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Thursday, July 4, 2024
Electronic Toys and Their Influence on Us
Tuesday, December 5, 2023
The Beginning of MY Radio Life...
-- April 27, 1973. Novice Ticket becomes effective. WN2QHL. Age 14.
-- July 19, 1973. First contact (with Elmer WN2NEC). Age 14.
-- February 1 and 2 1973. A grumpy old-timer calls -- during the Novice Roundup! -- to tell me that I'm putting harmonics onto the 20 meter band. I get scared and go off the air. Geez! I probably just needed to retune the tank circuit. Age 15.
-- February 23, 1974. I go back on the air with a DX-100. Age 15.
-- March 5, 1974. I take the General Class exam at the FCC office in New York City. I pass. Age 15.
-- April 11, 1974. I buy the Drake 2-B from WN2NEC. This revolutionizes my radio life. Fifteen meter contacts become possible. Age 15.
-- April 13, 1974. I work ZL2ACP on 15 meter CW. I wake up my parents to tell them. Age 15.
-- April 21, 1974. END OF NOVICE OPERATION. Apparently we were still working under a one year limitation on Novice operation. Could the expiration date have been marked on the license?
At this point the FCC screwed up and sent me a Technician License instead of a General Class License. My father got on the phone to Gettysburg and straightened this out. Thanks Dad. So I was only a Technician for a few weeks.
-- April 9, 1974. General Class License effective. I become WB2QHL, a man of substance. Age 15.
-- May-June 1974. I acquire a Heathkit HW-32A 20 meter SSB transceiver from the Crystal Radio Club. But I have to build the power supply from an old TV. Somehow, I survive. Age 15.
-- June 11, 1974. First contact with the HW-32A. Age 15.
-- November 9, 1974. Last contact with the HW-32A . Age 16.
-- March 15, 1975. First contact with my Hallicrafters HT-37. Age 16.
Saturday, June 11, 2022
Putting the "Mate for the Mighty Midget" Back to Work -- With a DX-100 on 40 Meter AM
After working on it for a while I got so fond of my old Hammarlund HQ-100 that I moved it from the AM/Boatanchors operating position over to a more convenient spot right next to my computer. This left a big gap on the receive side of the AM station.
I briefly put my HRO-ish solid state receiver above the DX-100, but I'm afraid that receiver needs some work. More on that in due course.
I thought about putting my SOLID STATE Lafayette HA-600A atop the thermatronic DX-100, but this just didn't seem right. The Radio Gods would NOT approve.
So I turned my attention to the Mate for the Mighty Midget that I built in 1998 and have been poking at and "improving" ever since.
This receiver worked, but not quite right. It received SSB stations well enough, but when I turned off the BFO I could no longer hear the band noise. I wasn't sure how well the RF amp's grid and plate tuned circuits tracked. And I had serious doubts about the detector circuit that Lew McCoy put in there when he designed this thing back in 1966.
As I started this latest round of MMMRX poking, I realized that I now have test gear that I didn't have in 1998: I now have a decent oscilloscope. I have an HP-8640B signal generator (thanks Steve Silverman and Dave Bamford). I have an AADE LC meter. And I've learned a lot about building rigs.
FRONT END TRACKING
The MMRX has a tuned circuit in the grid of the RF amplifier, and another in the plate circuit of the RF amplifier. There is a ganged capacitor that tunes them both. They need to cover both 80/75 and 40 meters. And they need to "track" fairly well: over the fairly broad range of 3.5 to 7.3 MHz they both need to be resonant at the same frequency.
McCoy's article just called for "ten turns on a pill bottle" for the coils in these parallel LC circuits. The link coils were 5 turns. No data on inductance was given. Armed now with an LC meter, I pulled these coils off the chassis and measured the inductances of the coils. I just needed to make sure they were close in value. They were:
L1 was .858uH L2 was 2.709 L3 was .930uH L4 was 2.672
Next I checked the ganged variable capacitors. At first I found that one cap had a lot more capacitance than they other. How could that be? Then I remembered that I had installed trimmer caps across each of the ganged capacitors. Adjusting these trimmers (and leaving the caps connected to the grid of V1a and V2A, I adjusted the trimmers to get the caps close in value. I think I ended up with them fairly close:
C1: 63.77-532 pF C2 64.81 -- 525.1 pF
I put the coils back in and checked the tracking on 40 and on 80/75. While not perfect, it was close enough to stop messing with it.
