SolderSmoke Daily News
Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
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Monday, April 13, 2026
Background (from Maine!) On the "Most Interesting Man in the World"
Saturday, April 11, 2026
DSB Homebrew from Macedonia -- Sasho Z33ST
This is a DSB radio design by R0AHZ using NE612 chip as mixer on receive and transmit.
Audio amp is LM386.
Frequency generation is by arduino nano and si5351
RF power amp consists of 2n3553 or any npn eqivalent as pre drive and BD139 as final. Power is about 1 to 2 watts max. I use it together with my power amp and I measure about 40 watts on tx.
Here is a link of me making a QSO wih it.
https://youtu.be/0GKlVfAPgV0?
73 de Z33ST
SolderSmoke Homebrew Direct Conversion Receiver Hall of Fame Update: 129 Completed, 122 + 7 Honorable Mentions: (As of April 11, 2026, 0852Z)
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.
Friday, April 10, 2026
Dean KK4DAS and Pete N6QW Talk to the River City (Sacramento, Ca.) Radio Club about the 40 meter Direct Conversion Receiver
Thursday, April 9, 2026
ANOTHER AMAZING Homebrew Station -- This one from Belgium -- ON1MWS
My gear is a toy compared to a modern station. And it will never even come remotely close to commercial gear. However, the journey to learn how radio circuits work, improve the station and add capabilities over the years has been satisfying. R&D as amusement.
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FB Danny! Thanks for the rigs and web sites. 73 Bill N2CQR
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
A really AMAZING Homebrew Station in Brunei
Didier is F5NPV but he is V85MPV in Brunei for a few years. Check out his amazing QRZ page:
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Are There Really Photons on the Signals from, say, a 20 meter Dipole?
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
U.S. Administration Supports Ham Radio Homebrew
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Tracy Kidder, author of Soul of the New Machine, dies at age 80
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
The Green Hornet -- My Visual and 10 meter Beacon from the Dominican Republic
This all started a LONG time ago when I built a "Lil Slugger" CW transmitter, designed by Doug DeMaw. The schematic appears below -- it appears in both the W1FB Design Notebook, and his QRP Notebook.
Then came the fun part. The visual part. I used the keying transistor from the Lil Slugger to drive a super bright green LED from LighthouseLEDs. I had in my DR junk box the parabolic mirror from an old car spotlight (the kind you'd plug into the cigarette lighter). That mirror became the mount for the LED. Before I got the thing going this year, I had to remove some of the window coating that keeps the UV out of the house. Unfortunately it was also keeping some of my beacon's photons IN. It had to go. I used my wife'd hair dryer to take the coating off. As you can see, the visual beacon is now really bright. So far, only one neighbor has noticed the green flashing light. So far, we have heard from no ships at sea. But we are hopeful. Pete N6QW warns of possible cruise missiles. I am prepared to live dangerously.
This video shows the set up from inside the shack, during the daytime:
The ten meter beacon has been doing well and is showing up on the Reverse Beacon Netwok (K1RA and NU4F). I will improve the antenna and this should strengthen the signal even further.
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
SDR vs. HDR -- Are analog hams Troglodytes, stuck in a rut, resistant to change, and all that ?
The above paragraphs appeared in a very good ham radio club magazine. I had some comments on it which I shared with the author and the editor. In light of our recent discussion of the ARRL Clean Signal Initiative, I thought that it would be useful for me to post these comments here.
I think the author misses an important point: The ability of radio amateurs to homebrew their equipment. I know from experience that it is difficult to homebrew traditional analog SSB equipment-- I am running analog SSB gear from two separatelocations. But here is the key: With traditional analog gear, homebrewing of the gear can be done. Not so with SDR gear.Sure, hams can do their own software (but usually this is limited to the software experts). I suppose that AI will let people vibe code their own SDR software, but I suspect that most hams will not do this. Even if they did, software development is a very different activity than is homebrewing of analog hardware.And as for the hardware, I suspect that we are rapidly approaching the point where this will come down to the placement of two (maybe one!) chips in their sockets. One ADC chip, one FPGA chip (programmed by an FPGA expert) and you are essentially done. Again, you are talking about a device that is radically different from a homebrew SSB analog transceiver. I can build an analog SSB transceiver, I really can't build an SDR transceiver.I have problems with your claims that SDR is inherently more sensitive than traditional analog rigs. Maybe if you go FT8, but not with SSB. As for selectivity, well some of my rigs have homebrew 10 pole crystal filters. The skirts are very nearly vertical.Finally, related to all of the above, is the commercial/SDR vs. homebrew/analog issue. If we go down this supposedly superior path, all of the rigs used by "amateur" radio operators will be commercially produced. They will be much like the Iphone in my pocket. And amateurs will have as much of an emotional connection to their "rigs" as I do to my Iphone: ZERO.The article portrays the users of analog gear as old Troglodytes, resistant to technological change. I just don't think this is accurate. Some of us stick to the older analog gear because it is possible to really understand it, and it is possible to really homebrew it. That, I think, is very valuable.73 Bill Hi7/N2CQR