I'm not exactly sure why I pulled this old rig off the shelf, but I'll write up what I did -- I often use this blog as a kind of notebook. I can look back and easily see what I did on my last encounter with the rig.
The receiver is Doug DeMaw's Barebones (aka Barbados) Superhet. This was my first superhet receiver. I built in in 1997. The transmitter was my first real homebrew project -- it is the VXO 6 watter from QRP classics. I built it in the Dominican Republic, probably in 1993 or 1994. I built the power supply so that I could say that the entire rig is homebrew.
This rig is getting a bit long in the tooth: The receiver is built with 40673 Dual-Gate MOSFETs, an some of the transistor cans have gotten rusty. The frequency readout on the receiver is the top of a coffee can fitted onto the reduction drive behind the tuning knob from a Drake 2-B (not MY 2B!).
Here are two 2013 videos that I did on this receiver:
-- I put the crystal filter back in CW mode. I had widened it so that I could listen to 20 meter SSB, but I decided to go back to its original configuration. When I built the receiver in 1987, I didn't characterize the crystals -- I just used the capacitor values that Doug DeMaw had in his article. I pretty much did that again this time, just putting caps that are close in value to what Doug had. DeMaw used color burst crystals at 3.579 MHz. So I guess this would be a GREAT receiver for the Color Burst Liberation Army!
-- I used My Antuino (thanks Farhan!) to check the passband. Here is what it looks like. I just put the Antuino across the 10k resistors on either side of the input and output transformers. The coil cores had become very loose -- I just tried put them in the right place. I may need to put some wax in there to allow them to better stay in place. I think they could have used toroids instead -- that would have been easier. One of the transformer connections was open -- they don't work well that way, once I fixed that, the passband looks like this:
-- Each of the horizontal divisions is 500 Hz. The passband is not pretty, but it is OK, and I didn't feel like doing too much work on this to get it in better shape.
-- The filter peak was a bit lower in frequency than expected. I found that trimmer cap C3 in series with the BFO crystal would not allow me to lower its frequency sufficiently. So I moved C3 to a position in parallel with the crystal. With this mod, I could get the BFO frequency to 3578.69. This produces a 690 Hz tone when the received signal is at the peak of the IF passband. Opposite sideband rejection is quite good.
-- I didn't have to do any real work on the transmitter. The RF amplifier in the transmitter had served for a time as the RF amp in by 17 meter DSB rig (I had added a bias circuit, which I removed when I put the amplifier back in Class C). Some time ago I rebuilt the oscillator circuit (which had been literally cut off the board when I used the amplifier in the DSB rig).
-- I did have to reconfigure the muting circuit -- the T/R switch in the transmitter switches the antenna and also -- through a two wire circuit -- cuts off 12 V DC to the transmitter when in receive mode.
-- For sidetone I just put a small piezo buzzer through a 1k resistor between 12 V DC and the key line.
It all worked fine -- I talked to three stations on the high end of the 20 meter CW band.
Hope that filter shape doesn't haunt you at night..
ReplyDeleteI know. Scary. Looks like a witch! 73 Bill
ReplyDeleteI've enjoyed going back to old homebrew rigs many years later. There are usually some things you want to rip out immediately and replace, and other things that strike you as quite good. It becomes a kind of a renovation task. Most old projects can't be more than they were designed to be, but you can always improve them.
ReplyDeletePaul VK3HN.