Eldon, WA0UWH, says the podcast inspired him to build some QRSS transmitters for 30 meters. His first effort was atop a 9 volt battery. The latest version has a more traditional enclosure. Eldon hopes to be seen on some of the grabbers -- please help him out if you can. In my case the hard part was getting the transmitter into the frequency band for QRSS (only 100 Hz wide!).
Linux Mint, QRP, & C / C++ Compilers
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Greetings:
On the bench I'm studying PLL techniques using a sample & hold detector +
VHF circuitry. Currently, I've got nothing to post RF-wise. Another...
7 hours ago
Hi Bill,
ReplyDeleteIts really cool to see more QRSS stuff making the light of day. I've been following this for a while.
My approach right now is to build up a receiver for the other side of the QRSS.
I've built a DC receiver based on the Pixie 2 and an working towards a grabber for 80 meters to start with and work up from there to SDR, see; A Pixie2 as a QRSS grabber - part 1
I set up a webpage about the transistor if anyone is interested.
ReplyDelete2n3904.net