Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke

Showing posts with label DC Receiver Build. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DC Receiver Build. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Steve WD4CFN's FB Mid-Tennessee SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver

 

Steve WD4CFN has built a FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver.  

From his QRZ page:  "I also enjoy QRP.  A group of us have started a local QRP club this year, MidTN QRP Group. (https://groups.io/g/MidTNQRP). "

Steve writes:  

I finished my SS DCR tonight and connected an antenna. Lots of summer QRN, but also lots of signals. This was a great project! Thanks to all.

Congratulations Steve. Welcome to the Hall of Fame.

Monday, June 9, 2025

Rick W1DSP's FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver -- Exploring the Rabbit Holes


Thanks to Rick W1DSP for sending us his "proof of life" video.  It is indeed alive!  Congratulations Rick!  Welcome to the Hall of Fame!

Rick writes: 

Here's another SS DCR proof of life video. I took a bunch of detours on the way to get here - redesigned the coil former to add a fixed coil (learned openscad), spent a bunch of times on the DCR classics (KK7B, W7EL designs), acquired parts to build the original KK7B DCR, and so on. This is the sort of project that's a perfect excuse to explore all the sorts of rabbit holes we hope to find along the way to completing a project. Thanks for a great project. I'd just like to add that you're building a great community of experimenters. Most excellent, sir! Thanks to Bill & Dean!

Sunday, June 8, 2025

Phil W1PJE, Director of MIT's Haystack Observatory, visits SolderSmoke East, Talks Radio with N2CQR and KK4DAS


We were very pleased that Phil W1PJE was able to visit yesterday. Phil is the Director of MIT's Haystack Observatory. He is very knowledgeable on topics related to space and space technology. He is also a member of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver Hall of Fame. We talked about the history of the Haystack Observatory, famous antennas (dishes), and about the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion receiver project. It was a lot of fun talking to Phil. We managed to shoot this video with him. Thanks Phil and thanks Dean.

Saturday, June 7, 2025

A FIRST! K1OA Contact with N2CQR -- All Homebrew with SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receivers on Both Ends

At around 0630 EDT on June 7, 2025 I heard K1OA calling CQ on 7030 kHz CW. This was exactly where I had a crystal.  I called him, but he didn't hear me.  I sent him an e-mail.  We tried again -- he heard me calling him and I heard him responding by calling me, but I don't think we succeeded in exchanging signal reports. It was close, but no cigar.  

I had to walk the dog. Scott and I agreed to meet on 7030 kHz at 0730 EDT.  Arggh.  There was a QSO there.  I thought we might have to try to change frequency, but this would have been tough because both of us were crystal controlled on transmit.   Fortunately, the contact on 7030 kHz wrapped up.   Scott called me, I responded, and we were able to exchange signal reports.  I was so excited that I almost forgot to hit the record button on my phone.   But I caught the last minute or so.  See above.  

This was really something.  This really goes to prove what Dean and I have been saying all along:  this receiver is not a toy!  It can be used for real ham radio contacts.  And now we have had these receivers on both ends of a contact.  For transmit, Scott was using a KA4KXX transmitter with about 3 watts output.  I was on my Tuna Tin 2 at about half a watt output.   

Thanks Scott! And thank you Walter!  

Sunday, June 1, 2025

Alan Wolke W2AEW's Build of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver


We were already very proud to put Alan Wolke W2AEW in our Hall of Fame.  But Alan put icing on the cake this morning by making his own video about his build, along with some pre-CME video of the machine inhaling CW and SSB (see above).  The SSB is DX, from France.  FB Alan, thanks.  

My only comment to Alan was on the frequency readout.  I noted that many builders had resorted to San Jian PLJ frequency counters.  A few others had done what he did and used the frequency readout feature of their Tiny Spectrum Analyzers.  I told him that at first I had gone very low tech.  It was in fact, quite barbaric.   Check it out: 

I think it is kind of low-tech cool.  I am a bit disappointed that none of the builders have done anything similar.  Mark KI5SRY came the closest, but his solution was relatively spophisticated.  Look, it is not to late.  Get out those index cards and calibrate those screws!  Send in pictures or videos.  

Ashish N6ASD's Beautiful SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver -- Built in Bangalore -- "This was such a fun project. This was my first direct conversion build, and I learned a lot along the way."


