Just go to http://soldersmoke.com. On that archive page, just click on the blue hyperlinks and your audio player should play that episode.
http://soldersmoke.com
Whenever I find myself in need of some radio-inspiration, an e-mail from Mike, AA1TJ, seems to pop up in my inbox. This morning's message and the associated video (above) were especially inspirational. Mike was e-mailing Steve, WA1HFF.
Hi Steve, Thanks for the message and the great QSO! I was running my one transistor transceiver that I call the Reggie. You can read about it on my webpage at
My antenna is nothing to write home about; just an end-fed half-wave wire bent into an "EL" at 35 feet.
I've made just over 240 contacts with my Reggie in a little more than a year's time; working 19 states. My best (and only) real DX was the Bahamas. All of these contacts were made with no receiver gain on this end; just a pair of diodes fed by a one-transistor BFO, and onto the headphones.
A couple of fellows have built their own Reggies, so you might run into one on 80m now and then. I've made three Reggie to Reggie QSOs thus far.
Steve, last night I was trying something new; I ran a loudspeaker from an audio amplifer connected to my Reggie. What's unusual is that my audio amplifer was made from three, common power supply rectifiers (1N5401's). I'm not kidding! It's a nearly forgotten circuit from 1954 that I (re)stumbled upon a couple of weeks ago. It uses the phenomenon of PN junction charge-storage to produce amplification.
Last week I used two diode gain stages for a total power gain of 48dB to drive my headphones. Yesterday, I added a third diode gain-stage and connected it to a loudspeaker for shack-filling audio volume.
I made a video of last night's setup (the same setup I worked you with). You can see it at
Thanks again for the nice contact last night, Steve. You were armchair copy here! :o)
Best wishes, Mike, AA1TJ
Here's a question for Mike: Can you build that kind of amplifier with homebrew point-contact diodes? If so, you'd be opening up the possibility of a homebrew solid state receiver with homebrew solid state devices. Oh man, this stuff makes me feel like such an APPLIANCE OPERATOR.
Graham: I can see it here. It may be the settings on your computer. In any case the image is just the video so you should be able to watch by clicking on the video link in Mik'e message. Hope this helps. 73 Bill
"SolderSmoke -- Global Adventures in Wireless Electronics" is now available as an e-book for Amazon's Kindle.
Here's the site:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004V9FIVW
Bill's OTHER Book (Warning: Not About Radio)
Click on the image to learn more
Where are the readers of SolderSmoke Daily News?
Pete Juliano N6QW
Master Homebrewer
Dean Souleles KK4DAS
With beret and with a Michigan Mighty Mite in hand
Iranian man on the train
-
Today I caught a train from Southern Cross bound for Bendigo. At Footscray
a man got on. He looked confused and clearly had almost no English. He was
askin...
A Crystal Set with No External Antenna
-
In the previous post, I described my recent build of a very simple little
TRF receiver for the AM broadcast band. It happened as the result of a
month or t...
One of the Last Places on Earth!
-
Malden, MA, Cortland St., NYC, Market St., SF, Anaheim, CA, St. Louis, MO
and Burbank, CA. These locations share a common bond and that bond is
Surplus Ele...
A 15 (and 10) meter high-pass filter for Field Day
-
*QRM from a transmitter to receivers on lower bands*
A friend of mine belongs to a club in a town north of me and he was
describing an issue that they'v...
AB4WS
-
Episode 525 - Jack Prindle - AB4WS Jack Prindle AB4WS, had an early
interest in AM broadcast radio, evolving to scanner listening to public
safety in his n...
The "George Batterson 1935 CW QSO Party" - Summary
-
The first *George Batterson CW QSO Party* has concluded and the results are
in! The "*GB*" was introduced to honor George Batterson (W2GB), who along
wi...
KK4DAS MB 20 Transceiver Complete
-
The MB 20 transceiver is now complete. The rig is a homebrew 10-watt
20-meter SSB transceiver. The VFO module was an ebay purchase of a
salvaged Yeasu...
The Communicator May-June 2025
-
*Another full issue*
Its a big issue, and great articles, along with our regular columnists.
Now read in over 165 countries, this issue brings you 120+ pag...
A Curious 9 MHz Crystal from Mouser Electronics
-
Just a quick post to share info about a good 9 MHz crystal sold by Mouser
Electronics.
I last purchased batches of crystals for xtal IF filters back in 2...
40m Pelican Case SSB Transceiver
-
See YouTube channels for details:
http://www.youtube.com/c/CharlieMorrisZL2CTM
*Test code for the LCD and Si5351*
#include
...
Hollow-State Design, 3rd Edition
-
Hollow-State Design, 3rd Edition is available from: Lulu Press:
tinyurl.com/hollowstatedesign3 eBay: search for “hollow-state design”
Electric Radio bookst...
I Finally Bought My Dream Airplane
-
Aviation has been a love of mine since I was a very little person. Living
in Nevada, seeing posters and ads for the Reno Air Races, specifically the
Texa...
Daylight Again – An all Analog Radio
-
What’s all this? In 10 seconds, A high performance, 7MHz, 5 watt SSB rig
Draws just 24 mA of current 90 dB dynamic range, 80 dB close-in dynamic
range 3D ...
Digi-chirp! Digital synthesis of ‘nostalgic’ CW
-
The bottom ends of 80, 40 and 20m are not what they used to be. For
starters, the busiest part is the digital segment where computers talk to
computers – l...
Modifications to the Dayton/FDIM-2019 Antuino
-
The Dayton Antuino has sub-optimal performance. This is a short note on
improving it to an 80 db range of measurements. The trouble with Antuino
2.0 (the o...
Raduino as NBFM TX
-
Here is a neat, 30 minute hack for your Raduino to turn the Si5351 into a
pretty stable, solid NBFM transmitter. The hack is to add a varactor diode
in ...
QRP Labs shop!
-
[image: Shop]
All QRP Labs kits may be ordered online securely at the shop, with PayPal
payment.
*Click here to visit the shop!*
*Click!*
*Shop! Order...
Hi, the image is not available on this post either.
ReplyDeletePosts older than this and the previous one are okay.
73 de Graham G3ZOD FISTS #8385
http://www.fists.co.uk
Graham: I can see it here. It may be the settings on your computer. In any case the image is just the video so you should be able to watch by clicking on the video link in Mik'e message. Hope this helps. 73 Bill
ReplyDeleteBill, aha, you're right - it's a Flash object and not a picture. I have Flash turned off on my computer (causes it to crash).
ReplyDeleteThanks - I'll head back under my stone now HI.
73 de Graham G3ZOD FISTS #8385
http://www.fists.co.uk