DETECTOR CIRCUIT
I've had my doubts about the detector circuit that Lew McCoy had in the MMMRX. In his 1966 QST article he claimed that the circuit he used was a voltage doubler, and that this would boost signal strength. But I built the thing in LT Spice and didn't notice any doubling. And consider the capacitors he had at the input and output of the detector: 100 pF. At 455 kHz 100 pF is about 3500 ohms. At audio (1 kHz) it is 1.5 MILLION ohms. Ouch. No wonder years ago I put a .1 uF cap across that output cap just to get the receiver working.
Scott WA9WFA told me that by the time the MMMRX appeared in the 1969 ARRL handbook, the second "voltage doubling" diode was gone, as were the 100 pF caps. Now it was just a diode, a .01 uF cap and a 470,000 ohm resistor. I switched to the 1969 Handbook circuit (but I have not yet changed the 1 meg grid resister to 470k -- I don't think this will make much difference). Foiled again by a faulty QST article, again by one of the League's luminaries.
6U8s out, 6EA8s in
We learned that the 6U8 tubes originally called for by Lew McCoy are getting old and not aging well. So I switched all three to more youthful 6EA8s. This seemed to perk the receiver up a bit.
MUTING from the DX-100
My K2ZA DX-100 has a T/R relay mounted in a box on the back of the transmitter. When the Plate switch goes up, it switches the antenna from receiver to transmitter. The box also has a one pole double throw switch available for receiver muting. I put the common connection to ground, the normally connected (receive position) connect the ground terminal of the AF output transformer to ground -- it is disconnected from ground on transmit. The other connection (normally open) is connected to the antenna jack -- on transmit this connection ground the receiver RF input connection. These two steps mutes the receiver very nicely.
Replacing Reduction Drive
Over the years I have had several different reduction drives on the main tuning cap. I had a kind of wonky Jackson brothers drive on there that needed to be replaced. I put in a new one -- this smoothed out he tuning considerably.
Ceramic Resonator
I never could get McCoy's 455 kc two crystal filter to work right. So at first I made due with the two 455 kc IF cans. This made for a very broad passband. Then I put a CM filter in there. This was more narrow, but with a lot of loss. There may have been others. But the filter spot is currently held by a 6 kHz wide ceramic filter. This one is my favorite so far.
Digital Readout
When I was running the DX-100 with the Hammarlund HQ-100 I built a little frequency readout box. The box was from a Heath QF-1 Q multiplier (I am sorry about this). The readouts are in Juliano Blue and come via e-bay from San Jian. I now have it hooked up to the DX-100's oscillator. I haven't tapped into the MMMRX's oscillator yet.
Wednesday, March 30, 2022
Mike WU2D Looks at the "Dream" SW Receivers of the 1960s and 70s (Video)
Sunday, October 24, 2021
WA9WFA's Mate for the Mighty Midget 1966 QST Receiver
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
Super-Regeneration is Super-Strange
Friday, February 19, 2021
A Problem with the San Jian PLJ6-LED Counter
Saturday, February 6, 2021
Some Thoughts on Singly Balanced Mixers with Two Diodes and One Transformer
Monday, February 1, 2021
The VFO that I am looking for: The Globe VFO deluxe
Tuesday, January 26, 2021
SolderSmoke Podcast #228
Of course, no travel.
But vaccines are here so maybe soon we can leave our shacks.
In the meantime:
I’ve been playing chess against AI bots on chess.com.
Netflix recommendation: The Bureau. From France. A review from NPR:
A reading from "Conquering the Electron." Germanium vs. Silicon.
Bill’s Bench:
The KLH Model Twenty-one II.
Acoustical Suspension. First receiver
WITH A PILLOW! Bad speaker? Blown AF amp
finals. Hot heat sink. VBE Multiplier. Desitin.
Tony Fishpool’s recommended LM386 boards. 10 for 11 bucks. Nice. They
work. Pictured in the Amazon ad at the
upper right of the SolderSmoke blog page.
Putting a digital display on the Lafayette HA-600A
Test gear trouble. My
Radio Shack multimeter getting flaky. I
many need something better. Auto
ranging? My beloved Maplin AF generator died – will have to fix. I need that
thing. Probably a bad chip. Good thing they are socketed.
I almost forgot about SKN!
But I remembered and I made one contact with the HT-37 and Drake 2-B.
