope (an old friend) from the Dominican Republic

 

A recent article about the possibility of an early demise of the Hubble Space Telecope caught my eye.  I first saw HST as it came overhead (a lot) during my first stay in the Dominican Republic (1992-1996).  

Here is an entry from my observation log showing one of my first sightings of HST from the DR: 

2 February 1995: (message placed on COMPUSERVE board) I got a really nice look at the HST this morning (2 February) from my perch here in Santo Domingo. I woke up early and checked the computer for any satellites that might be in the neighborhood. (I'm a ham and have been trying to communicate through the new Russian Hamsat RS-15). I noticed that HST would be visible starting at around 0935 UTC (0535 local); I scrambled up onto my roof with binoculars in hand and began to scan the southern sky. There she was, right on time! I first spotted the satellite when it was in Centaurus (with the Southern Cross glimmering off to the right) and followed it through Scorpio, below Venus and Jupiter until it vanished in the east. Great way to start the day! Yet another benefit of southern latitudes! 73 and Clear Skies, Bill (N2CQR/HI8)

I am back in the DR now; I decided to look for it again.   

The Heavens-Above web site gave good info on the orbit.  So did the N2YO site.  There were a couple of morning passes in January that didn't work out because of local cloud cover,  but last night (January 20, 2026) I managed to see it on an evening pass. It was fainter than I remember, peobably because I saw it at 1930 Local, near  zenith, as it was getting ready to fly into the darkness.  But I saw it.  My old friend, HST.  

Here is the pass that I watched last night: 


There is another good pass tonight.  I will give it another try.  Stay tuned. 

Friday, January 16, 2026

MIT Technology Review on Why AI LLMs are So Strange and So Alien

Until recently, I thought that the AI LLMs were just sort of fancy, souped-up search engines.  Google on steroids.   But then they started getting simple things wrong.  And they seemed to understand that that our April 1 stories were just sarcasm.  There seemed to be more to them than fancy search engines.  

This MIT article explains what is going on with the LLMs.  

https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/01/12/1129782/ai-large-language-models-biology-alien-autopsy/

What do you folks think of this?


Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Why is it that AI-provided electronic circuits often don't work in the real world?

Like many, I have turned to AI for circuit ideas.  And like many, I have been surprised by how many of these ideas just don't work.  I have found relatively simple circuits that don't work when built in the real world, and don't work when built in LTSpice. I have already described how AI failed when I asked it a simple question about how many 330 ohm resistors to put in parallel to get 50 ohms.  Mike WU2D had found that a lot of AI provided circuits just don't work.  (Go to the 10 minute point in his video. )

I was wondering why this is so.  So... I asked AI!  For those who are sure that their AI is smarter than my AI, let me specify:  I just wrote the question into the Google search box and looked at the "AI Overview" in the response.  

Here is what AI said: 


AI-recommended circuits often fail in the real world due to gaps between simulation and realitysuch as a lack of real-world data (noise, rare conditions), AI's inability to grasp complex physical nuances like heat dissipation or component aging, and poor integration with physical prototyping, leading to brittle designs that don't account for manufacturing tolerances or environmental stresses, despite being mathematically sound. 

Key Reasons for Failure:

Data Limitations (Garbage-In, Garbage-Out): AI relies heavily on training data; if it's incomplete (missing extreme temperatures, noises, aging effects) or biased, the AI generates designs that work in simulation but not in messy real-world conditions.