Ashish N6ASD is a really good guy.  We started watching his projects when he was in San Francisco.  He does a lot of fundamental radio building.  And he is a friend of Homebrew Hero Frank Harris K0IYE

When I spotted a "thumbs up" from an N6ASD on the SolderSmoke Discord channel, I knew that we would soon have yet another Bangalore Direct Conversion Receiver.  Ashish has been in contact with both Farhan and Ramakrishnan.  FB. 

Ashish writes:  I finally finished building the receiver! This was such a fun project. This was my first direct conversion build, and I learned a lot along the way. The biggest challenge was finding stable capacitors for the oscillator. In my first attempt, I used whatever I had in my junk box, but those capacitors drifted all over the place. Mica caps seemed expensive and difficult to get in Bangalore. I ended up buying surface-mount NP0 capacitors instead. Soldering them was a hassle, but they are much cheaper and easier to get here. Next step will be more mods and experimentation! The first improvement will be in the BPF. I will replace the regular ceramic caps with NP0 caps and re-tune it.

Here is Ashish's receiver inhaling CW:   


Congratulations Ashish -- Welcome to the Hall of Fame! 

Ashish N6ASD

The resemblance between Ashih's photo and the famous
1818 painting by Caspar David Friedrich is completely coincidental,  
but quite remarkable. 




 

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Not a Toy! K1OA Making Contacts with the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver and a KA4KXX Transmitter

This goes to prove what we have been saying all along:  this receiver is not a toy!  It is capable of operating as part of a real 2-way ham radio station. Hall of Fame member Scott K1OA has paired his receiver up with a Merry Christmas transmitter designed by Walter KA4KXX and has been making CW contacts with it (see above).  Walter supplied the crystal and many of the needed parts.  Scott has already worked WA9RNE, N4HAY and W3RJ, and has tried making contact with Walter but no luck yet. He has gotten RBN reports from Germany and New Zealand. All that with just 3 watts.

This is not the first time this receiver has been out to use.   I made one contact with it using a "Ten Minute" QRPp transmitter that I had intended only to use for test purposes: 

https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2023/02/first-qso-with-high-school-receiver-100.html 

HoF member Aaron ZL1AUN used his receiver with an SSB transmitter to make contact using his receiver:

https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2025/02/soldersmoke-direct-conversion-receiver_23.html  We understand Aaron's article about the receiver has been published in "Break-In" magazine -- we hope to get a copy (electronic would be fine!) 

And who can forget HoF member Nate KA1MUQ who turned his "frying pan"  direct conversion receiver into a double sideband transceiver and used it to make phone contact with Idaho from California: 

https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2025/03/nate-ka1muq-turns-his-frying-pan-dc.html 

If anyone is aware of other contacts made using this receiver, please let me know.  

Friday, May 30, 2025

Hiss, Filters, QRM, and Hearing Loss: Do we need AF filters in direct conversion receivers?

L6 is the 88mH toroid

Messages on Discord about the need to knock down higher frequency audio response in the SolderSmoke direct conversion receiver got me thinking.

I agree with Rick Campbell and others on the benefits of hearing a "wide open" direct conversion receiver. But Rick and others have built DC receivers with 3 kHz low pass AF filters. This made me ask myself a question: Is an audio filter in a direct conversion receiver a good idea?

And I started wondering if perhaps I was being too dismissive about the complaints about high frequency audio -- I had been attributing them to newcomers who were just unaccostomed to radio noise or "static." But maybe there was more to it than that. Maybe a big part of the problem was in my head, specifically in my ears. So this morning I did an experiment. I took an online hearing test. First, without my hearing aids: As expected, it showed significant high frequency loss. (It was as if the US Army had installed a 3 kHz audio low pass filter in my head!) Then I put my hearing aids in and retook the test: This time I passed the test and showed no loss. I then listened to the DC receiver with my hearing aids in. Now I could hear what builders on the Discord server were commenting on: I could hear higher frequency hiss, and, more importantly, stations that were producing 4-5 kHz sounds on my speaker were audible and annoying.

