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Tuesday, October 8, 2024
The Transistor that Changed the World -- the MOSFET
Saturday, September 7, 2024
Sony and the Transistor
I found the comment about Sony's belief that NPN transistors are superior to PNP very interesting.
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
"The Far Sound" -- Bell System Video from 1961 -- Good Radio History (video)
Saturday, May 11, 2024
Jens OZ1GEO's AMAZING Radio Museum
Thursday, March 7, 2024
The Wizard of Schenectady -- Charles Proteus Steinmetz
Such a beautiful article. Ramakrishnan VU2JXN sent it to me. It reminded me of how puzzeled we were when we found "Schenectady" on old shortwave receiver dials, amidst truly exotic locations. Rangoon! Peking! Cape Town! Schenectady? Obviously this was due to General Electric's location in that New York State city. But reading this article, I am thinking that the presence of Charles Proteus Steinmetz had something to do with it. His informal title (The Wizard of Schenectady) confirmed that we have been right in awarding similar titles to impressive homebrewers.
Here is the Smithsonian article that Ramakrishnan sent.
And here is a link to a PBS video on Steinmetz:
https://www.pbs.org/video/wmht-specials-divine-discontent-charles-proteus-steinmetz/
Here is a SolderSmoke blog post about "Radio Schenectady":
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2020/07/radio-schenectady.html
Wednesday, March 6, 2024
N6ASD Builds a Zinc-Oxide Negative Resistance Transmitter (and a Spark/Coherer rig)
My journey into the world of amateur radio began in a very primitive way. My first "rig" comprised of a spark-gap transmitter and a coherer based receiver. A coherer is a primitive radio signal detector that consists of iron filings placed between two electrodes. It was popular in the early days of wireless telegraphy.
Spark transmitter (using a car's ignition coil to generate high-voltage sparks):
Coherer based receiver (using a doorbell for the "decoherer" mechanism):
When I keyed the transmitter, a high voltage arc would appear at the spark-gap and this produced (noisy) radio waves. The signal would be received by the iron-filings coherer on the other side of the room. A coherer is (usually) a one-shot receiver. You have to physically hit it to shake the filings and bring the detector back to its original state. That's what the doorbell hammer did. It would hit the coherer every time it received a signal. It amazed me to no end. A spark created in one room of my house could make the hammer move in another room. Magic!
Soon after this project, I started experimenting with *slightly more refined* crystal detectors and crystal radio circuits. As most of you would know, these amazing radios don't require any batteries and work by harnessing energy from radio waves. I guess these simple experiments instilled a sense of awe and wonder regarding electromagnetic waves, and eventually, this brought me into the world of amateur radio in 2015.
My main HF rig is an old ICOM IC-735. The only modification on this is radio is that it uses LED backlights (instead of bulbs):
With space at a premium in San Francisco, the antenna that I have settled for is an inverted vee installed in my backyard (and it just barely fits). I made the mast by lashing together wooden planks. For this city dweller, it works FB:
I have recently gotten into CW, and it has definitely become my mode of choice.
I'm a self-taught electronics enthusiast and I love homebrewing radio circuits. I'll be sharing more info about them soon.
Thanks for checking out my page. I hope to meet you on the air!
73,
N6ASD
Monday, February 19, 2024
Jean Shepherd has Trouble with his Heising Modulator (and his date)
This is probably Jean Shepherd's best program about homebrew ham radio. It is about how we can become obsessed with the problems that arise with equipment that we have built ourselves, and how normal people cannot understand our obsessions.
I posted about this back in 2008, but I was listening to it again today, and quickly realized that it is worth re-posting. Realize that Shepherd's Heising modulation problems happened almost 90 years ago. But the same kind of obsession affect the homebrewers of today.
Note too how Shepherd talks about "Heising" in Heising modulation. Heising has an entire circuit named for him, just like Hartley, Colpitts, and Pierce of oscillator fame. Sometimes, when I tell another ham that my rig is homebrew, I get a kind of snide, snarky, loaded question: "Well, did you DESIGN it yourself?" This seems to be a way for appliance operators to deal with the fact that while they never build anything, someone else out there does melt solder. They seem to think that the fact that you did not design the rig yourself makes your accomplishment less impressive, less threatening. This week I responded to this question with Shepherd's observation -- I told the enquiring ham that my rig is in fact homebrewed, but that I had not invented the Colpitts oscillator, nor the common emitter amplifier, not the diode ring mixer, nor the low-pass filter. But yes, the rig is homebrew, as was Shepherd's Heising modulator.