  • Brittleness & Lack of Context: AI struggles with "edge cases" or novel situations not in its training, leading to fragile designs, much like an AI failing to recognize a rotated bus. It lacks human intuition for subtle physical interactions.
  • Physical Nuances Ignored: Simulations often miss crucial real-world physics like heat hotspots from component imperfections, electromagnetic interference, or subtle signal integrity issues, which become critical in physical prototypes.
  • Manufacturing & Prototyping Gaps: AI designs might be theoretically optimal but impractical to build (e.g., impossible tolerances, complex layouts). The gap between virtual design and physical assembly (poor connections, wrong components) causes failures.
  • Validation Challenges: AI-generated circuits need extensive, real-world testing (SPICE simulations, breadboarding, PCB builds) to catch issues, but AI can't perform physical troubleshooting like soldering a damping resistor or witnessing ground bounce in a lab.
  • Probabilistic vs. Deterministic: AI works on probabilities, whereas electronics often need deterministic precision. A small error tolerable in some AI tasks can be catastrophic in sensitive circuits. 
How Engineers Address This:
  • Iterative Feedback Loops: Combining AI's speed with human expertise and physical testing to refine designs.
  • Hybrid Approaches: Using AI for creative exploration but relying on established physics models (like SPICE) and human judgment for final validation.
  • Focus on Integration: Ensuring AI tools work seamlessly with existing engineering workflows and physical constraints. 

Saturday, January 10, 2026

SolderSmoke Homebrew Direct Conversion Receiver Hall of Fame Update: 104 Completed + 7 Honorable Mentions: Total Receivers Built: 111 (As of January 19, 2026, 0853Z)

G3MOT's Receiver

Please let us know if you spot any errors, or if we have inadvertently missed anyone.  Don't worry about being late to the game -- the challenge continues.  All of the info is still available. 

As of January 19, 2026 0821Z:

So far 104 completed receivers, and 7 honorable mentions.  Total Count:  111.       Receivers built in 17 countries.   

NE3U (KY4EOD)  Matt 
KQ4AOP       First ham signals ever heard! 
N9TD             Derek
AC3NG          Ryan
VK3TPM       Peter Marks  
W4KAC         Ken 
W4KAC         Ken built a second one! 
N2EPE           Erik
VA3NCA        Wayde    
KI5SRY          Mark -- Gears on PTO screw
 
KA1MUQ       Frying pan receiver
AA1N              Adam
ZL1AUN         Aaron -- Using SSB transmitter -- New Zealand
W8UC             Never before homebrewed. 
VK4PG           Phil -- Nice case, "really pleased"
G7LQX           Working well, video of CW and SSB.  -- England
KE2AMP        John     Spring on PTO screw -- great
N9SZ              Steve  nice receiver
KD9NHZ        Piotr  Nice one
KE8ICE          Calvin, Very cool receiver. 
 
WV3V              Jayson!  Got it done!
GM5JDG         Martin.   -- Scotland 
KF8BOG          Jim:  A long struggle, but success.  
Chris Wales    Fantastic video.  -- Wales
YD9BAX         Wayan! Homebrew transformer!  Indonesia
N0NQD         Jeff 
WN3F              Roy -- Made new stickers! 
AB5XQ            Bill  
KB7ZUT          Andy  
AA1OF            Jer

VictorKees        Holland
KC9OJV           John -- Manhattan-style convert
WZ5M              1, 2 or maybe even 3 receivers!
K1KJW             Jim in Vermont
KC5DI              Dallas -- friend of WZ5M
Gary                 Australian -- Wooden PTO form
LU2VJM          Juan in Argentina  -- Argentina
K1OA               Scott "Most fun in 50 years"
KC9DLM         Ben -- Had EFHW problems
PH2LB             Lex  Yellow, Glue Stick -- Netherlands

AI6WR             David
G6GEV            Dave (It was a blast!) 
KC1ONM        Wayne  MakerLabs NH
KB1OIQ          Andy    MakerLabs NH
KA1PQK         Jay       MakerLabs NH
W1TKO           Mike    MakerLabs NH
K5KHK            Karl
SM0TPW         Mikael  -- Sweden
KI7LKB           Brian (coat hanger tube)
M6CRD            Chris

W2DAB           Dave in NYC
W4JYK            Wes of VWS
KA4CDN          Mike of VWS
M7EFO             Adrian 
VK5RC             Rob
KD8KHP          Dave
VK1CHW         Chris
KA0PHJ           Brian
W0IT                Louis
W1PJE             Phil

