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Friday, September 23, 2016
QRPp Back Issues (and some new ones too!)
Here's an index:
http://www.k7qo.net/qrpp_toc_de_k7qo.pdf
And here are lot of the back issues:
http://www.ncqrpp.org/
And I see there are August and September 2016 editions available in the Files section (KI6DS) of the qrp-tech Yahoo group. Did I see articles there from Steve "Snort Rosin" Smith?
Labels:
Clubs,
magazines,
QRP,
Smith--Steve
Sunday, September 18, 2016
My New Chinese Signal Generator
More amazing low-cost test gear from China. Elisa gave me this device on the occasion of my completing another solar orbit. Amazing capability for less than $90. The video above gives you a good sense of what this thing can do.
I have already had success with the freq generator function. The frequency counter also works great. The sweep function looks very useful for filter checking. And the ability to generate square waves at different phase relationships will be very useful in phasing receiver and transmitter projects.
This little box should help me eliminate a lot of clutter on the work bench. And it looks good next to the Rigol 'scope.
Mine came from Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01A8S4TZK/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s02?ie=UTF8&psc=1
They come with a variety of different brand names: I ordered a Jinwen but got a FeelTech. They are obviously the same device.
Be sure to begin your Amazon shopping on the Amazon search link on the SolderSmoke blog (upper right).
Thursday, September 15, 2016
QRP Wisdom from George Dobbs, G3RJV
This video makes me want to destroy my amplifier...
Labels:
Dobbs-George,
QRP,
radio history
Saturday, September 10, 2016
Alan Wolke Talks 'scopes on "The Workbench" Podcast
George KJ6VU is a long-time supporter of the SolderSmoke podcast. He has recently teamed up with another ham and launched a podcast called "The Workbench." This morning I listened to Part I of their interview with the legendary Alan Wolke W2AEW. It was great. As I was listening to Alan I was soldering together a crystal filter for my new receiver, and using my RIGOL 'scope to check the results.
I liked Alan's description of how they made images of 'scope patterns in the days before the advent of Digital Storage Scopes (Polaroid!). I also liked Alan's scorn for those who use the "Auto" switch on the 'scopes. The host's reaction to Alan's description of a $300,000 Tektronix 'scope was also fun: "For that price I want to be able to drive a car into it and put a swing set behind it!" Indeed.
Recommended listening:
http://hamradio360.com/index.php/2016/08/30/ham-radio-workbench-5-oscilloscopes-part-1/
Labels:
oscilloscope,
test gear,
wolke -- Alan
Friday, September 9, 2016
Oz JOO : An Australian Mighty Mite with 3D Printing
Hi Bill & Pete,
I have the JOO - joy of oscillation! The transistor is a 2N3053 with a clip on heat sink, but I don't think that I really need it. Output power +22dBm or 160mW. When I tested it on a Comms test set at work, I found that the harmonics were about 12dB to 15dB down and I stopped looking at the 10th harmonic. Not good.
Fitting the 80m low pass filter (salvaged from another project) brought the harmonics more than 50dB down.
The coil former is a 31mm diameter and 3D printed by one of the guys at work. The material is PET - the material they make soft drink bottles from. After we printed it, I put it in a microwave oven with a glass of water. 30 seconds and the water got warm and the coil former stayed cool.
I haven't had a contact yet, but maybe in the next few weeks.
The next project is an 80m CW transmitter based upon the Goodfeller transmitter from QST 1946. It requires a inductor in the pi coupler, 1.5 inch diameter, 32 turns at 20 tip; but where to get one of those these days - wind your own.
I got the guy at work to also 3D print me a coil former with a spiral thread around the outside with a 20tpi pitch for the wire to lay in. Some hot glue and the coil is ready.
Now that I have finished all 189 episodes and two specials, my days are empty. Please make some more.
73 de Peter VK2EMU
Hi Peter (great name BTW),
Congratulations –really liked your build – top drawer! 3D printer access WOW – now if I could only get my 3rd son (Mechanical Engineer) to build me one of those machines.
The 3D made coil form is perfect for a VFO and follows the principles set down by Doug DeMaw W1FB (SK) about keeping the coil supported at both ends and away from metal. Bill needs a coil like that to mate with his HRO dial mechanism –and follows something old (dial) something new (coil).
73’s
Pete N6QW
Labels:
Australia,
Juliano -- Pete,
Michigan Mighty Mite
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
ZL2BMI @ AA7EE -- Possibly the Most Beautiful DSB Rig Ever Built
Dave AA7EE has a very cool blog post on his version of the famed ZL2BMI DSB transceiver (seen above). As usual, Dave puts most of us to shame with his excellent non-ugly construction and enviable in-focus macrophotography.
Check it out:
https://aa7ee.wordpress.com/2012/07/29/half-of-the-zl2bmi-dsb-transceiver-a-simple-80m-direct-conversion-receiver/
Check it out:
https://aa7ee.wordpress.com/2012/07/29/half-of-the-zl2bmi-dsb-transceiver-a-simple-80m-direct-conversion-receiver/
I especially liked Dave's discussion of how and why .1 uF caps are used in the coupling and bypass network between the two chips.
Of course, the only thing I don't like about this rig is the, well, the chips. Can we persuade Dave to build the earlier discrete component version of this rig?
Be sure to read the many comments on Dave's post. Our friend Rogier comments on the beauty of it all. Edgardo LU1AR (the Argentine wizard with the gyrocopter) chimes in. And we see feedback from Eric Sears ZL2BMI himself. FB.
VIVA DSB!
