Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Monday, October 14, 2024
Monitoring Maritime Radio Messages with YADD
Friday, September 6, 2024
Ham Radio in the 1970s (and earlier, with some cool Jazz). What favorite rigs do you see?
Thursday, September 5, 2024
Who can tell us more about Lovelock's homebrew shortwave radio?
Saturday, May 25, 2024
Pete Juliano's Amazing Videos -- 318 of Them!
Monday, May 29, 2023
Eric Schwartz WA6HHQ of Elecraft -- FDIM Interview #4 by Bob Crane W8SX (audio)
It was really cool that our correspondent at FDIM caught up with Eric Schwartz WA6HHQ of Elecraft. Some highlights from the interview:
-- Eric met Wayne Burdick through the NORCAL 40 (Wayne had designed it, and Eric was writing articles about it). That was a very influential rig -- it was the basis for a book and a CALTECH course by David Rutledge.
-- Elecraft has a strong QRP element in its DNA.
-- The K2 is "Heathkit style" and offers the builder the opportunity to understand the rig at the component level.
-- Eric says that using something you built yourself is worth at least 10db.
Here is Bob's interview with Eric:
http://soldersmoke.com/WA6HHQ23.mp3
Thanks Eric and thanks Bob.
Monday, May 1, 2023
Apex Surplus in Los Angeles
Sunday, July 24, 2022
A Surprisingly Good Movie from the Late 1960s: "The Ham's Wide World" (Video)
Friday, April 30, 2021
Trying to Repair Some Old Gear, He Got Hit with a Dose of LSD!
Oh no, here's something else for us to worry about when working on old gear. As if the treat of electrocution or radioactive poisoning were not enough, now we have to worry about being hit with a dose of the 1960's drug culture. That could be one bad trip indeed. Imagine if you were having a hard time troubleshooting the Buchla Model 100. All of a sudden things start getting weird and your test gear starts dancing on the bench.
Fortunately, this is not likely to happen with a rig like the DX-100. With rigs like that the only similar danger is nicotine poisoning.
Thanks to Stephen Walters for finding this groovy story.
Monday, March 8, 2021
AA7EE Casually Kills a Direct Conversion Receiver, then Coldly Discards a Diode Ring Mixer
I was really glad to see that Dave AA7EE has -- after a long absence -- posted another article on his blog. The article has some great personal reminiscences about his involvement with direct conversion receivers. Here is one passage:
I spent many happy hours tuning around and listening on 80M with the DSB80. It was this first experience that cemented my affinity for direct conversion receivers built with commercially available diode ring mixer packages. It just seemed so simple – you squirt RF into one port, a VFO into the other, and (after passing the result through a diplexer) amplify the heck out of the result. The seeming simplicity of the process of converting RF directly to baseband audio has held great appeal for me ever since. Unfortunately, that project didn’t survive. One day, in later adulthood, in my apartment in Hollywood, I reversed the polarity of the 12V DC supply and, discouraged at it’s subsequent refusal to work, tossed the whole thing away. Now, I cannot quite believe that I did that, but it was during a long period of inactivity on the ham bands, and complete lack of interest. If only I could go back, and not have thrown it into the dumpster of my apartment building! Hollywood is ridden with recent notable history. My little double sideband transceiver met it’s unfortunate end just 100 feet from the spot where Bobby Fuller, of The Bobby Fuller Four, was found dead in his car, in 1966, the subject of a still unsolved mystery to this day. The death of my little DSB rig was a lot less mysterious. To think that I heartlessly tossed an SBL-1 mixer into a dumpster, is a mark of how far I had strayed from my homebrewing roots, forged in a little village in England. Now, a few years later, in a city known for it’s sin and excess, I had cruelly ended the life of a stout and honest diode ring mixer. I suppose I should spare a thought for the polyvaricon but, well, you know – it was a polyvaricon!
https://aa7ee.wordpress.com/2021/03/04/the-ve7bpo-direct-conversion-receiver-mainframe/
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
The SolderSmoke Team Talks to the River City Amateur Radio Communication Society (Video)
Thursday, January 21, 2021
Sunday, May 3, 2020
QSO Today -- Episode 300 -- Panel Discussion
Friday, October 25, 2019
Saturday, December 15, 2018
SolderSmoke Podcast #208
SolderSmoke Podcast #208 is available:
http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke208.mp3
15 December 2018
Pete and the California fires
Bill goes to Brooklyn
2 meter simplex
A return of the trivial electric motor
Audio from Mars
HF Conditions -- a real mixed bag
Pete looks back at 2018 -- The Year of the SSB Transceiver -- Lessons Learned
Hans Summers, the QSX and the virtues of SDR
W7ZOI's DC Receiver Retrospective
The 1972 Solar Flare and the Vietnam War
SHAMELESS COMMERCE: Buy your gifts through the Amazon link to the upper right.