So I went back to Wes Hayward's November 1968 QST article. In his receiver, he has a low pass AF filter using an 88 MILLIHenry coil and a couple of capacitors to ground. I had a few of the coils (given to me years ago by a NOVA QRP club member) so I built it. With my hearing aids in, I noticed an immediate improvement. I then did what one of the Discord builders did and put the filter in with a switch that would let me make "with and without" comparisons. The filter definitely cuts down on any AF above about 3.5 kHz. And it doesn't seem to do damage to the desired signal. This is useful. I left the W7EL diplexer in the circuit.

This filter won't solve the image or "opposite sideband" problem inherent to simple DC receivers, but it will help with signals or noise that are producing tones above about 3.5 kHz in the receiver. I think this is especially important in countries in which there is a lot of SSB crowding on 40 meters. The UK, for example, has an allocation from 7.0 to 7.2 MHz. In the US we go from 7.0 to 7.3 MHz. That is a big difference.

So the answer is probably yes, an AF filter in a direct conversion receiver is probably a good idea, especially if you can switch the filter out of the receiver. You can live without these filters. Not having the filter keeps the receiver very simple, and lets it sound really great. But having the filter in there does help reduce interference and high frequency hiss. So I think this is a useful add-on mod for builders who see a need to cut down on the kind of interference that a lack of this filter causes.

In 2019 W7ZOI noted: "Another unusual element is the 88 mH toroid used in the audio low pass filter at the detector output. A viable substitute would be a 100 mH inductor with radial leads. The muRata 19R107C (from Mouser) should work. Bourns also offers a variety of similar parts."

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Kevin K3IY's Beautiful FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver: "An amazing experience... A milestone for me..."


Kevin's receiver was beautifully built. And it sounds great.  Congratulations Kevin, and welcome to the Hall of Fame. 

Kevin writes: 

This was my first “real” homebrew project.  I’ve built a few kits and toyed with some basic circuits, but this is a milestone for me.  It wasn’t without some troubles but what an amazing experience.  I couldn’t get my oscillator to work and the issue was I tried to make due with two 680pF ceramic caps.  I took Dean’s advice to stick with the 330pF silver mica’s and I found my signal.  At this point I also broke down and bought an oscilloscope.  I now plan to do some mod’s and eventually build a TR switch and pair it with a transmitter.  I can’t thank Bill and Dean enough for making this an obtainable goal.  Kevin, K3IY

Kevin's receiver on CW (above) and SSB (below). 


He's thinking about his receiver

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Chuck N4AVC's FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver: "I enjoyed the build and testing."

Chuck N4AVC's use of the frequency counter in his digital multimeter is pretty cool and innovative. And it is nice to have yet another receiver in Virginia; he is down in the Richmond area.  And of course the Sharpie callsign tattoos on the wooden board are really nice. 

Chuck writes:  

Completed!!! For Pete: "She ain't pretty, but she sure can cook!". Thanks Bill and Dean, I enjoyed the build and testing. It's funny, the audio oscillates on an older 9v battery, but is clean on the 9.5v bench supply. Going to put Bill's mod on the inductor to make tuning a little finer and spread the boards out a little more. I used the double sided boards I had and there is some interaction between the boards.

Congratulations Chuck! Welcome to the Hall of Fame!


Monday, May 26, 2025

Paul WA1MAC GETS DOWN TO BRASS TACKS with his FB GLUE STICK SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver

 
Wow, look at that beautiful build of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver.  We haven't received a "proof of life" video from Paul yet, but we trust that his receiver does in fact work.  Paul has some heavy care-giver responsibilities that keep him in his home.  We do not want to complicate  his life by asking for outside antennas or videos.  

We are also not going to complicate Paul's life my insisting that he build it our way.  First, his life is already complicated enough, and second, the innovations he introduced are really cool.  The use of brass tacks and conducive copper tape is really ingenious.  And the glue stick has brought him to the Joy of Oscillation (JOO).  In fact the glue stick has given him JOVO -- the Joy of Variable Oscillation.  FB Paul.  

Paul writes: 

Hi guys

I've been gettin down to brass tack here at the mac-shack!  Fits in nicely within my new caregiver role.
Been having a ball with the brass thumbtack breadboarding from SPRAT on your DC Receiver challenge!
Gluestick PTO, check, alive with the joy of oscillation!
BPF, check (need to tune once I find the nano VNA here somewhere)
DBM and diplexer, check, there was room on the board left over so I cheated and snuck the BPF on that board too
3 BJT audio amp with transformer, check, alive and passes the finger test, loudly!
Since I currently have no 40m antenna here guess it's time to finally put that active antenna I've been meaning to build............Any how thanks for all the fun and hair pulling, oh wait, I'm already bald!
 
