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Saturday, February 1, 2025
USAF Video: Why SSB is Superior to Ordinary AM
Saturday, December 7, 2024
My Receiver Doesn't Work Right! What Should I Do?
We prepared this for use by the high school students who were building direct conversion receivers. Unfortunately none of them got to the point where they would use this little article, but given the fact that a number of people are now engaged in direct conversion receiver projects, I thought it would be a good idea to post this here. Also, much of this applies more generally to receiver problems.
My receiver doesn’t work right!
What should I do?
First,
relax. You will be able to get it to
work. The design is good, people around
the world have built this receiver, and you will be able to get it to work. But homebrew radio is not plug-and-play
radio. Sometimes a new receiver needs
some tweaking, peaking, and coaxing.
Realize that the 40 meter band has its ups and downs. The downs usually come at mid-day. The sun’s position high in the sky causes a build up of the D layer of the ionosphere. This tends to absorb radio waves. So signals are often weak at mid-day. Signals will be much stronger in the morning, and in the evening.
Can you hear the “band noise” when you connect your antenna? This sounds like hiss or static. Some of this is the result of thunderstorms in Brazil. Some of it is from events far away in the cosmos. Some of it comes from the weed whacker down the block! But if you can hear this noise, that is a very good sign that your receiver is working. The signals you are looking for will be stronger than this band noise.
Where are you tuning? Your receiver tunes from about 6.8 MHz (with the screw all the way our) to about 7.8 MHz (screw all the way in). But we are only really interested in the ham frequency band between 7.0 MHz and 7.3 MHz. Try to tune your receiver near the middle of the tuning range (with the screw about half-way in). You should hear morse code from about 7.0 to 7.06 MHz. Then you should hear strong digital signals at 7.074 MHz. Tuning further up (screw going in) you should start to hear hams speaking to each other using Single Sideband. At first they will sound like Donald Duck.
Sometimes you will only hear one side of the conversation. That is normal. The other station may be either too far away from you, or too close to you. You may be outside his or her skip zone.
One very
obvious thing to check: How is your
battery? Is it drained, or is it still
at about 9 volts? You may need to
change it.
How is your
antenna? It doesn’t have to be fancy or
elaborate. 33 feet of wire will
do. But it does need to be up in the air
a bit. And you need to have the 33 foot
counterpoise wire connected to the ground (on the PC board). With many pieces of consumer electronics
antennas are kind of optional – the devices will often work without them. Not so with ham gear. Antennas are important. If you are not receiving signals, it may be because of your antenna.
Friday, December 6, 2024
SimpleX Super Superhet Receiver -- A Great Video from Mike WU2D
Monday, November 25, 2024
Pete N6QW Has Hybrid Rig On-The-Air
Thanks Pete!
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
Bill N2CQR Builds Yet Another Mythbuster Transceiver
This one is for 20 meters (no need for 75) and will go to the Dominican Republic.
6 crystal filter at 5.2 MHz. VFO from old Yaesu FT-101 Termination Insensitive IF amplifiers using boards from Mostly DIY RF No RF amp ahead of the mixer. First mixer is homebrew diode ring. Bandpass filter has 4 LC circuits. Steep skirts. Low insertion loss. Bal Mod/Product detector has two diodes (singly balanced) Carrier osc is crystal controlled and homebrew. Audio amp starts with a 2N3904 amplifier followed by an LM386 board. Transmitter portion will be done next.Tuesday, October 22, 2024
KA1MUQ's Amazing Homebrew Hybrid Rig
Nate KA1MUQ is still working on this rig and so has not yet produced any detailed schematics, but he sent this to us to show that true homebrewing is NOT dead. Indeed, his magnificent work shows that it is not! This is a 5 band SSB transmitter using both transistors and Thermatrons. I see a crystal filter from Mostly DIY RF in there. FB! And Nate tapped into Pete Juliano's tribal wisdom on homebrewing and hybrid rigs. Pete commented that the three 6146s in the final reminded him of a Yaesu FT-102.
Wednesday, October 2, 2024
4Z4GE's Homebrew Tube SSB Transmitter from Israel, 1974
https://www.nzeldes.com/Miscellany/SSB-rig.htm
Very cool. I like his description of how he found parts for this transmitter:
The power amplifier tubes needed ventilation as well as shielding; that was always a challenge because I had no good source of perforated metal. The black sheet with the round holes actually came from the cover of a car air filter that I found in the trash.
