Submit signal reports here: https://haarp.gi.alaska.edu/form/reception-reports
Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Monday, November 17, 2025
HAARP Test 17 -- 22 November 2025
Submit signal reports here: https://haarp.gi.alaska.edu/form/reception-reports
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Hiding a Solar-Powered Mesh Node in Alaska -- Can you find it?
Even though it deals with some high-tech, SDR, IC stuff, there is a lot to like in this video.
Some of the guys in Vienna Wireless have been playing around with Mesh nodes. This video made me think about building one and leaving it on the roof of our apartment overlooking the Mona passage. I already have the solar panels (from the old Volkswagens)...
Here is a description of his YouTube channel:
A collection of DIY boats, devices, and other projects built out of junk. Almost everything on this channel is made from scrounged, hoarded, and salvaged parts. I grew up on an island in Alaska, so I know the value of never throwing anything away! I may not be an expert craftsman, but I know my way around a roll of duct tape! I'm also always on the lookout for crazy free or cheap stuff, whether it be electronic parts, boats, aircraft engines, or even a monorail train! Check out www.saveitforparts.com for even more projects!
Here is the YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@saveitforparts
Thanks to Jenny List of Hack-A-Day for alerting me to this.
Thursday, August 7, 2025
SolderSmoke Podcast 261: Travel, AI-Apocalypse, ARRL Award, Amplifiers (with Claude) , Transcoms, Smoke released in DR, QRP, CW, MAILBAG
Opening: Travel notes: Pete to Denver. Dean to Alaska. Bill in the Dominican Republic.
The future of the podcast. We will embrace our NIMCEL status and fight on in spite of the AI Apocalypse. Thanks to Peter VK3TPM, Hamilton KD0FNR, Sam AI7PR, Todd K7TFC and the WayBackMachine for providing backup and transfer options for the blog. Google could end Blogspot at any time.
Dean and Bill win the 2025 ARRL Technical Service Award. Thanks to Bruce KC1FSZ for the nomination. And thanks to Bill Morine N2COP for letting us know. 91 receivers completed so far!
SolderSmoke East was pleased to host Phil W1PJE, a distinguished MIT radio astronomer AND member of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver Hall of Fame.
Dean: Amplifier design, woes, triumphs, tribal knowledge. And help from Claude.
Pete: Project X -- The Transcom SBT-3, Crossroads and Decisions.
SHAMELESS COMMERCE DIVISION: FIGHT THE AI-APOCALYPSE -- BECOME A PATREON SPONSOR.
Mailbag:
Who is the Project 326 Guy? A British engineer resident in China for last 20 years.
Steve EI5DD Ham Radio Ireland magazine. Hey -- Why no Irish DC RX builders?
Paul K9ARF -- Thanks for the very kind e-mail about SolderSmoke.
Rogier PA1ZZ -- Many nice videos and suggestions on blog backup.
Grayson KJ7UM on the EF-50 valve (thermatron!)
Bruce KC1FSZ Four DC RX builders at the Wellesley Mass radio club.
Chris KD4PBJ -- Long trip to pick up two directional beacons possibly for 630m or 2200m bands!
Alan W2AEW did a Minimum Discernible Signal test on the DC RX. FB!
Mike WN2A -- Many great comments on MDS in its various forms.
Philippe F6GUH is a FB homebrewer.
Mike EIOCL -- Always great to talk on the air with an old friend.
Walter KA4KXX -- I checked into the Sunrise net! With my HW-101! Thanks Walter.
Farhan VU2ESE -- Watched our interview with Phil W1PJE
Sunday, April 27, 2025
Building a Helio in Alaska from 75 year-old Blueprints
Saturday, March 25, 2023
Update on the High-School Direct Conversion Receiver Project: Board #4 Completed
This week we had two sessions of about two hours each. We introduced the final board: the audio amplifier. Many of the students began work on this amplifier; others were catching up with work on boards presented earlier.
The AF amp is their most challenging board: It used 14 Manhattan pads and about 26 components. We warned the students that amplifiers often aspire to be oscillators. We told them to pay attention to layout, and to keep their leads short.
At first, the students just built the first stage on the AF amp board. They tested this, then moved on to build the other two stages.
By the end of Friday, two groups had completed the build of the AF amplifier board.
We think there are about 13 receivers in production. Some are near completion, others will need more work.
On Thursday of next week those teams that have completed all four boards will put the circuits together and will test the entire system. They will then add all needed front and back panels and socketry.