73
 
Paul  WA1MAC, get it the mac-shack  :-)


JOVO! 

Glue Stick! 

Brass tacks! 

Congratulations Paul!  Welcome to the Hall of Fame!  

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Ted KN4ZXG's FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion receiver: "This project is the greatest gift to homebrewing..."


There it is, a thing of beauty.  The best part is that Ted built this receiver himself.  That is something that most hams NEVER do. 

Ted writes: 

This project is the greatest gift to homebrewing since I got interested in radio nearly a decade ago. Lot's of great projects out there but most go into a mysterious black hole of obsolete parts like the NE612 mixer that's hard to get, or even the LM386, which is plentiful but not as cool as this amp. Everything's divided neatly on it's own board and explained. The builder has wiggle room on the layout and ways to test each module whether that's with nice or budget equipment. Not only did I learn a ton about each stage, but also about making RF probes and making use of my modest but super useful equipment like the Nanovna. Although there were no mysteries, it all comes together to make magic. If you know stuff, you can do stuff! Thanks again de KN4ZXG, Ted.

While he has some great plans for modifications and improvements, at this point I think Ted should follow Farhan's advice and spend some time just listening to the receiver that he has built. Direct conversion receivers sound especially good. It is as if they are closer to the ether.

Here are some clips of Ted's receiver in action:

 

Congratulations Ted.  Welcome to the Hall of Fame.  


Thursday, May 22, 2025

Mitch NK3H's FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver -- "Incredibly satisfying!"

Wow, Mitch NK3H has built a really nice receiver. (He says it is not pretty, but those of us who have built one or who are in the process know that it looks great.) The SSB really sounds good also. 

Mitch writes: 

It's not pretty but it works! Incredibly satisfying. In answer to the questions, (1) though I 'd built a few small Manhattan style boards (e.g., Michigan Mighty Mite) this was more complicated. I've been using W1REX's island cutter to create isolated areas on the copper clad board, rather than pasting on pieces of circuit board. But the islands are a little small for as many as four connections on one island, as in most of the transistor bases. Inevitably a component lead would inadvertently contact the ground plane and all bets were off. Tracking down the shorts was challenging. (2) Once I got to the audio amplifier board I carefully laid out all of the components before starting to solder. But as I finished each stage and was ready for the next, I always seemed to be missing a resistor or two. I'd search the desk and the floor -- very frustrating. Turns out the speaker magnet was collecting and hiding the missing resistors. Lesson learned. (3) Next I'm hoping to build a transceiver. Still looking for the right project, probably a little more digital than this wonderful DCR.

Mitch obviously learned a lot during this project.  I had similar experiences with pads on the same level as the surrounding board -- I found that the 1 or 2 mm of elevation provided by the Manhattan pads prevented a lot of inadvertent shorts to ground.  And I too "lost" (temporarily) a lot of components to the magnet in the speaker.  

Good luck with the next projects Mitch.  With the Michigan Mighty Mite and the DCR under your belt you are ready to go.  Maybe a Double Sideband transmitter to go with the DCR? Or, as you said, perhaps something more digital.  There is a lot of good ham experience with the Si5351 digital VFOs.  Or maybe even an SDR rig.  

Thanks Mitch.  Congratulations and welcome to the Hall of Fame. 

-----------------------

Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Bill K7WXW's FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver


This is a very nice build.  Bill K7WXW fought a long battle to get this receiver working, and -- more importantly -- to understand why it is working.   

Bill writes: 

  1. The cycle of design, sim, build, debug, update, repeat can teach you a lot.


FB Bill.  Welcome to the Hall of Fame! 




Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Monday, May 19, 2025

Daniel VE5DLD's FOUR FB Saskatchewan SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receivers


Daniel VE5DLD is a teacher in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.  Back in early 2023 several lucky students joined him in building the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion receiver.  We had asked people to build the receiver -- we wanted to test the design before asking the local high school students to build it.  Daniel and his students came through for us, and ended up having far more success than we did.  Congratulations Daniel!  Welcome to the Hall of Fame. 

