https://www.paara.org/newsletter/2000/graph200007.pdf
Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2004 17:48:59 -0500 From: "Prof. Arnaldo Coro Antich"Subject: Re: GB> 6EH7 vs. 6EJ7 as RF Amplifier
Dear amigo Chris: You are absolutely right ! EF184 is the best pentode for RF amplifier duty... But, let me ask you something... have you thought about the ECC88 and the even better ECC189 dual triodes that were designed for TV tuner work, and that incidentally were also about the last vacuum tubes ever designed from ""scratch"" until Phillips and other European manufacturers stopped from making receiving type vacuum tubes. The ECC189 is simply wonderful for a front end !!! I am sure that you are aware of our limitations here at my QTH regarding the possibility of obtaining solid state modern devices... so we still make ""new"" ham radio rigs using mostly vacuum tubes... We even still make a version of "" The Islander"" a DSB transceiver with direct conversion vacuum tube receiver... Tube lineup is EF184 RF amp ECH81 product detector ECH81 triode section not used ECL82 triode audio preamp ECL82 pentode audio output 6AH6 VFO ( Russian equivalent 6*5P ) Audio filter provided by good working brain of operator !!! Keep up the good work amigo !!! 73 and DX YOur friend in Havana Arnie Coro
CO2KK
http://ibiblio.org/modena/GLOWBUGSpiobaire/glowbugs.piobaire.weekly.html
Today’s first question came from a long time listener in India. Rajiv tells me that at this moment he is not able to pick up our station on the shortwave bands, and he rightly assumes that this is because of the very low solar activity… but Rajiv who lives in the garden city of India, Bangalore, the home of the nation’s electronic and other high tech industries, is able to read the scripts of the program that are made available to several short wave listeners clubs e-mail distribution lists. Rajiv tells me that he wants to obtain the electronic files of the Super Islander amateur radio transceiver to compare the circuit diagrams and design philosophy with a similar project that is becoming very popular among Indian radio amateurs. Ok amigo Rajiv… I have already sent you all the files including some nice digital photos of the first prototype of the Super Islander, that as you will see, has two final amplifier options , one built using NPN RF power transistors, and the other one using two vacuum tubes that are very easy to find here in Cuba from recycled TV sets. The Super Islander is a single band transceiver that can be built for the 160, 80 or 40 meter bands. Here in Cuba amigo Rajiv, the most popular amateur band nowadays is two meters, using the FM narrowband mode, and the second most popular band among Cuban radio amateurs is 40 meters, that’s why most of the Super Islanders are built for operating between 7.000 and 7.150 kiloHertz. The double sideband signal generated by the Super Islander simple circuit is very stable, and very few if any radio amateurs that contact stations using the Super Islander are able to detect that it is a double side band and not a single side band signal what they are hearing. One of the most outstanding features of the Super Islander single band amateur radio transceiver is that it is modular, so those who want to build it, are able to build and test each module as a single project, and after all the modules are fully tested, then they are easily wired together . The parts count, that is the number of components required to build a Super Islander was kept intentionally as low as possible, both to simplify its construction and to increase the reliability. I hope that amigo Rajiv in Bangolore , India will be able to make good use of the Super Islander’s files, and maybe even go ahead and build one , as the parts required are almost universally available, because that was one of the design requirements that I set when starting the Super Islander project more than fifteen years ago….You can learn more about this simple amateur band transceiver by sending a request for the Super Islander files to arnie@xxxxxx … I will send it as a dot zip file and you will be able to see circuit diagrams, photos and full descriptions of the different modules of this nice little rig, that has proven itself under the most difficult circumstances, like handling emergency communications links during tropical storms.
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/hard-core-dx/2007/msg02587.html
Beginners generally build one of two radios; the vacuum tube Islander or the solid state Jaguey. The Islander is a DSB/CW Cuban design using a very clever low parts count circuit and a direct conversion receiver. The Jaguey, named for the Jaguey Grande Radio Club in Matanzas province, is a generic design, with a DC receiver, DSB and CW, using solid-state components. Many of its ideas are from Wes Hayward's W7ZOI's Solid State Design for the Radio Amateur. The lack of mechanical filters or quartz crystals to homebrew SSB filters made Cuban designers CO5GV, CO2JA and CO2KK choose a DSB and CW rig. Fitted with good quality capacitors for the VFO, it works quite well from a 12-volt car battery in hurricane emergencies.
(co6ec) Jose de Jesus Enriquez Campos
The first Image was the prototype presented at the Ganuza meeting, the rest of the photos were the ones we built with the improvements, and the photos and plans were sent to many colleagues, the colleagues who went to that meeting will remember, well, they still have to there are many left, because that was almost 30 years ago,
greetings CO6EC
(co8zz) Raul Verdecie
Magnificent photographs!!!... They seem to have been taken today with some digital "super camera"!!!
Really, from what I can see now, the CO6EC Islander was the perfect example... mine (my first radio and built by me) was also made like this, with the plates that the FRC sold and it was good, but very ugly ...HI... The AGC worked wonderfully as it came, I don't know if Jose's improvements were later! With it I made my first hundred or so entities only in 40 meters / CW (between 7,100 and 7,150) when it was CL8ZZ. I gave it away so that someone would have their license and now I regret not having kept it... I would have liked to show it now to those who regret not having a radio!!!
(co8zz) Raul Verdecie
Ah, I can never forget those headphones!!!... my external hearing aids (read ears) are much smaller today thanks to them, they exerted tons of force on the operators' skulls!!!
(cm6vml) Vidal
Very good article, I hope that one day, with a good teacher, I can build my own team, congratulations Jose, regards Vidal.
(co7wt) Pavel Milanes (CO7WT)
Sure...
My first radio and with which I got my CL7WT license back in the 90's an ISLANDER, like that in capital letters.
I remember that the CL only had a small 40m segment (like now) and that it was full of broadcasts as soon as the afternoon fell, it was an odyssey to speak on the radio... you had to find a "little hole" between the Broadcastings where it wouldn't bother you " a lot" to be able to talk.
I remember that the old CO7OC (he is no longer a radio amateur) and CL7HU (now AC7HU) helped me build it with a board I bought at the radio club. I took almost all the valves from the deceased KRIM 218, then I found a store in Camagüey that sold idle things from the workshops...
Turns out they had such a large inventory of "idle" tubes that they couldn't put it on the counter...they let me through to the warehouse...huge...stack of tubes, if I remember correctly I ended up with Chinese or Japanese tubes that they were more sensitive in the receiver... the driver went from a 6P14P to a more robust 6P9, by the end that was a humble 6P44 it became two 6P7s that were a Russian version of the RCA 607 if I remember correctly... in the end it had like 80W.
It goes without saying that when I said on the radio that there were valves in that place "they flew"....
The VFO was the one from the Jagüey, not the original from the Islander, I never knew about the AGC modifications.
I would like if someone has the plans with the modifications to send them to me, just for nostalgia...
My email pavelmc@gmail.com
(co2jc) Carlos Alberto SantamarÃa González
Brother, your article is very good, because of the nostalgia and also because it talks about what we radio amateurs like: tinkering. I didn't have an Islander because what I started with in 2000 was a Polosa to which two colleagues helped me adapt it with VFO for 40 and 80 m. But I talked a lot with colleagues who did it with an Islander or a Jagüey and participated in the Rueda del Behique that I started in the 80 m. Others in the Hurricane Wheel that started a little later and were heard well. As you well say, the propagation at that time had nothing to do with what it is now, but it was very good to listen to the colleagues who came out with the equipment they had built. Thank you once again for your article. CO2JC