Guys, stop what you are doing. Put down that soldering iron, or that cold Miller High Life ("the champagne of bottled beer") and click on the link below. You will be transported back to 1965 (and 1934!), and will hear master story-teller Jean Shepherd (K2ORS) describing his teenage case of The Knack. He discusses his efforts to build a Heising modulated transmitter for 160 meters. He had trouble getting it working, and became obsessed with the problem, obsessed to the point that a girl he was dating concluded that there was "something wrong with him" and that his mother "should take him to a doctor."
This one is REALLY good. It takes him a few minutes to get to the radio stuff, but it is worth the wait. More to follow. EXCELSIOR! FLICK LIVES!Thursday, January 18, 2024
Some Great Reading Material -- Links to Radio Publications
Sunday, January 14, 2024
QRP Trigger Warning! 500 kW from WLW (great video)
Friday, November 24, 2023
A FREE Book from the Early Days of Ham Projects with Transistors: The CK722 -- The Device that Got Pete Juliano Started in Homebrew
You can get the book for free here:
We are really lucky to have Pete Juliano sharing his vast tribal knowledge with us.
Thursday, November 16, 2023
The Grid Leak Detector -- Follow-up from Yesterday's Post on the Whole Earth Catalog's "Hippy" One Tube Receiver
Sunday, October 15, 2023
Spy Rigs, Para Sets, Bugs, and Enigma Machines -- Dr. Tom Perera W1TP (video)
Saturday, August 19, 2023
Valveman -- The Story of Gerald Wells
Thursday, April 20, 2023
Artie Moore and the Titanic
https://www.facebook.com/groups/118053768802799
Thursday, February 23, 2023
Early (1912?) Ham Station
If you zoom in you can see the crystal and the cat's whisker.
Wednesday, February 22, 2023
The Transistor at 75, and the Raytheon CK722 (Pete's First Transistor)
https://www.eejournal.com/article/the-transistor-at-75-the-first-makers-part-1/
Part 4 is especially interesting to us because of the N6QW-CK722 connection:
Raytheon: Raytheon started making vacuum tubes in 1922. During World War II, the company made magnetron tubes and radar systems. Raytheon started making germanium-based semiconductor diodes in the 1940s and, just months after BTL announced the development of the transistor in late 1947, started making its own point-contact transistors using germanium salvaged from Sylvania diodes. After attending the 1952 BTL transistor symposium and licensing the alloy junction transistor patents from GE, the company quickly started making germanium transistors including one of the most famous transistors of that generation, the CK722, which was simply a rejected commercial CK718 transistor with downgraded specs for the hobby market. (Jack Ward has created an entire museum around the Raytheon CK722 PNP transistor.) Raytheon exited the semiconductor business in 1962.
Here are all of our blog posts on the CK722:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/search?q=CK722
Here is our post on Pete Juliano's CK722:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2015/03/pete-juliano-homebrwing-with.html
Is this the Origin of the Term "Ham" Radio?
Click on the image for a better view
The timing (1895) and the context (railroad telegraphy) seem about right. But other etymologies are out there. Lexicographer Steve Silverman KB3SII is on the case. What do you guys think? Are the roots of "ham" radio in railroad telegraphy?
Monday, February 13, 2023
The Infinite Impedance Envelope Detector (done with an FET)
Thursday, January 26, 2023
"The Electrical Experimenter" -- A Treasure Trove of Inspiration
Oh this is really phenomenal. Nick "the Vic" M0NTV is on the mend from some routine surgery. While mending he found this 1915 issue of Hugo Gernsback's "The Electrical Experimenter." I just spent a few minutes quickly going through it and I can see that this is a treasure trove that could keep us -- the modern day electrical experimenters -- busy for a long time.
-- We see Signor Marconi in Italian military uniform (I never saw that before).
-- There is mention of successful DX reception of the station in Arlington Va. (just down the road from me).
-- There is a an article about the radio station of T.O.M -- Hiram Percy Maxim.
-- There are detailed maps of Mars, complete with the canals.
And there is a lot more.
Above all, I think what stands out from this magazine is the homebrew spirit, the notion that we can and should build our rigs ourselves, and seek to understand them.
Below is the whole magazine. Please take a look and use the comment section below to point us to passages of interest to the electrical experimenters of today.
Thanks Nick. Your e-mail came during a discouraging period filled with a few "tales of woe." The magazine really lifted my spirits.
Here it is:
Monday, December 26, 2022
A Blast from the Past: TR on Homebrewing (sort of)
"It is not the critic who counts; not the ham who points out how the homebrewer stumbles, or where the builder of rigs could have built them better. The credit belongs to the ham who is actually at the workbench, whose hands are scarred by solder and metal and glue; who strives valiantly; who errs, whose amp oscillates again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to build his rigs; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of homebrew achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid operators who neither know victory nor defeat.”