There is a lot more interesting stuff on Nathan Zelde 4Z4GE's site:
https://www.nzeldes.com/possiblyinteresting.htm
Thanks Nathan!
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
A Clean Vintage Ham Radio Transmitter: The Collins 32S-3
Monday, September 9, 2024
IMD in Transmitters -- Splatter? Or Signal Strength?
https://www.newsvhf.com/conf2024/PresPapers/WA1MBA-IMD_in_Transmitters.pdf
Here is a good (and very recent) article on IMD ("splatter") produced in transmitters. The focus is on VHF, but much of this is relevant to HF operators. I found the footnotes on the ARRL "Clean Signal Initiative" to be worrisome. They seem to just be assuming that all ham operators will be using commercial gear, and the "OEM" needs to be made to meet certain standards. This seems to leave the homebrewer out in the cold. I can see where someday soon, the "standards" will exceed the capability of analog homebrewers. That would be bad.
The role that signal strength plays in the perception of "splatter" is often misunderstood by the "waterfall police." We often we hear some irate waterfall policeman screaming that, "You are 40 over and far too wide." Here is a good quote from the article on this point:
"If you have a calibrated spectrum display (as many SDR’s are these days), you can directly measure the level difference in dB. If it is 30 dB or more, then it could be an acceptably “clean signal”, even if it is bothersome. Most ham voice communication is conducted with less than 30 dB signal/noise, and in that case the unwanted IMD is buried in the noise."
And even in a low noise environment, if the signal is 40 db over S9. that would mean the signal PEP is at -33dbm. If the IMD products are 46 db down from the signal peak, that means your IMD products are -79 dbm. That is S-8! That signal will look quite wide in the waterfall, but it would be within FCC specs, right? The problem here is not so much distortion, as signal strength. And let's remember that "legal limit" is usually a misnomer: FCC regs require hams to use the minimum power necessary, not 1.5 kW on every single QSO.
Saturday, September 7, 2024
IMD and Splatter
Monday, April 8, 2024
Woebot -- An AI-Based Therapy Bot for Us?
"I have discovered spurs in the output of my transmitter. They are 60 db down, but I still can't stop thinking about them. What should I do?"
I can't help thinking that if Jean Shepherd had access to something like this, his Heising modulator trouble might not have spoiled his date with the girl from his school.
What do you guys think about the Woebot?
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
How to Feel Bad about Carrier Suppression (and How to Get Over It)
Friday, March 15, 2024
Finishing up (?) Version 2 of my 15-10 Transceiver (Video) -- An Annoying Residual Carrier Problem
Tuesday, January 30, 2024
Yet ANOTHER Homebrew 15-10 SSB Transceiver (Video #1)
Wednesday, January 3, 2024
Monday, September 4, 2023
SolderSmoke Podcast #248 -- Back from the Summer -- Spurs and Filters, S-meters, 6BA6 mania, Shirtpocket rigs, MAILBAG
SolderSmoke Podcast #248 is available for download:
Audio: http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke248.mp3
Travelogue: Trip to the Dominican Republic 3-9 August. Thinking about the M0NTV video on mixers...
Solder Smoke Shack South is almost done. I am thinking about workbenches, operating tables and antennas. How high should an electronics workbench be? Table height? Or workbench (woodwork) height?
My son and I went to see "Oppenheimer" Trinity test scene very cool. They wanted to see if the gadget would work!
Is the SolderSmoke blog completely archived on the WayBack Machine? Please check and let me know. Thanks.
Bill's Bench:
-- I've been working a lot of DX with the homebrew rigs: Indonesia, Australia, Japan, Hawaii. Lots of fun. 15 meters has been especially good. But the rigs still need work:
-- M0NTV's video got me to put TinySA to work. I found that output from dual banders could be improved. Spurs and harmonics. Yuck. I need more TinySA -- ordered the TinySA Ultra.
-- Allison KB1GMX helped a lot. EB63A amp was unstable, especially on 10 meters. Higher frequencies are harder! Tightened up shielding, negative feedback, and bypassing. This all helped, but I found that I needed to take the higher frequency LP filters out of the amplifier box. W3NQN filters are better, with steeper skirts and better 2nd harmonic rejections. NanoVNA proving very useful. https://www.gqrp.com/Datasheet_W3NQN.pdf
-- Also worked on the Bandpass filters for these rigs. Farhan's comments on skirts of different filter configurations. Some are "LSB" filters (with steeper skirt at the highest freq) and some are "USB" filters (with the steeper skirt at the lower frequency) See diagrams on the blog page. So I built USB new filters for 12 meters and for 10 meters.