We really want the students to complete as many of these receivers as possible. Exam season and the end of the school year is approaching, so we have to get this done. We will remind students that they don't want to that person who ALMOST finished a project! We will urge them to GET IT DONE! They can tweak it and mod it later. This kind of tweaking and modification is part of the homebrew experience.
We have been presenting awards to the students who are first to complete each stage: The winners of the PTO board competition got a copy of SolderSmoke: Global Adventures in Wireless Electronics. Those who won the mixer competition got a W1REX Hamfest Buddy transmitter. Thanks Rex! And this week we presented an award to the students who were the first to complete their bandpass filter. You've heard of the Tony, the Emmy and the Grammy? Well, we presented "The Torry" (from Toroidal). The trophy was made from a toroidal winding tool made in Alaska by KL7FLR. I explained to the students who had made it. Thanks Paul!
Sunday, July 24, 2022
A Surprisingly Good Movie from the Late 1960s: "The Ham's Wide World" (Video)
Sunday, April 4, 2021
A Satellite Ground Station (Receiver) Made from Junk
Saturday, May 2, 2020
A Toroid Winder from the Wizard of Wasilla -- Paul KL7FLR
Tuesday, October 24, 2017
630 Meter DX from Wasilla, Alaska
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| Kl7L's 600m Part 5 station |
I had a chuckle when you and Pete mentioned the new 630 and 2200m bands - and the real estate requirements - Well, I've been active with the experimental callsigns since 2003 and very glad we have finally got the bands - so a small form to fill out on the UTC web site and a 30 days wait to check you are not within 1Km radii of the co channel PLC on Trunk power lines, if no "disapprove" away we go - and I and many have!
Just turn off all those nasty dimmers, LED lights and SMPSU wallwarts - plonk your radio on 474.2kHz USB and decode using WSPR or JT9 and I think youll be surprised on what you can hear even on a short typical 80m or topband wire or so. There a lot of activity all around you
The station for both band is homebrew soldersmoke heaven - transverter/PA and filters/Couplers/Phase meters etc with only my ol' TS850 doing the prime driving, or a Hans Summers U3S.
Size does matter - but my best RX for both bands is a 2ft long active probe up a pine tree, that's all - and some 300ft of RG6, and the Tx antenna is a 60ft high Marconi or more over an inverted L with a 3 wire top cap all nested in the Birch forest - loads or radials but still very lossy in the Summer - nothing special here - Of course with the QRP per se we have to use CW or digital modes mostly but DX can be done - after all my closest active neighbor on 2200/630m is over 2000Kms away!
So, for the first time I sparked up on JT9 on 630m this early morning and first blood to QSO with VK4YB @ 5W EIRP!
Not bad for a first qso on what is a fairly typical back yard antenna - so, there is hope and many people appear to be putting transcontinental signals out this power, so everyone is on the same playing field - just the ground and location and latitude will change things! It tends to be more flaky, lossy and geo/solar events tend to hit us hard up here compared with say Seattle.
On 2200m TX its a loop of thick wire hanging in the trees - literally 500ft circumference and a beefy coupler to deal with the 50A or so of antenna current to make the 1W ERP or so - still its getting out OK and again should be putting signals over the Pole to EU and across the Pacific as it becomes more and more dark up here.
I'm now caught up with past Soldersmoke pod casts and thanks to you and Pete for making me smile
Take care
Laurence KL7L aka G4DMA et al
Wasilla Alaska 23rd Oct 2017
Friday, August 11, 2017
Alaskan Road-Kill Microphone
| N2CQR Lamp Mic |
Monday, January 3, 2011
More WSPR DX
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Alaska QRSS Grabber Controlled from CHINA!
Our friend Laurence leads an interesting life...http://www.kl1x.com/
Hi Bill and greetings from the NE coast of still summery China - actually its cooling down a bit from boiling over to just cooking.
Just been home to Alaska. Whilst and between lumberjacking 20 dead trees on the property I had a few mins to throw up a K9AY and connected it via 250ft of Walmarts best RG6U into the R75 - with a little help of Ham radio delux, Citrix and Skype I have control of the radio from here in China - Mostly on 30m but really shoved it up for the winter lf/mf season but of course WSPR and visual modes have proved very popular. So until a moose walks thru, a Wolf chews threw or wife cuts thru the antennae wire it will be up.
Here in China I'm sporting the second r75 and this supplements the SDR IQ - my antennae are gradually getting blocked towards the states and Eu by every rising high rises just in front and I can actually measure the increasing losses at LF and HF as the beast rise. Still looking for your WSPR signal and keep up the good work.
Regards
Laurence G4DMA et al - KL1 X and in BY3A



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