SolderSmoke Daily News
Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
Podcasting since August 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Friday, July 3, 2026
A Really Really Complete South African Workshop
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Vintage Audio Restoration: Glue, Fusible Resistors, and Relays
This guy is restoring VINTAGE audio gear. It is definitely younger than the Boatanchors we usually work on, but it is a lot older than more recent gear that is made with largely pick-and-place machines and surface mount components. There are mostly through hole components here.
There are some challenges I've never thought about: glue that over time starts to mess up the circuitry. Fusible resistors? Who knew? And then there are relay contacts that go really bad. We use a lot of these kinds of relays.
All in all, there are a lot of good ideas in this video. His other videos are probably worth watching too. I think it will be especially useful for my friend Bob, KD4EBM who does a lot of work in this area.
Please let me know what you think. Comment below.
Monday, June 29, 2026
SolderSmoke Podcast #265: AI Pete, WSPR, sBITX, San Diego, Last Ditcher, NYC, 17-12 Fix, MMM Blasphemy, 6T9er, MAILBAG
SolderSmoke Podcast #265 is ready for download.
Video Version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jWYe6NxnJA
Audio Version: http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke265.mp3
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Travelogue: Pete to San Diego, Dean to NYC, Bill stays home.
Field Day Report! Dean? Pete? I had a bad back. Really.
The importance of "taking a break" discussed on "Hidden Brain" podcast.
We need new chapters for the FMLA series. Time to add the CBLA?
AI Pete? http://soldersmoke.com/AIPete.mp3
Dean: WSPR success -- Report
Back on the air with the homebrew sBITX.
The Last Ditcher CW rig. Frank Jones would approve! Construction technique combining wooden slats and copper clad boards is FB.
Homebrew CW rigs -- update.
Schematics and Co-Pilot
Shameless Commerce Division:
Mostly DIY RF
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Please comment on the Podcast (on YouTube or on the blog) and about blog posts (on the blog page). Comments let us know that we are not speaking into the Google void!
Bill: Fixing the receiver in my 17-12 rig. Adding 12 db to the TIA.
The Open Circuits book. Eric is the Eric from CuriousMarc. And he is a ham!
Blasphemy? Bill redraws schematic for Michigan Mighty Mite.
I have 6T9 tube. I don't really want to build a CW transmitter. But I may have to.
Gemini explains "Low Value Content" They see 10,000 posts and assume it is AI Slop.
Mailbag:
Wes: Nice email from W7ZOI.
Peter Marks VK3TPM fixed the index file (with help from Claude).
Peter VK3TPM and Paul VK3HN -- Great comments on AI.
Also Dean KK4DAS and Bob KD4EBM
VK3HN sent FB AI QSL from ZL2BNE (see mine!)
Bruce KK0S sent two FB AI QSL cards.
Rogier PA1ZZ -- Sends "The World of El - AI" IDK.
Ryan KJ7KVD building a Michigan Mighty Mite (I sent parts)
Robert W8MOX heard my beacon from the DR to Annandale Va.
Kirk NTOZ -- The future of ham radio and what went wrong.
Paul KL7FLR -- The Wizard of Wasila -- Finally 3D printed a Toroid winder
Charlie NJ7V -- Doing great work over at Red Summit RF.
Podstatus reports that we are #2 in Ghana! Hooray for us!
Farhan VU2ESE -- LARCSet CW mods!
Walter KA4KXX Homebrew POTA proposal.
Grayson KJ7UM: Likes Helge's Norwegian paraset
Gerald VA2GJ: Including DC RX in Canadian license study materials.
Ron WA6YOU: Spy radios RT-6 and RR-6
Scott K6AUS: https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2026/06/update-how-many-drake-2-b-receivers.html We need to send him a 2B!
Bob W8SX: FDIM interview with Hans G0UPL. More to follow.
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Update: How Many Drake 2-B Receivers Were Made? Can Someone Send a Drake 2-B to Scott?
Scott K6AUS has been involved since the very beginning and continues to look at the mathematics:
https://nomadiq.net/blog/post/how-many-drake-2bs-were-ever-made
Scott has given us a very useful update based on additional serial numbers provided by SolderSmoke listeners.
How many? About 11,300. Check out Scott's page for some interesting mathematical details.
Thanks a lot Scott!
BTW: SCOTT K6AUS DOES NOT HAVE A DRAKE 2-B. THIS IS JUST WRONG! HE HAS DONE SO MUCH FOR THIS RECEIVER! HE SHOULD HAVE ONE! IS THERE ANYONE OUT THERE WHO CAN SEND A DRAKE 2-B TO SCOTT?
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Bob W8SX Interviews Hans G0UPL at FDIM 2026
Thanks to Bob W8SX for being the SolderSmoke Correspondent at FDIM again this year.
We will present the audio recordings that Bob did for us. The first of these is with Hans Summers G0UPL.
Bob talks to Hans about the QMX and QMX + transceivers. Hans reports that he has sold more than 16,000 of these transceivers in the last three years. He describes for Bob how he made use of the Hilbert transform, and how the fact that this rig is SDR means that with each firmware update, the user gets essentially a new radio, with features that often did not exist before.
Here is the recording:
http://soldersmoke.com/G0UPL FDIM 2026.mp3
Thank you Bob, thanks Hans, and thank you QRP ARCI.