Pete’s Bench:
Presentation to RSGB on Homebrew.
TenTek Troubleshoot.
Swan 240? Looking
nice.
SDR adventures.
MAILBAG
Bill N8ET sent me some really nice Showa 9 MHz 8 pole
crystal filters.
Kevin AA7YQ Smoke jumper!
Building a hybrid SDR.HDR rig.
Launched blog. FB
Nick M0NTV working on similar HDR/SDR project. Great video.
Grayson KJ7UM Hollow State Design – Launched a new
blog. Very FB!
Thomas K4SWL of SWL Post blog. Kearsarge Mountain Transmission system. And recent events.
Peter VK2EMU Poetry.
CW poetry.
Pete WB9FLW looking at DSB rigs…
Drew N7DA Feels not
like a real ham because he hasn’t built a quad from bamboo. Which type of
landscape bamboo is best for antennas?
Ryan Flowers of MiscDotGeek.Com blog is also watching the
Tally Ho YouTube videos of Leo Sampson. Wants to put a WSPR beacon on the Tally
Ho.
Joe KF5OWY Working
with diode ring mixers, trying to see the mixer action on his ‘scope. 1 and -1!
Jim AB9CN sent a cool idea about how to do a 20/17 Moxon.
Roy GM4VKI – I thanked him for his article in SPRAT about
putting a 2n3904 on the output of an NE602 10P mod. Brilliant.
Roger Hayward Told him that I really liked his Dad’s recent
web site updates.
Farhan – Jokingly cursed me for showing him the Oscillodyne
regen of Hugo Gernsback and Jean Shepherd. “Now I will have to build this!”
Friday, January 1, 2021
Glowing Numerals for the Lafayette HA-600A (With Jeweled Movements)
Thursday, December 31, 2020
So Many Wonderful Things on W7ZOI's Site
There he is. Wes Hayward, W7ZOI in 1957. I had never seen this picture before. I found it on Wes's recently updated "shackviews" web page: http://w7zoi.net/shackviews.html .
There are so many treasures on that page, and on all the other portions of Wes's site.
Some highlights for me:
-- Wes's description of the station in the above picture.
-- On his page about Doug DeMaw, Wes mentions that after Doug edited Wes's 1968 article about direct conversion receivers, Doug built some himself, experimenting with different product detector circuits. Having used Doug's mixer circuit in many of my rigs, and having recently experimented with different product detectors for my HA-600A, I kind of felt like Doug was watching over my shoulder, guiding me along as I experimented.
-- Wes's use of a digital Rigol oscilloscope. Makes me feel better about giving up on my Tek 465.
-- The page about Farhan's visit to Wes, and the awesome gathering of homebrew Titans that ensued...
-- Wes's meeting with Chuck Adams.
Thanks Wes. Happy New Year and best of luck in 2021!
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
SolderSmoke Podcast #227: Solar System, SDR, Simple SSB, HA-600A, BITX17, Nesting Moxons? Mailbag
Mars is moving away. Jupiter and Saturn close in the sky. And the Sun is back in action – Cycle 25 is underway. Also, the earliest sunset is behind us. Brighter days are ahead.
Book Review: “Conquering the Electron” With a quote from Nikola Tesla.
No real travel for us: Hunkered down. Lots of COVID cases around us. Friends, relatives, neighbors. Be careful. You don’t want to be make it through 10 months of pandemic only to get sick at the very end. SITS: Stay In The Shack.
Pete's Bench and Tech Adventures:
Backpack SDR keithsdr@groups.io
Hermes Lite 2
Coaching SSB builders
G-QRP talk
A new source for 9 MHz crystal filters
Bill's Bench:
Fixing the HA-600A Product Detector. Sherwood article advice. Diode Ring wins the day. Fixing a scratchy variable capacitor. Studying simple two diode singly balanced detectors. Polyakov. Getting San Jian frequency counter for it.
Fixing up the 17 meter BITX. Expanding the VXO coverage. Using it with NA5B's KiwiSDR.
Resurrecting the 17 meter Moxon. But WHY can't I nest the 17 meter Moxon inside a 20 meter Moxon? They do it with Hex beams. Why so hard with Moxons? DK7ZB has a design, but I've often heard that this combo is problematic. Any thoughts? I could just buy a 20/17 Hex-beam but this seems kind of heretical for a HB station.
Suddenly getting RFI on 40 meters. Every 50-60 Hz. Please tell me what you think this is (I played a recording).
