Just go to http://soldersmoke.com. On that archive page, just click on the blue hyperlinks and your audio player should play that episode.
http://soldersmoke.com
-- Wow, a real celebration of Al Fresco! And of the wooden chassis -- Frank Jones would be so pleased.
-- Nick's description of the tales of woe caused by metal boxes is right on the mark, as is his description of the benefits of leaving the circuitry visible. He's right -- this is an art and science kind of thing.
-- That's a shelf, but it is FAR from being a shelf of shame!
-- I am jealous of the S-meter. I may need to include one of those in future rigs.
-- Great to hear the shout outs to VK3HN, ZL2CTM, and N6QW -- we are are indeed the IBEW!
-- I think we can see the N6QW influence in Nick's decision to use a steerable filter/IF amp board. FB.
-- I liked hearing Helio PV8AL in Boa Vista. When I was building simple Direct Conversion receivers for 40 meters, I knew that I had it right when I could hear Helio's roosters in the morning!
We are always impressed by the way in which SolderSmoke listeners stay on the cutting edge (sometimes OVER the edge!) of modern technology. I recently got this fascinating note from our friend Jack AI4SV, who is now operating under the hot sun of the Mediterranean island of Cyprus.
Hi Bill,
It is brutally hot here in Cyprus during the summer, so we're spending a week at a rental on the beach -- no complaints in that regard. With all construction material back at the main house, I am free to daydream with no threat of actually building anything that I think of. The result: a new technique -- fourth dimensional design.
Now, consider breadboarding. There isn't much to say about one dimensional circuits since current has to flow in a circle, but I suppose Franklin's kite was kind of one-dimensional: cloud, Franklin, earth. At least it had a key, so kind of relevant to radio, at least if you are a CW operator.
Two-dimensional circuit design would be a breadboard, particularly with surface mount components. Arguably three-dimensional if it's mulitlayer. Manhattan Island or Deadbug is more in the realm of three-dimensional, with components sticking up from the board, and true three-dimensional is probably best reflected in tube rigs with spider webs of wiring. I don't know who can think in terms of three dimensional layout like that, but it's certainly an art (kind of a blend of Escher, Dali and Bosch).
Now comes fourth dimensional design - not just a theoretical abstraction, but a realizable method that would result in lower part count and simplify the operator interface to a single knob. The basic idea is that you have a design laid out in three dimensional space and that design is made time-variant in space. The simplest implementation would be a breadboard mounted in a track so it slides back and forth, like a desk drawer. Pulling it towards you puts it in transmit, pushing it away in receive. The secret sauce is that the rails have contacts and that the layout is designed such that the traces or pads on the board line up with contacts on the rails such that no relays are needed on the board. Some thought would need to be put in to assure that contacts are made in an appropriate order to avoid frying components.
That's already fourth dimensional because the same board exists in two states and it can be one or the other, but not both at the same time. Superimposing transmit on receive would be bad, maybe world-ending.
There is no reason to stop there. This whole slide drawer sort of layout could be mounted on a rotational axis with contacts distributed around a tube surrounding the railings. Now you have band switching. Pull the knob to receive, twist it to go to 20 meters, push back in to transmit. That's only roll and translation in one axis -- four more to go, the practical implementation of which I will leave to the reader. Perhaps put mode (CW, SSB, etc.) on yaw, tuning on pitch (which seems natural), volume on y-translation, and RF gain on x-translation, and you would have a formidable 4D transmitter.
Clearly, this is too big to keep to myself, so I am sending it onward to you to share with the world for the benefit of mankind.
Hope all is well in the shack somewhere in the wilds of Northern Virginia.
Cheers,
Jack
5B4APL / AI4SV
---------------------------------
My follow-up exchange with Jack:
Jack: When I read the title I thought you were going to comment on my BOLD decision to place a wooden front panel on my heretofore Al Fresco Mythbuster rig. But I see now you have taken this to an entirely different astral plane! Far out OM! Really groovy. The crystal thing really brings it into New Age relevance. Whole Foods may want to get involved!
I've long thought that the three dimensional nature of tube rigs is one of their most attractive features. You, my friend, are taking this one step further, into Einsteinian space time! One problem I foresee: How will hams "synch up" if they are moving through space time at different relativistic speeds? This could be a real problem for the FT-8 folks and the WSPRers.
Can I put your hyper-insightful message on the SS blog? People need to know about this!
73 Bill
Hi Bill,
That was a BOLD design choice, but I like the aesthetic.
I'll let Joe Taylor grapple with the cosmic issues related to synching signals. The bigger issue may be regulatory in nature. I am not sure how Part 97 will deal with signals received before they are sent.
Yes, please feel free to share on the blog -- the world needs to know.
73,
Jack
Jack: Another possibility: Perhaps too much Cypriot sun? Stay safe OM! SITS! 73 Bill
In Chapter 13A, Frank Harris writes: The Vanishing Art The 1986 ARRL Amateur Radio Handbook reported that hardly anyone was building
homebrew ham receivers.... Out of hundreds of contacts, so far I’ve worked four guys, George, K7DU, Mike, NØMF,
Biz, WDØHCO and Jack, W7QQQ who were using homebrew receivers for the QSO. Three of
these receivers were made from vacuum tubes. George's receiver is a beautifully crafted
instrument that looks like a commercial design from 50 years ago. All of these receivers had no
trouble hearing me on 40 meter CW. I talked to one other fellow, Gil, N1FED who told me he
had just finished a vacuum tube receiver. Unfortunately, it was performing so poorly he was still
using his modern transceiver on the air. Gil told me he didn’t like transistors. I guess he found
printed circuit boards and those pesky oscillations too much trouble.