-- Phase Noise rears its ugly head again. See blog posts.
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SHAMELESS COMMERCE DIVISION:
Mostly DIY RF getting ready to release PsssT kits. Target date: December 18, 2023 (E Howard Armstrong's birthday). https://mostlydiyrf.com/
Amazon Search box seems to have died. I can't get it back. Can anyone tell me what happened? (There seems to be "explanations" from Amazon about this, but they are written in a strange language that I cannot follow.) Something similar happened with the Google Ads on this blog page. Apparently you can't have ads both on YouTube and blogger.
But hey, there is Patreon for those who want to support the podcast and blog.
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Pete's Bench
An S-meter for Bill?
6BA6 Mania!
QRP SSB with 6BA6
Shirtpocket rig re-build
Mailbag:
Walter KA4KXX has a great article about homebrewing in the September 2023 QCWA Journal.
Steve KC1QAY -- Has joined the CBLA. I sent him a 3579 crystal. He built a MMM and experienced JOO. And Allison KB1GMX is in his local radio club. TRGHS.
Ajay VU2TGG in Pune, India -- launching a high school receiver effort.
Denny VU2DGR The Wizard of Kerala: https://soldersmoke.blogspot.
Joe VK4BYER working with kids a remote Australian community. FB.
Todd K7ZF -- Wants to get into homebrewing. Advised him to start small.
Dean KK4DAS: Fixing Hallicrafters Worldwide RX. Ciudad Trujillo! Got question from Mark in the VWS Makers Group: HOW DOES Michigan Mighty Mite REALLY Work. See blog.
Trevor Woods -- Info on Super Islander Mark IV made in Cuba from old CFL bulbs. FB.
Bob KD4EBM sent me some great stuff: Sony SW receiver, QCX Mini. Made a CW contact with the QCX. Felt virtuous -- it is going to the DR. Thanks Bob.
Peter KD2OMV: One of the guys I worked with the ET-2 transceiver. Great to hear from him.
Armand WA1UQO Richmond area radio museum? https://www.youtube.com/watch?
Mike WN2A -- Sent me a great care package with lots of toroids. A lifetime supply! Thanks Mike!
Nate KA1MUQ got his Doug DeMaw receiver going after 38 years! FB. Been there, done that!
Tony: G4WIF Liked Valveman video about Gerald Wells. He visited him! https://soldersmoke.blogspot.
Dean KL7MA Bill talked to him on 15 SSB. He had worked Wes W7ZOI! FB!
Thursday, January 12, 2023
On Ten Meters with a uBITX from the Eastern Tip of Hispaniola
Wednesday, December 14, 2022
Faust Gonsett and the SB-33 in 1963
- It is a hybrid rig using Germanium transistors –the transistor was only 15 years old
- The Mechanical band switching showed the strong use of mechanical assemblies
- The small size was simply amazing
- The Bi-lateral circuitry predates any Bitx circuits.
- The urban legend was that a team of illuminati were involved in its design (Don Stoner is one name that pops up)
- The Japanese were a quick study and the FTdx100 in 1967 is a result, only better.
- Many are still around in shacks. I have three
Gonset was well known for innovative designs – the Gooney Box is another example. Look at all of his compact mobile equipment.
The next point – the final owner of SBE was Raytheon thusly the next generation of SDR Radio Equipment for the US Air Force can trace its pedigree to the SBE-33.
This was the appliance box of 1963. I saw my 1st SBE-33 (August 1963) when likely you were in the 2nd Grade and I was headed off to Midway island.
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Thursday, September 1, 2022
New Video: Farhan's Presentation on the "Daylight Again" Analog Transceiver
Tuesday, August 23, 2022
SolderSmoke Podcast #156 -- November 4, 2013 -- Interview with Peter Parker VK3YE of Melbourne, Australia
Special hour-long interview with Peter Parker, VK3YE
-- Early experiences with radio
-- CW
-- DSB Gear
-- Simple gear, and gear that is TOO simple
-- VXOs, Super VXOs and Ceramic Resonators
-- Building receivers
-- Chips vs. Discrete
-- Making the leap to SSB
-- The Knob-less wonder and the BITX
-- No need for a sophisticated workshop
-- Advice for new phone QRPers
Peter's Blog: https://vk3ye.com/
Peter's YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/vk3ye/featured