Daniel wrote: 

Hi Bill!  Yes, I had my own DC Receiver that I use every so often for fun and 3 built by my students.  All working.  We didn't get any video because we just finished the school year and the kids left, but I've kept in contact with them and they told me they have been able to receive signals from their homes.  The kids developed excellent troubleshooting skills gained large amounts of confidence in their ability to fix things.  Over the next year, my students told about fixing their gaming consoles and fixing problems in their parent's electronics.  They are certainly no longer afraid of opening something up to see what is going on!  And that's what makes me the most happy!  Yeah, you can just recognize myself and only mention that 3 students were able to build DC receivers.

And yes, the Michigan Mighty Mite was a fantastic gateway to home brewing!

Thanks for thinking of me and my students!

73
Daniel D.
VE5DLD


On June 19, 2023,  Daniel wrote: 

We got everything going and all 3 students now have receivers capable of inhaling RF.  We 3D printed some knobs and hot glued them.  We took one outside but didn't hear any signals.  Mid afternoon is not good for 40m.  We will try again later this week and I'll bring my KX3 to make sure there is a single for them to listen.  This issue on that last radio was an improperly installed J310.  The angle is was installed hid the problem well!  Here are a few pictures of the completed rigs. 

Back in 2015, Daniel built a Michigan Mighty Mite.  I was pleased to be reminded that I had sent him the crystal.  Go CBLA!  For more info on Daniel's transmitter see: 

Thanks Daniel! 73  
___________________________

Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Honorable Mention: Andreas DL1AJG's THREE SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receivers for Biologists

 

Andreas DL1AJG was another of those intrepid hams who,  in the dark of winter 2023 took up the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver Challenge in order to test our receiver (before we pushed high school kids to build it).  Andreas came to the task with a lot of useful teaching experience. At the time he was an academic  biologist and had been teaching a course called "Applied Electronics for Biologists."  See: 

https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2022/08/can-biologist-fix-radio.html


Some of Andreas's students

I put these receivers in the "Honorable Mention" category only because they deviated a bit from the basic schematic:  they used an indoor ferrite antenna, had an RF amplifier ahead of the mixer, and did not use a transformer in the AF amp.  But they are very clearly the SolderSmoke DC receiver, they succeeded in inhaling RF, and Andreas and his students built them to help us.  

Here is the schematic they used: 

Click on the image for a better view

Here is an e-mail exchange I had with Andreas when the scholatic dust had settled in June 2023: 

Dear Bill,

Please my apologies for my late update on our DCR project. We started with the course in the semester break and once the semester started only a handful of students were able to finish their receiver. A long shelf of shame .... 

Here is what we've got so far (those were finished at the end of April already). 3 nice DCRs completely sufficient to copy CW indoors without additional antennas starting from late afternoon. Strong stations can be heard all day. I found that coupling some 6m of wire with one or two windings to the ferrite core can boost the signal dramatically but can also increase noise. 

The PTO is based on your design (Bill Meara N26QR &  Dean KK4DAS) which was sparked by Farhan  (VU2ESE) , except that I've swapped the FET for a NPN. The input amplifier and antenna is from the JUMA active ferrite antenna by Matti Hohtola (OH7SV), the band pass filter is from Hans Summers (G0UPL), the mixer and the headphone amplifier is inspired by Pete Juliano (N6QW), you told me that the diplexer (as well as the whole DCR idea) is attributed to Wes Hayward (W7ZOI) and the perfect schematics of Rick Scott (N3FJZ) where crucial to get me started in the first place. I enjoy keeping track of original sources, as I would do in science. This shows that even little achievements are based on the ideas of many other great people -  and this is nothing to be ashamed of. 

This was a lot of fun! Thank You!
Best and yours sincerely,
Andreas

Wow, the direct conversion re-engineering of education continues, this time at graduate-school level with biologists in Munich!  Amazing.  

Andreas points out that his group was also plagued by semester-related problems that caused many additions to the German shelf of shame.  Let's hope that someday soon these builders will come to their senses and join the ranks of those who have finished their homebrew projects.  

Looking at the schematic (above) of Andreas's project, there are a couple of significant differences from ours:   

-- Their AF amp used a transformer-less push-pull design.  We had considered this but abandoned it thinking that it would be too complicated to explain the workings of this circuit to our students.