Consider SolderSmoke the book as a gift. Visit Pasta Pete's for cooking ideas.
Don't Build It! Sage -- but unexpected -- advice from Pete.
Straight Key Night approaches.
Book Reviews:
--"What is Real?" (Quantum Physics)
-- RHdb by K6LHA.
Movies
"Bohemian Rhapsody"
"First Man" (Not yet!)
MAILBAG:
Steve G0FUW
Ed KC8SBV
Monday, December 3, 2018
A Beautiful Launch! Watch the Video
Today's SpaceX Falcon 9 launch of Farhan's Exseed Satellite was really spectacular. Congratulations Farhan! Really inspirational stuff.
Now we wait to hear the bird. If I have loaded the orbital information correctly, I should have my first chance this evening. I have my antenna positioned.
Sunday, December 2, 2018
Launch Day! Godspeed Exseed! 1:31 pm Eastern time. Video links here.
Farhan posted this message and the above video to Facebook today (I have the video cued up to around the 5 minute point):
We are all set for the launch of ExseedSat... There are two tiny switches at the bottom of the satellite that keep the satellite switched off while it stays in it's container. Once the satellite is ejected, the switches are released and the satellite wakes up.
There are 36 satellites on this launch, some belong to close friends in the satellite fraternity. We wait for all the satellites to drift out and after 45 minutes, the antennas are depolyed and we will start beeping signals home.
Here is a test of that process. You can skip to the fifth minute to watch the antenna depoly .
I really like the tape measure antenna. This recalls the earliest OSCAR satellites. And let's not forget that OSCAR 1 also launched from Vandenberg. So there a lot of good tradition flying with Farhan's bird.
Press reports indicate a launch time of 1:31 pm Eastern time today. I think you can watch it live through the video window below. Or try this link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wq8kS6UoOrQ
Saturday, December 1, 2018
Cubesat Launch Now Scheduled for Sunday Morning (California time)
https://spacenews.com/dedicated-rideshare-falcon-9-launch-raises-satellite-tracking-concerns/
https://www.theverge.com/2018/12/1/18114894/spacex-falcon-9-reusability-sso-a-mission-rideshare-satellites
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Bad Weather Postpones Falcon 9 Rocket Launch
March 30 2018 Falcon 9 Launch from Vandenberg AFB |
Sunday, April 8, 2018
AMAZING 1999 Video on the Invention of the Transistor at "Hell's Bells Laboratory"
Thanks to Armand WA1UQO for alerting me to this. I really liked the book -- "Crystal Fire" -- that this 1999 video is loosely based on. I'm also a fan of the narrator, Ira Flatow, whose melodious voice is heard each week on NPR's excellent "Science Friday" radio show.
A few observations and thoughts on the video:
-- I liked the irreverant Calypso song "Hell's Bells Laboratory." It looks like those folks had a lot of fun. And wow, Shockly's secretary was named Betty Sparks. TRGHS.
-- I have the same big Variac on my bench. And I have one of those "third hand" devices.
-- I'd like to build my own replica of the point contact device with the triangular piece of lucite and the gold foil.
-- While Shockley seems to be the real bad guy in this story (he seems to have all the bad characteristics of David Sarnoff, Lee DeForest, and Steve Jobs), I liked the his use of "physical intuition" to understand devices and the problems they were meant to solve.
-- The image of the two Japanese founders of Sony working in the late 1940's in a bombed out department store was very powerful.
-- Although I came on the scence a bit later, I WAS one of those kids who used a transistor radio and an earphone to surreptitiously listen to rock-and-roll music.
-- "More transistors are made each year than raindrops fall on California." Hmmm....
More info here: http://www.pbs.org/transistor/
Extra interviews: http://www.pbs.org/transistor/tv/index.html