In spite of this pessimism, you CAN build transistorized receivers that work reasonably
well. I built mine because I was intrigued by mysterious circuits like “balanced mixers,”
“product detectors,” “cascode amplifiers” and “crystal ladder filters.” Before this project, I
could recite the purposes of these circuits, but I had no “feel” for how they worked and why
receivers are designed the way they are. What better way to learn than to build one? Aside from the need to shield circuit blocks from one another, a homebrew receiver with
a single big board full of discrete components has another problem. If you build the whole thing
at once without buying a kit and pre-cut board, I guarantee it won’t work. To make homebrew
stuff that works, you have to develop your own technology based on parts you can get and
circuits you understand. Learning to think this way was difficult for me. Rather than “building
a receiver,” I had to lower my sights and build one circuit at a time, e.g., “an oscillator,” “a
mixer,” “an audio amplifier,” etc. Then I put the blocks together to complete my project. Some
of these circuit blocks didn’t work the first time so I had to build a new block. There were
various reasons the modules didn’t work. Usually, I wasn’t able to buy the exact parts used in
the circuits I was copying. Or my craftsmanship or shielding wasn’t adequate. Sometimes I
never did learn why one version of a circuit block was superior to another. By building my
receiver using separate little shielded modules for each circuit block, I could replace a circuit
block whenever I managed to build an improved version. Otherwise, I would have ruined the
entire big board. On rare occasions my circuits didn’t work because there were errors in circuit diagrams in
QST magazine or in the handbooks. I found some serious errors in my 1979 ARRL Handbook
and a minor one in my 1998 edition. Perfect editing is not possible, so we shouldn’t expect it. GET THE WHOLE BOOK HERE (FREE!) http://www.qsl.net/k0iye/
Get Frank's book here (FREE!) http://www.qsl.net/k0iye/ I've had Frank's book on the blog many times over the years, but it is a book that merits repeated mention. It is filled with great advice and homebrew wisdom. I found myself looking at it again recently, and at Frank's QRZ.com page. I came across lots of wisdom that I may have missed in earlier visits. For example: From the QRZ page:
My version of ham radio is 100% scratch built equipment. I buy nothing manufactured for ham radio except log books...My rig is based mostly on the 1986 ARRL handbook. Modern designs in today's QEX and Handbooks are usually full of mysterious ICs. In my opinion, they don't qualify as homebrewing.
From his book (Chapter 15):
I was fascinated by ham radio, but I didn’t learn much about how sideband worked. I
had the impression that sideband was MODULATION FOR MILLIONAIRES and too
complicated to homebrew. The 1957 ARRL handbook’s opaque descriptions of “phase shifters”
and “balanced modulators” only confirmed my opinion.
If you are like me, you will have a devil of a time getting your SSB drivers to produce
intelligible speech without hissing and noise problems. All I can tell you is to keep your brain
mulling over your difficulties. Shield and filter your prototype until the darn thing works. Keep
careful notes so you don't make the same mistakes twice. Persistence will win in the end.
My sideband transmitters are still in the experimental category. You will find that it takes
a great deal of tweaking and fussing to get SSB tuned so it sounds good and doesn’t radiate on
unplanned frequencies. You won’t believe how many diseases your SSB transmitter will create
for you to conquer! Sideband is not a project for impatient people. Foreword: We homebrewers are nearly extinct, but there are still hundreds of us scattered around the
world, some are even in the USA. Yes, there ARE American homebuilders! We’re rare, but
thanks to the QRP hobby, the number is growing. Even if we homebrewers don't change the world, I guarantee you will enjoy learning radio technology and building your own equipment.
Get Frank's book here (FREE!) http://www.qsl.net/k0iye/ THANKS FRANK! Send Frank a thank you note: Frwharris@live.com
Pete spotted this. Beautiful work. I noted that Byron hasn't used the Manhattan style of construction. This makes his work look a lot neater, but it makes it harder to modify and debug the circuitry. On the other hand, OM Byron is obviously so good at this that his circuitry probably doesn't require any debugging or mods. The red S-meter and freq counter give it a slightly menacing appearance. Very cool.
This factory is a LONG way from Manhattan -- both from the island and from the technique. How about some Juliano Blue PC Boards? The machine that automatically checks for bad connections was especially amazing. And the boards are made in 24 hours, with 3 day shipping to the U.S.
Pete WB9FLW reminds us that Olivier F5LVG has LONG been using copper nails and wood boards to build amazing rigs. See above for one magnificent example. That, my friends, is a superhet receiver. Inspirational!
A few posts back we asked for nominations for the official name of this technique. We still have to consult with Steve Silverman on this, but the nominations are:
Armand WA1UQO (perhaps reflecting his proximity to Washingotn DC) "Wire-Tapping"
Gary Hinson: "Coffin Dodging" (sounds a bit dodgy to me).
And the front runner so far, from Melbourne, Australia -- drum roll please:
Peter Parker: "NAILBOARDING." (Peter thinks he nailed it with that one. I tend to agree.)
Thanks to Rogier PA1ZZ (long in W6) for this. I guess I have used a variation of this technique in some antenna tuner projects, and maybe in a crystal radio effort. This also reminded both Pete and me of the electronic project kits that we were given as kids. Those kits had little springs that were supposed to keep the components in contact. They might have worked better with nails.
This technique definitely provides an opportunity for an earnest young guy to make use of his soldering GUN. I don't think a wimpy 35 watt iron would be up to the task.
"SolderSmoke -- Global Adventures in Wireless Electronics" is now available as an e-book for Amazon's Kindle.
Here's the site:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004V9FIVW
Bill's OTHER Book (Warning: Not About Radio)
Click on the image to learn more
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SolderSmoke Co-Host and Master Homebrewer
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