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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Thursday, May 21, 2026
School for Danger -- the SOE, and Radio, in Nazi Occupied France
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Farhan Talks LARCSet (CW & SSB) at FDIM (with a Lot of Homebrew Wisdom)
Watch the presentation here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MefojjQ84YY
Farhan made it to FDIM 2026 (he must hold the "distance travelled" record!). We thought he might be talking about the latest version of the digital SDR sBITX, but NO! Farhan talked about the entirely analog LARCSet, a 30 dollar SSB/CW monobander. And in the process he shared a lot of good homebrew history and wisdom. I took notes on the video of his presentation:
-- Farhan recounts his discussion with Steve Hartley, President of GQRP. Farhan said he started to talk about SDR projects, but Steve steered him away from all that. Farhan said he realized that the homes of GQRP members are often small, and projects need to fit into took boxes that are pulled out as needed. There is often not even enough room to mount a screen. Analog rigs just fit better.
-- Farhan talked about the beauty of analog. He also shared some info on the recent timeline of analog rigs, going back to 1976 with the IARU gift kits made available by W1VD. Farhan very kindly mentioned the DC receiver that Dean and I are promoting. He talked about the 2003 BITX 20 rig, and the subsequent uBITX. Farhan talked about the cleanliness of all-analog rigs. "SDR's are a mess!" he said. "With SDRs it is difficult to avoid hash."
-- Farhan said he had trouble measuring the phase noise of the VFO in the LARCSet. He consulted with Wes W7ZOI. Wes told him this was NOT a measurement problem; VFOs have almost no phase noise. The level is even lower than that of crystal oscillators. Of course, crystal oscillators are more stable, but they also have more phase noise.
-- He noted that almost no recent homebrew design does not rely on an Si5351. This, he said, is "not a healthy situation." Indeed.
-- Farhan talked a bit about how Indian regulations seemingly require a deviation from the completly open source ethos. Indian regs require companies to have assets. So the PC board layouts have to remain proprietary.
-- Farhan talked about the sharpness and shape of the BP filter in the LARCSet. I remember talking to him about the shape of my BP filters in my dual banders -- I had to rebuild the filters.
-- On the crystal filters that form the heart of SSB rigs, Farhan noted that cheap low Q crystals often introduce a lot of loss in the filters (that may explain my problem with some styles of computer crystals).
-- A member of the FDIM audience asked about the Sharpie written frequency readout on the LARCset that Farhan showed to the group. Farhan told them that this was the only frequency readout used in the rig.
-- With the LARCSet, Farhan used varactors to vary the frequency. But the varactors he used were cheap but horrible. They varied the frequency as the rig hearted up. The LM386 was the source of heat. He also noted that they cheap varactors, while cheap, did not provide linear frequency readout. Farhan said the varactor scheme was still not perfect; he offered a PTO solution that could be used instead. Three cheers for the PTO!
-- Farhan said the LARCset was really an SSB rig, but when coming to FDIM he said he felt obligated to present a rig that included CW, "or they would throw me out of the room." Farhan described a scheme to generate CW based on what was done with the Atlas rigs.
-- Farhan said the LARCset might even work on 2 Meters. Hmmm.
-- On tuning, Farhan said he used a very large tuning dial (he said it was like a steering wheel) and then recommended the use of a smaller control that could serve as an SSB "clarifier."
-- Farhan pointed out that homebrew rigs are never really done; even decades later, they can still be modified.
Watch the presentation here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MefojjQ84YY
Sunday, May 17, 2026
Rick N3FJZ on the Red Summit Podcast with Charlie NJ7V
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUQA2uNskEs
I liked Rick's story about his early days in radio electronics. Taking old TVs from the street -- been there, done that! FB Rick,
Rick points out that he has never used a commercial ham radio rig, so he is unfamiliar with some of the "features" of such rigs. Sometimes, I think, the lack of experience is a good thing.
I really like the display that Rick uses, showing the operating frequency, the VFO frequency and the BFO frequency. This might help with our struggle with those who complain that we are 40 Hz off. Rick then notes that he used 15,000 lines of code for this display. Wow, that shows the benefits of being -- like Rick is -- both a real software wizard and a hardware wizard.
Rick describes how he uses tin-plated steel boards in lieu of copper clad boards.
I liked his approach to schematic drawing -- we benefited from this in the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion receiver project.
When Rick talks about taking pieces of schematics from other rigs and making them work in new rigs, Charlie notes that, "this is the ham radio way." Exactly.
There is a lot of really sentimental stuff in this podcast. SolderSmoke is mentioned frequently. They mention Pete and Dean. This starts at around 22 minutes. Rick talks about Farhan at around 26 minutes. And he talks about Wes W7ZOI.
Rick talks about some of his early projects. I have a sentimental attachment to his Lakeside DC receiver:
Then, a few years later, we had our first HB2HB contact. Homebrew rigs on both sides:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2015/10/hb2hb-n3fjz-n2cqr-si5351-and-bitx-tias.html
Finally, I agree with the last sentiment expressed by Rick in his conversation with Charlie: The Red Summit podcast -- especially with its focus on homebrew -- is exactly what this hobby needs. Anything that encourages hams to experience the fun of homebrewing is a good thing. Three cheers for Rick and for Red Summit.
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
SolderSmoke 264: CW TX, Repair of 17-12 Rig, AI and Repair, Back on 40m, HB for 2m, VWS WSPR Makers Project , MAILBAG
May 12, 2026
SolderSmoke Podcast #264 is available for download:
Audio: http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke264.mp3
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9FcfuqjZxA
We had a small recording glitch at the beginning of this video. But we didn't lose much. We had talked about the success of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver Project. We talked about the receivers built by Nader Omer ST2NH and Chuck Adams AA7FO. We had also gloated a bit about our April 1 post -- you know, the (bogus! ) story about how the Administration is "Supporting Homebrew Radio." (Let us know if you were taken in by this, even for just a few seconds.) At that point, we were just beginning Pete's section; that is where the recording began. Here are the notes for the rest of the podcast:
Three CW transmitter projects featuring low parts counts. Good results from Reverse Beacon Network.