-- Most significant, is Andreas's use of a ferrite rod antenna and an RF amplifier.   I think a simple 33 foot quarter wave antenna (with a ground or a counterpoise) might work better.  But hey,  to  each his own!   The important thing is that a number of these receivers were successfully built.  They look beautiful.  

Congratulations to Andreas and the successful Munich homebrewers!  

-----------------------------------

Thanks to Andreas DL1AJG.  Welcome to the Hall of Fame.   

------------------------------------

Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Sunday, May 18, 2025

Rick N3FJZ's Early Completion of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver Challenge

 It was a cold day in early February 2023.  Rick N3FJZ had responded to an early version of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Challenge: 

I wrote: 

Rick N3FJZ has completed his the direct conversion receiver that we will soon be building with students at a local high school.   See video above. 


We are hoping that a number of people will build the receiver as we designed it.  Some folks have sent us versions of the receiver that they have built, but these versions often include significant deviations from our design, rendering them less-than-useful in checking our work.  Rick built it just as we prescribed.  His build is very useful in confirming the validity of our design.  So if you are working on one of these receivers, I would encourage you to -- for the moment -- dispense with innovations and build it the way Rick did:  as per the design we have been using. 

We know that our design is not perfect.  But we have decided to stick with it because it is very simple and very easy to explain.  Examples:  We know there is an impedance mismatch between the mixer and the AF amp.  But fixing this would introduce complexity that we want to avoid.   And the receiver works fine with the imperfection.   We know that a push-pull AF amp would probably work better than the one we have.  But we do not want to have to explain push-pull amps, biasing schemes, and PNP transistors in this short introductory course.  So we stuck with three common-emitter AF amp circuits and an 1K-8ohm transformer. 

Rick did a really excellent job not only in building this receiver, but also in documenting it.   His diagrams and drawings are really superb.  We will probably use these in our presentations to the students: 


We will keep all of you informed on the progress of this project.  We will begin this week.  But if you are still working on the receiver, please send us your work,  even if it comes in after we begin the course.  

Thanks Rick! 

-------------------------------------

Thanks indeed Rick.  Sorry it took so long to put you in the SolderSmoke Challenge Hall of Fame, but you are in now, and you definitely deserve it.  Congratulations OM.  

I especially like your finding the audio ourput transformer in an old transistor radio.  Too often we see builders quit after discovering that Mouser or some other supplier no longer stocks the needed part.  You show that homebrewers have other sources available, if they are willing to scrounge a bit.  FB.    I also liked the switch that helped compare the outputs of the two AF transformers.  Very useful.  

Thanks too for all the great videos and your really nice documentation -- we have used your work quite a lot. 

73 and welcome to the Hall of Fame! 

Rick N3FJZ

____________________________

Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:





Saturday, May 17, 2025

Stephen VK2BLQ's Very FB EARLY build of the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver

 

This was back in the old days, long before we had Discord.  It was early 2023, and we were getting ready to start the Direct Conversion receiver project at the local high school.  I put out a version of the SolderSmoke Challenge:  I asked people to build our receiver and let us know if it worked for them.  Stephen VK2BLQ took us up on this and built the beautiful receiver you see above.  

Thanks Stephen.  Welcome to the Hall of Fame!  

Stephen wrote:  

Bill,


Don't worry, you are not alone out there.

Here is my build; sorry that the front panel is overexposed and hard to see, but it is plywood.

I did follow the schematic but due to the contents  of the junk box there have been some component changes.

The only thing that I had to buy was the 3/16 x 50 mm (2 inch) brass screw.

My calculations for the coils for the PTO and  BPF  were  a little  bit off necessitating padding down the PTO with a further 100 pF (easier than remaking the coil and mounting)  and removing a few turns from the T50-6 toroids.

Like other people have found: the audio takes off at full volume; I am thinking but not yet tried adding decoupling between R5 (15K) and C2(47 uF). It isn't the actual values of the electros as I had to use 100 uF so might be the audio output getting back into the earlier stage.

The tuning range I get is  our 7000 to 7200 KHz and some shortwave stations above and below, Turning the screw is a little bit fiddly, but once tuned the vfo is quite stable and the audio sounds good.

Best wishes,

Stephen

VK2BLQ

Designer: Douglas Bowman | Dimodifikasi oleh Abdul Munir Original Posting Rounders 3 Column