Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Thursday, September 5, 2024
Excellent New Video from Grayson KJ7UM on his Thermatron version of the Michigan Mighty Mite
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Hammarlund and Homebrew Heroine: Janis AB2RA, HQ-100 Filter Cap Question
Dean KK4DAS is getting ready to work on his dad's HQ-170A. He too will find lots of wisdom and tribal knowledge on Janis's wonderful web site.
Her main page: http://www.wireless-girl.com/ (with a vast amount of technical info available through the links on the upper left side of this page)
About Janis: http://www.wireless-girl.com/AboutMe.html
Thanks Janis!
Sunday, August 22, 2021
Joe Galeski's 1960 "IMP" 3 -Tube Filter SSB Transmitter, and the Spirit of SSB Homebrew
Here is another important bit of SSB history. In May 1960, Joe Galeski W4IMP published an article in QST describing his super-simple SSB transmitter. While Tony Vitale's "Cheap and Easy" rig was a phasing design, Joe came up with a filter rig. He built USB filter at 5775 kc. With it, he ran a VXO at around 8525 kc. This put him on 20 meter USB.
Here is the QST article: http://marc.retronik.fr/AmateurRadio/SSB/A_3_tubes_filter_rig_%28SSB%29_%5BQST_1960_5p%5D.pdf
In discussing how to put this rig on other bands, Joe got the sideband inversion question exactly right:
Saturday, August 21, 2021
W2EWL's "Cheap and Easy SSB" Rig -- And The LSB/USB Convention Myth
In March 1956 Tony Vitale published in QST an article about a "Cheap and Easy" SSB transmitter that he had built around the VFO in an ARC-5 Command Set transmitter. Vitale added a 9 MHz crystal-controlled oscillator, and around this built a simple phasing generator that produced SSB at 9 MHz. He then made excellent use of the ARC-5's stable 5 - 5.5 MHz VFO. His rig covered both 75 meters and 20 meters. Here is the article:
Because it used the 9 and 5 frequency scheme, over the years many, many hams have come to think that Vitale's rig is the source of the current "LSB below 10 MHz, USB above 10 MHz." This is wrong. An example of this error popped up on YouTube just this week (the video is otherwise excellent):
Friday, December 18, 2020
Grayson Evans KJ7UM's New Blog -- Lots of Great Technical Info
Saturday, November 11, 2017
Amazing Homebrew/Boatanchors QSOs on 40 --Six solder melters in a row!
Al W8VR |
W4IJ Boatanchors |
Saturday, September 2, 2017
SolderSmoke Podcast 199 Eclipse, Regen, BITX, DC RX, 3D OLEDS, Iphone Boxes, Mailbag
SolderSmoke Podcast #199 is available.
http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke199.mp3
2 September 2017
The Eclipse. The Floods.
Sawdust Regen gets John Henry off to a good start.
Voltage regulators as audio amplifiers
The return of the Simple-ceiver (Direct Conversion)
Ceramic Resonators
3D OLEDS
iPhone Boxes as rig enclosures
Electric Radio on Frank Jones
17 Meter Contacts
MAILBAG
Saturday, July 29, 2017
SolderSmoke Podcast #198 - D-104, HW-8, Juliello, DIFX, Dishal, Baofeng, MAILBAG
Bill Breshears WC3K (SK) |
Juliello. No. |
Thursday, April 13, 2017
The Soul of the Old Machine
I continue to peruse the stack of Electric Radio magazines that Armand WA1UQO gave me last month. Great stuff. I'm really struck by how much of our ham radio history is captured in the pages of ER... and nowhere else. This is a resource that should be protected.
In the last podcast I shared a few lines from the "Amateur Radio SSB -- The First Fifty Years" series or articles. Today at lunch time I was reading the March 1994 issue, there was an article by Don Meadows N6DM entitled "A Homebrew CW Receiver." From the last paragraph:
"This homebrew receiver as the main station receiver until 1975... In 1989 the homebrew receiver was finally mothballed... In its place I acquired an imported box that does everything. This box is friendly and cooperative, but I have no rapport with its soul. When it ultimately falters, it will need to be cured in the manufacturers sanitarium for sick gear instead of on my own workbench.
I've always been proud of this homebrew receiver. It did its job exceedingly well. Retrieving recently this old friend from storage for photographs, cleaning out the dust and dead insects, inspecting its wiring up close -- all this evoked fond memories."