MAILBAG:
Dean KK4DAS’s Furlough 40/20
Adam N0ZIB HB DC
TCVR
Tony G4WIF G-QRP
Vids. Video of George Dobbs.
Grayson KJ7UM
Collecting Radioactive OA2s. Why?
Pete found W6BLZ
Articles
Rogier KJ6ETL PA1ZZ
lost his dog. And we lost ours.
Steve Silverman KB3SII
-- a nice old variable capacitor from Chelsea Radio Company.
Dave K8WPE thinks we
already have a cult following.
Dan W4ERF paralleling
amps to improve SNR.
Jim W8NSA -- An old friend.
Pete Eaton
WB9FLW The Arecibo collapse
John WB4GTW old
friend... friend of:
Taylor N4TD
HB2HB
And finally, we got lots of mail about our editorial. No surprise: Half supportive, half opposed. Obviously everyone is entitled to their opinion. And we are free to express ours. It’s a free country, and we want it to stay that way. That is why we spoke out.
Yesterday the Electoral College voted, finalizing the results. All Americans should be proud that the U.S. was able to carry out a free and fair national election with record turn out under difficult circumstances. And all loyal Americans should accept the results. That’s just the way it works in a democracy.
We are glad we said what we said. It would have been easier and more pleasant to just bury our heads in the sand and say nothing. But this was a critically important election and we felt obligated as Americans to speak out. We'd do it again. And in fact we reserve the right to speak out again if a similarly important issue arises.
Sunday, November 22, 2020
Wrapping up the HA-600A Product Detector Project -- Let's Call Them "Crossed Diode Mixers" NOT "Diode Rings"
This has been a lot of fun and very educational. The problem I discovered in the Lafayette HA-600A product detector caused me to take a new look at how diode detectors really work. It also spurred me to make more use of LTSpice.
In the end, I went with a diode ring mixer. Part of this decision was just my amazement at how four diodes and a couple of transformers can manage to multiply an incoming signal by 1 and -1, and how this multiplication allows us to pull audio out of the mess.
But another part of the decision was port isolation: the diode ring mixer with four diodes and two transformers does keep the BFO signal from making its way back to into the IF chain. This helps prevent the BFO signal from activating the AGC circuitry, and from messing up the S-meter readings. LTSpice helped me confirm that this improvement was happening: in LTSpice I could look at how much BFO energy was making its way back to the IF input port on the diode ring mixer. LTSpice predicted very little, and this was confirmed in the real world circuit. (I will do another post on port isolation in simpler, singly balanced diode mixers.)
At first I did have to overcome some problems with the diode ring circuit. Mine seemed to perform poorly with strong signals: I'd hear some of the "simultaneous envelope and product detection" that started me down this path. I also noticed that with the diode ring, in the AM mode the receiver seemed to be less sensitive -- it was as if the product detector circuit was loading down the AM detector.
One of the commenters -- Christian -- suggested putting some resistance into the input of the diode ring circuit. I put a 150 ohm pot across the input, after the blocking capacitor. The top of the pot goes to the capacitor, the bottom to ground and the wiper to the input of L1 in the diode ring circuit (you can see the circuit in the diagram above). With this pot I could set the input level such that even the strongest input signals did not cause the envelope detection that I'd heard earlier. Watching these input signals on the 'scope, I think these problems arose when the IF signals rose above .7 volts and started turning on the diodes. Only the BFO signal should have been doing that. The pot eliminated this problem. The pot also seemed to solve the problem of the loading down of the AM detector.
With the pot, signals sounded much better, but I thought there was still room for improvement. I thought I could hear a bit of RF in the audio output. Perhaps some of the 455 kHz signal was making it into the AF amplifiers. I looked at the circuit that Wes Hayward had used after the SBL-1 that he used as product detector in his Progressive Receiver. It was very simple: a .01 uF cap and 50 ohm resistor to ground followed by an RF choke. I can't be sure, but this seemed to help, and the SSB now sounds great.
A BETTER NAME?
One suggestion: We should stop calling the diode ring a diode ring. I think "crossed diode mixer" or something like that is more descriptive. This circuit works not because the diodes are in a ring, but because two of them are "crossed." From now on I intend to BUILD this circuit with this crossed parts placement -- this makes it easier to see how the circuit works, how it manages to multiply by -1, and to avoid putting any of the diodes in backwards.