W2AEW           Alan
KN6FVK          John (Barkhausen-Be-Gone Spray) 
VU2JXN           Ramakrishnan -- India
AA0MS            Doug 
9V1/KM7ABZ   Paul  --  Singapore
VK2BLQ          Stephen -- Australia
N3FJZ              Rick
Daniel               VE5DLD  -- Canada
Student 1          Student of VE5DLD
Student 2          Student of VE5DLD

Student 3         Student of VE5DLD
K7WXW          Bill 
NK3H               Mitch
KN4ZXG         Ted
WA1MAC        Paul
N4AVC             Chuck 
K3IY                 Kevin
N6ASD             Ashish in Bangalore
W1DSP             Rick
WD4CFN         Steve

KM5Z             Mike
KF5DAN         Dan
Fritz                 Fritz
N9OK              Joe
WA5DSS         Bill 
K0GDB           Grant
G0JNR            Shane Glow-in-Dark Coil Form
KK7BCO        Tobias
K2BVR            Bob
Robert              Sutton

K5YFO           Dave (Texas) 
KD4PBJ          Chris
KN4GAH        Chris -- EE perspective
F1GMA           Philippe  -- France
W2TEF            Todd
EI9ITB            Karl  -- Ireland
VU2TUM         Puneit Singh
AA7EE             Dave Richards
KI5VIR            Jay
CT7AXD       Graham -- Promoted from Honorable Mention!

G3MOT           Josh
KW4H             Steve
NJ7V                Charlie (RedSummit)
Denny               N2ETZ
-------------------------
Honorable Mentions: 

*AA7U            Steve No PTO
*VK7IAN        Ian -- No Manhattan boards -- Tasmania
*KC1FSZ        Bruce's build on a PC board
* DL1AJG      Andreas -- Germany
* Matthew      Student of DL1AJG
* Arash           Student of DL1AJG 
*KA4KXX     Walter -- FB 20 Meter version

Friday, January 9, 2026

Artificial Intelligence Not So Intelligent! AI Flunks the Parallel Resistor Test!

So this morning I asked this of AI:      

How should I make a 50 ohm dummy load capable of handling 5 watts from 330 ohm 1/4 watt resistors?'

Here was the answer: 


Oops.  Nope.  That makes a load of about 20 ohms, not 50.   

Wow,  this seemed like a fairly simple request.  AI got it wrong.  If AI (LLM) can't get a simple question like this right, you have to wonder how many other things it is getting wrong. 

Saturday, January 3, 2026

More on Spark Transmission and Reception -- From Germany. Spark Transmission using a Piezo Fire Starter


More spark today.  I really liked how Robert Dalby demonstrated spark transmission and reception.  He used a simple Piezoelectric flame starter (like the one that many of us have in our shacks) as the transmitter, with a homebrew coherer connected to an LED and some batteries as the receiver.  Ingenious.  As with CuriousMarcs video of yesterday, you can see how Marconi's system really worked.  Brilliant. 

This demo also shows how many devices can generate part of the noise we hear in our receivers.  We see and hear the noise generated by a nearby electric fence, and the noise made by a simple electric motor.  Many new builders have trouble accepting the reality of noise.  Noise happens. 

The entire YouTube channel is very interesting.  Check it out here: 
It is based on the amazing collection of Dieter Beikirch (I think he is DJ5RS) and is presented by Robert Dalby. Here is how they describe the channel: 

German avionics in the era of the vacuum tube. Join us as we investigate the most critical period in the rapid development of electronics, especially airborne electronics, from the first spark-gap radios of WW1 to the advances in radar technology in WW2.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Spark Gaps and Coherers demonstrated and Measured by CuriousMarc


CuriousMarc provides a good demonstration of how spark transmitters work with coherer detectors.  His measurements are really illuminating.  His device just needed a "tapper" to de-cohere the metallic filings.  We see the tapper in this wonderful "Secret Life" video by Tim Hunkin: 