Friday, June 26, 2026
100 Billion Transistors on One Small Chip -- No Room for Homebrew!
https://newsroom.ibm.com/2026-06-25-ibm-debuts-worlds-first-sub-1-nanometer-chip-technology
FCC Amateur Radio Exam Question: Draw the schematic for the new IBM sub-1nm chip, showing how it will be used in FT-8 operations.
Mike WN2A suggested I ask AI about a schematic. Here is what Gemini said:
To put that number into perspective, if we were to draw a schematic where each transistor was just a tiny 1-inch symbol on a piece of paper, the blueprint would be so massive it would easily cover the entire landmass of the United States.
Modern sub-nanometer chips—like IBM's cutting-edge nanosheet architectures—are far too complex for human hands to map out line-by-line. Instead, engineers use advanced software to design chips hierarchically. Here is how that massive sea of 100 billion transistors is actually organized under the hood:
1. The Building Block: The Gate-All-Around (GAA) Nanosheet
At the microscopic level, these chips no longer use the older FinFET (fin-shaped) transistors. Instead, they use nanosheets, where the channels are stacked vertically like a three-story sandwich. The gate wraps entirely around all four sides of each horizontal sheet, providing maximum electrical control and drastically reducing current leakage.
2. Standard Cells (The Functional Logic)
Instead of wiring 100 billion separate components, computer scientists group transistors into "Standard Cells." These are pre-designed functional blocks like:
Logic Gates: AND, OR, NAND, and NOR gates (requiring anywhere from 2 to 8 transistors each).
Flip-Flops: Memory cells that store a single bit of data (requiring about 20 to 30 transistors).
3. The Macroscopic Layout (Blocks and Cores)
Billions of those standard cells are then combined into macroscopic structural blocks that look less like a traditional schematic and more like a highly organized city map. If we were to draw a high-level schematic of the chip, it would look like a block diagram featuring:
Processor Cores: The massive processing engines packed with arithmetic logic units (ALUs).
Cache Memory (SRAM): Vast grids of 6-transistor memory cells stacked tightly together to hold data right next to the execution units.
Interconnect Matrix: A vertical 3D skyscraper of up to 15 layers of microscopic copper wiring running above the transistors to route data and power across the chip.
If you are working on a homebrew electronics project and want to map out a circuit diagram for an RF amplifier, a QRP radio transceiver, or a simple analog filter, I can absolutely help you draw or troubleshoot those schematics! But for 100 billion nanosheets, we have to leave the drafting to the silicon foundries' supercomputers.
Thursday, June 25, 2026
My AI QSL Card: Wood Boxes, a D-104, Books, a 'Scope, the EB-63A, Guapo, our Sticker, and a Cup of Coffee! KK0S's Cards
Inspired by the ZL2BNE card sent to me by VK3HN, and the excellent question from Walter KA4KXX, I endeavored today to create a QSL card that was sort of like that of OM ZL2BNE.
I kind of like the result:
-- We have the wooden box rigs. I am working on one of them. (That happens a lot!)
-- There is a D-104.
-- We see the EB-63 .1kW Linear.
-- There are books on the shelf: SSDRA, EMRFD and SPRAT in a binder. And we see a book by Hayward.
-- There is an oscilloscope.
-- There is a nice map of Northern Virginia and my Maidenhead Grid Square.
-- We see Guapo, and a cup of coffee.
-- We also see the SolderSmoke sticker.
Here is how I did this:
I used https://www.canva.com/ You have to select the AI option. Then I told it I wanted it to look like the ZL2BNE card (I sent them a copy). At that point you have to start modifying what the AI comes up with. You have to do this many times until you get it sort of right.
Please send me your results!
Here are a couple of QSLs that Bruce KK0S did with ChatGPT:
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
A Really FB HB QRP QSL Card from New Zealand
Thursday, June 18, 2026
The RT-6 and RR-6 Motorola "Spy Set"
I don't know if this rig really qualifies as a "spy set" but it nevertheless is very interesting. It is a tube rig, designed for use by B-47 bomber crews who could not make it back from the Soviet Union after dropping their nuclear bombs. Supposedly they would bail out, then use these radios to call for help. Good luck with that! Note the fold-out CW key.
This rig was also reportedly hidden in European countries as "stay behind" assets to be used in the event of a Soviet invasion.
Here is a web site with more info: https://www.universal-radio.com/catalog/hamhf/rs6.html
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
First QSO by Chris (aka Morny) G7LQX and it was Homebrew CW!
I must have missed this five months ago, but better late than never: Congratulations to Chris G7LQX for his first ham radio contact. And he was using a homebrew CW transceiver.
Details here: https://www.qrz.com/db/G7LQX
Chris has a very nice fist, and he is one of the only YouTubers I have seen who holds the straight key properly, with his forearm resting on the table. All of the others seem to keep the forearm floating in the air, above the key.
Monday, June 15, 2026
Canadian Ham to Include SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver in Teaching Materials for Canadian Ham License
Good morning Bill N2CQR.
I currently teach Canadian amateur radio certification courses.
The Advanced certification (akin to the FCC Extra Class license) has topics nicely showcased with the NorCal 40a transceiver.Saturday, June 13, 2026
Sputnik, IGY, Korolev, 1 Watt
Here is the Wikipedia on Sputnik 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sputnik_1
I didn't know how badly Korolev had been injured while in the Gulag.
The transmitter had 1 watt at 20 and 40 Mhz.







