Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
Image of James Webb Space Telescope In Position at L2
Friday, January 21, 2022
"From Crystal Sets to Sideband" -- A Great Book about Homebrew Radio by Frank Harris K0IYE (FREE!)
I first came across the above picture of K0IYE's inspirational, completely homebrew station many years ago in the pages of "World Radio" magazine. I have already linked to Frank's book many times over the years, but it is so good that I regularly feel compelled to write about it again. Frank updates the book. Just check out the introduction to his website. Frank even has a Spanish language version of his book. All for free. Thank you Frank.
The introduction to Frank's web site:
Thursday, January 20, 2022
Mike WU2D on VFOs (with additional Tribal Knowledge from Frank Harris K0IYE)
Wednesday, January 12, 2022
Looking at the Galaxy's Spiral Arms with a Dongle, a Raspberry Pi,and a Homebrew Antenna
Monday, January 10, 2022
Exorcism Not Quite Complete -- Thinking of Other Options
As often happens, I may have jumped the gun in declaring the exorcism of my 17 meter transmitter to be a success. As readers of this blog will recall, my problem was that when trying to "net" my separate 17 MHz receiver and transmitter, at around 18.116 MHz I could hear more than one tone as I tried to get to zero beat. The 8th harmonic of my 5.176 MHz carrier oscillator was mixing with the 23 MHz VXO signal and producing a spur. I could probably knock the level of this spur down below FCC limits, but -- and here is the problem -- I probably could never knock it down to the point that it would not be audible in the sensitive receiver that sits right next to the transmitter. So this is really a netting problem, not really a spur problem.
I don't want to try another filter frequency -- I have VXO crystals that really work only with a filter at 5.176 MHz.
So here is my current idea: Build a receiver board and turn this thing into a transceiver. Switch with relays the input and output of the 5.176 MHz filter, and use relays to switch to the receiver board the VXO and carrier oscillator signals.
Making this thing a transceiver would eliminate the need for netting. This should solve my problem.
What do you folks think?
73 Bill
Thursday, January 6, 2022
Roy Lewallen W7EL Gives Us All EZNEC for FREE! Thanks Roy! (Video)
Tuesday, January 4, 2022
Exorcism Completed! Getting Rid of the Spur in my 17 meter SSB Transmitter using a TinySA (video)
To re-cap: The problem became evident when trying to "net" or "spot" my transmitter onto my receive frequency. Around 18.116 MHz, I could hear at least two tones in the receiver as I moved the transmitter frequency. I needed to get rid of the extra tone.
First, thanks to all who sent in suggestions. They came in literally from around the world, and this is a demonstration of the IBEW in action. I used or at least tried all of them. They were all good ideas.
Following Vasily Ivananeko's pseudonymous suggestion I rebuilt the carrier oscillator (apologies to G3YCC). I used the carrier oscillator/buffer circuit from Farhan's BITX20.
Henk PA0EME said I should look at the signal level at the input ports of the NE602 mixer. Henk was right --- the VXO input was far too high. I lowered it, but the problem persisted.
At first, I thought that the spur in question was so small that it would not show up on the air. I could not see it in the TX output using my TinySA spectrum analyzer. That was good news and bad news: Good that it was not showing up on the air, bad that I could not see it in the TinySA and use that image in the exorcism.
At first I thought that the spur was being caused by the 10th harmonic of the carrier oscillator and the third harmonic of the VXO. This seemed to fit. So, following VK3YE's sage advice, I built a little 69 MHz series LC trap (using a coil sent by AA1TJ, on a board CNC'd by Pete N6QW). That trap succeeded spectacularly in crushing the 10 harmonic. Look at these before and after shots on the TinySA:
Spectacular right? But guess what? The problem was still there.
I scrutinized the situation once more. I realized that the spur would be more visible if I put the TinySA on the input of the transmitter's PA (a JBOT amp designed by Farhan) as opposed to putting it on the output. Watching the spur and the needed signal move in the TinySA as I tuned the VXO, I realized that they were moving in opposite directions. This indicated that the spur was the result of a carrier oscillator harmonic MINUS a VXO-generated frequency (as the VXO frequency increased, the spur frequency decreased). Looking at my EXCEL spread sheet, I could see it: 8th harmonic of the carrier oscillator MINUS the main output of the VXO.
To confirm this, I plugged the values into W7ZOI's Spurtune program. Yes, the spur popped up and moved as predicted.
For further confirmation I shut down the carrier oscillator by pulling the crystal from the socket, and then just clipped in a 5.176 MHz signal from my HP-8640B signal generator (thanks KB3SII and W2DAB). Boom! On the TinySA, the spur disappeared. Now I at least knew what the problem was: a harmonic from the carrier oscillator.
Following good troubleshooting practice, I turned off the gear and went to bed. When I woke up, an idea came to me: Before launching into a lot of filtering and shielding, just try running the carrier oscillator at a lower voltage, seeing if doing so might reduce the harmonic output. I disconnected the carrier oscillator board from the main supply and clipped in a variable voltage bench supply. Watching the signal on my TinySA, I watched as the spur completely disappeared as I reduced the voltage from around 13V to 10V (see video above). The main signal frequency level did not change much. I tested this by listening for the hated extra tones. They were gone. Exorcised.
Key lessons:
-- Spur problems are difficult to troubleshoot. Armstrong's superhet architecture is, of course, great, but this is definitely one of the pitfalls. Single conversion makes life easier. IF selection is very important. Choose wisely!
-- When looking at the TinySA as you tune the rig, pay attention to which way the spur is moving. This provides an important clue regarding the combination of harmonic you are dealing with.
-- The TinySA is a very useful tool. It seems like it is easier to use than the NanoVNA (which is also a fantastic tool).
-- It can be fun and rewarding to re-visit old projects. In the years between original construction and the re-look, new test gear has become available, and the skill and experience of the builder has improved. So problems that once seemed insurmountable become fix-able.
-- Thinking through a problem and thinking about possible solutions is very important. It pays to step away from the bench to think and rest. Rome wasn't built in a day. Here's a rough block diagram that I drew up (noodled!) while trying to figure out this problem:
Monday, January 3, 2022
1BCG -- The 100th Anniversary of the Trans-Atlantic Test
Phil W1PJE managed to hear and record some of the 2021 transmission (Thanks Phil). Listen here:
https://drive.google.com/file/
Phil also sent this spectrogram of the signal.