The goal in these projects is to raid the junk box and severely limit any new purchases of components. Pete had no idea of the depth of parts he bought and just stashed away. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5YLZ7aZpmxQ&t=30s
Bill:
Fixing the 17-12 Rig. Parasitic VHF Oscillations with the SK3050. Good advice from Gemini. Killing NE602s. Fat Finger Syndrome -- hard to work with ICs. Different freq when on transmit -- need for .1 uF cap on pin 8. Worked South Korea -- TRGHS.
Putting the DIGI-TIA back on the air. On 40! And SW listening with the Q-31.
Hard to homebrew for 2 meters. Did some beacon experiments to Puerto Rico on last day in DR.
SHAMELESS COMMERCE DIVISION:
The importance of Patreon! Thanks! patreon.com/SolderSmoke
Mostly DIY RF! https://mostlydiyrf.com/
Universe Today Podcast with Fraser Cain. No Ads. Great stuff. Listen! https://www.patreon.com/public-rss/75186?show=1744036
Dean:
The VWS WSPR project.
Mailbag:
Ed N3EML Heard me on 40 with my Digi-Tia
Grayson KJ7UM Liked WWII training video: https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2026/05/radio-receivers-1942-training-film.html
Mike WN2A -- Pete Juliano is our Shifu! (Lexicographer Steve Silverman KB3SII approves,)
Todd K7TFC Thoughtful comments on ARRL "Clean Signal Initiative."
Danny ON1MWS's regen with unusual variable capacitors.
Mike WU2D S-38, Nearfest, Mu Metal. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUQ4xml1dSY
Charlie NJ7V Interviews Mitch NK3H who homebrewed an SSB transceiver.
Charlie also had Don KM4UDX, President of the Vienna Wireless Society on the podcast.
Bob KD4EBM -- El Cilindro. Radioactive Hospital Waste -- basis for a Ruben Blades song. It was 1987 in Brasil. Cesium 137 left in hospital waste.
Hamilton KD0FNR Big fans of "The most interesting man in the world."https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2026/04/background-from-maine-on-most.html
Rhett KB4HG -- TW-100! Used on the OMRN. https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2026/05/the-tw-100-fly-away-transceiver-cw-ssb.html
What happened to Glenn KU4NO's homebrew rig? https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2018/07/a-rig-with-maximum-soul-5-band.html
Ryan KJ7KVD is listening to OLD SolderSmoke podcasts. He will build a Michigan Mighty Mite.
Will N5OLA restored a Heath SB rig. We now know why they went to HW rigs. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bt2d1Ia8lqQ
Paul G0OER -- Thanks us for PTOing the HB world, but sends us a video of a unique Eddystone receiver with 39 permeability tuned coils! https://www.youtube.com/shorts/L4oQHU5_kQk?feature=share
Rick N3FJZ -- A very cool video today on his homebrew HF power amplifiers: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-CUVAF4HyfY
Farhan VU2ESE -- I heard from him yesterday as he was landing in Chicago.
Sunday, May 10, 2026
A Very Impressive Workshop from the UK
Thursday, May 7, 2026
WA4CHQ -- A Virginian QRPer and Homebrewer
Sunday, May 3, 2026
Radio Receivers -- 1942 Training Film -- Crystal Sets to Superhets
Saturday, May 2, 2026
The TW-100 "Fly Away Transceiver" --- A CW-SSB Rig I Never Heard of Until Today
Thursday, April 30, 2026
The Agony of Troubleshooting -- Shielding, Bypassing, Testing, Throwing Things at the Wall
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Homebrew Cylindrical Variable Capacitors: What the Steering Wheels are Controlling in Danny's Regen Receiver
Grayson KJ7UM asked a very good question about Danny ON1MWS's regen receiver: What were those two very cool "steering wheels" actually controlling?.
Dear Grayson,
Tnx for the compliments. I used to build normal square boxes while I was a mechanic in a light advertisement factory. We had a one hour lunch break and were allowed to work for ourselves during the break. But I left that firm in 2019, as a consequence I had to find a way to build rigs without custom square boxes… the result is wood, tin cans of all sorts and a simple ground plate. After posting my CW rig on the FB group ‘the art HAM radio homebrew’ in 2023, Steve Fabricant noted ‘It could be a radiosonde that they sent down from a saucer to detect intelligent life, and failed.’ LOL, I found that very funny actually.
As you turn the rod the rod will shift in or out the metal tube. The tube is obviously the ‘hot’ side of the capacitor. The M8 rod moves 1.25mm for one turn of the rod. If memory serves me right the tube is 80mm for the tube regen, so we have a tuning gear reduction of 80/1.25= 64. The hot side is connected to the main tuning coil to create a tank circuit.
I did try different designs before but this is the best one. The tube/treaded rod capacitor is just as good as a commercial one. One thing I learned is that any friction must be avoided in a homebrew capacitor or it is useless in practice.
I am going to try to build a similar 400pF version for a homebrew crystal set as I wrote to Bill. It will be huge I guess.. I think I will need a 2”tube… But my current homebrew projects are insulating our house better as our natural gas prices are rising.
Like the way you call tubes Thermatrons. Yes, sound much cooler and more fitting for these beautiful devices. My ultimate aim is building a one band thermatron SSB exiter. No time for the moment.
Kind regards Danny.
Thanks Danny. Thanks Grayson.