Thursday, January 1, 2026

Walter KA4KXX's Innovative 20-meter SolderSmoke Direct-Conversion Honorable-Mention Receiver

 

It is a thing of beauty.  We were really pleased to see our old friend Walter KA4KXX take on the SolderSmoke challenge, and we weren't a bit surprised to see him do so using some real twists in the design.  You see, Walter is a very experienced homebrewer.   He has built many, many rigs over the years.  Just check out his QRZ page and you will see what I mean: 

Walter supported our original high school effort by offering the students a $500 prize for any student who used our receiver (and a similar transmitter) to check in to the 40 meter Sunrise Net.  Sadly, there were no takers.  But we really appreciated the attempt. 

We have listed Walter's receiver in the Honorable Mention category, only because his build is so innovative:  20 meters instead of 40.  An IC in the audio amplifier.  There were differences, but even a quick look at the above picture above shows that Walter's receiver is very much a SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver.  

Here are some additional photos from Walter. 





Congratulations Walter.  Welcome to the Hall of Fame!  
---------------------------

From Walter's QRZ page

Let's Start the New Year with... THE KNACK!


Happy New Year everyone!  Our friend Rogier PA1ZZ sent this to me. I'm sure there are parts of it that people will disagree with, but the overall message (BUILD THINGS!) is, I think, right for this group. Thanks Rogier! 

 

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Is the Veritasium Guy Retiring? Google says SolderSmoke is "Low Value Content."

I have been a fan for many years.  His comments on the vile influence of the algorithm and AI are right on target.  

Google recently informed me that the SolderSmoke blog has "Low Value Content."  Well, consider the source! 

Click for a better view (better than the one provided above by GOOGLE!)

I think Veritasium has made a good choice.  

Three cheers for Veritasium!  


Saturday, December 27, 2025

The Coastwatchers -- Their Rigs and Their Islands

 

AWA Teleradio 3BZ used by coastwatchers during the war Source: Australian War Memorial (P01035 .006)



Here is a great site about the AWA 3BZ Wireless set: 


AWA 3B SET

Here's a good article about the Coastwatchers: 


Guadalcanal 1943


I've been interested in the Solomon islands lately because my wife and I have been watching a YouTube video channel about a family living on Uepi island: 
Uepi is right on "the slot," near New Georgia. 

There are WWII remnants still visible (underwater) at Uepi: 


AI Overview
Uepi Island Resort | Tourism Solomons

Uepi Island in the Solomon Islands is famous today for its World War II history, particularly its abundant, accessible WWII wreck dives (aircraft & ships) in Marovo Lagoon, a key battleground during the Solomon Islands Campaign, offering divers a tangible connection to the fierce fighting between US and Japanese forces. The area, near major WWII sites like Guadalcanal, features underwater artifacts like Japanese Zeroes and US Corsairs, with the modern Uepi Island Resort preserving these historical relics within its dive operations. 
Uepi's WWII Significance
  • Location: Uepi is situated in the Marovo Lagoon, part of the Solomon Islands, which were central to the brutal Pacific Campaign of WWII.
  • Wreck Dives: The waters surrounding Uepi are a "treasure trove" of sunken WWII aircraft (like P39 Air Cobra, Japanese Zeroes) and shipwrecks, making it a prime destination for historical diving.
  • Preservation: The Uepi Island Resort actively manages and promotes responsible diving at these sites, emphasizing that removing artifacts is illegal. 
Key WWII Sites & Wrecks Near Uepi
  • Wickham Harbour: Located near Uepi, this area contains significant WWII wrecks, accessible via boat trips from the island.
  • Aircraft: Divers can find Japanese Zeroes, American Corsair fighters, and potentially B24 bombers, often in challenging conditions, with efforts to move some to cleaner areas.
  • Marovo Lagoon: As one of the world's largest saltwater lagoons, it holds numerous historical remnants from the intense fighting.