Labels:
Argentina,
DSB,
New Zealand
Sunday, September 4, 2016
First Signals from the "Armand HROish" Receiver
I've been kind of busy lately with other things, but I have managed to squeeze in a few minutes most days to work on my latest receiver project. I call it the Armand HROish receiver. Armand WA1UQO sent me the big National HRO-style dial and gear box, and he was there at the Manassas hamfest when I bought the dual variable cap that now serves in the front end pre-selector.
I went with a 455 kHz IF. The idea is to have a receiver that tunes from around 6.5 MHz to around 8 MHz so I can do some shortwave listening AND listen to 40 meters.
So far the filter consists of three IF cans (one small transistor can and two larger tube-type cans). The small transistor can was given to me by Michael Rainey AA1TJ - thanks Mike. Doug DeMaw suggested this use of IF transformers in his "Design Notebook."
At the front end I have a tunable dual tuned circuit filter followed by a 40673 amp.
The mixer is an SBL-1.
1st and 2nd IF amps are a 23 db 50 ohm termination insensitive amplifiers.
I have a second SBL-1 that will be the product detector, but I haven't built the BFO yet. So today I hooked up two 1N34A diodes in voltage double config and -- with a bit of AF amplification, got the receiver inhaling with a diode detector. I could pick up Radio Canada. Then I heard SSB sigs on 40. With no BFO, I decided to put my sig gen on 455 kHz and just wrap the lead around the IF cans. It worked -- I could listen to SSB and CW sigs. Very satisfying.
Still to do:
-- BFO and product detector.
-- Work on AF amp.
-- Get my CM-455 crystal mechanical amp in there with some relays around it so I can switch from narrow to broad via the front panel.
Lots of soul in this receiver: All parts either 1) came out of the junkbox, 2) were gifts from friends, or 3) were recent hamfest purchases. The HRO dial from Armand and the IF can from AA1TJ. The 455 kHz filter idea came from Doug DeMaw, the VFO circuit from SSDRA. The VFO base is from Whole Foods and the whole thing is built on a kitchen cutting board. It includes a 40673 and germanium diodes. The VFO amps are in Altoid tins. It will, when finished, go into a big metal box given to me by Tim KI6BGE and shipped east by Pete Juliano. And when I was working on the 1st mixer, I accidentally pricked my finger and a drop of N2CQR blood went onto the breadboard. Of course, I left it there. SOUL!
The Radio Gods are apparently pleased: In the first hour or so of listening, I was rewarded for my efforts when I managed to hear Tim WA1HLR on 40 AM describe his troubleshooting of an old piece of gear. TRGHS.
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
A Signal for SETI? HD 164595
That's the Russian radio-telescope that picked up what was thought to be a possible signal from an extraterrestrial civilization. This article from the SETI Institute has some interesting tech info on antennas and power levels. Definitely not QRP!
Labels:
radio astronomy,
Russia,
SETI,
telescopes
Monday, August 29, 2016
Update on the PA3GSV M4MMRX -- And a Mystery
Note the establishment of a new acronym (M4MMRX) for Lew McCoy's Mate for the Mighty Midget receiver. We have needed this acronym for a long time, and SolderSmoke HQ is proud to have come up with it. We do our part my friends.
Jan has made more progress on his amazing Dutch M4MMRX and has produced a short video showing the receiver in action with SSB and CW signals.
Here is a bit of intriguing homebrew mystery: Jan has gone to a LOT of trouble to create that semi-circular opening in the center of the front panel. He even cut a corresponding semi-circular hole in the sewer pipe cap that serves as the large wheel in his amazing homebrew reduction drive. But he won't tell us what he plans to do with that space. So I ask you, dear SolderSmoke readers: What is that space for? Why the see-through panel and sewer-pipe cap? What is Jan's plan?
From Jan:
Hi Bill,
The rattle is gone, so I made a little video of the MMMRX in ssb and cw mode.
In the text, a ch327 and a ch45 crystal is mentioned, but I can’t get this to work.
The ch45 has a 453.6 kHz fundamental, for ch327 can’t find one.
The ch327 is a FT-243 one, tested several, but no fundamental somewhere around 455 kHz.
For ssb there is a ch45 and a ch46 crystal in, which should provide a bandwidth of about 2kHz.
(Still not totally in the clear how this should work with the very narrow resonance response of the crystals.
One should expect two peaks and nothing in the middle?)
For cw I found two ch45 crystals about 130 Hz difference in frequency, which seems to work well.
Still need to correct the 40m oscillator coil, then move on to finishing the receiver.
This is my first home brew tube superhet.
The project isn’t finished yet, but it sure is fun to build, and learned a lot during the process.
73 Jan
Labels:
Filters,
Mate for the Mighty Midget,
McCoy -- Lew,
Netherlands
Sunday, August 28, 2016
40673 LTSpice Model?
Does anyone have an LTSpice Model for the venerable 40673? Or for a similar MOSFET? I'm hoping to find something that I can easily plug into LTSpice.
Friday, August 26, 2016
The NAA VLF Station (NOT QRP!) and Brad's Receiver
NAA Towers -- Arlington Va. 1913 |
Brad WA8WDQ wrote to us about a VLF (24 kHz) his receiver project (see below). This led to some Googling about the VLF station NAA. Wow, there is some important radio history associated with that call sign. The station's original location was just a few miles from I where I live now. From Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VLF_Transmitter_Cutler):
The station began operations in 1913 as a radio telegraphy station call sign NAA in Arlington, Virginia, at a facility next to Fort Myer. Although its broadcasts occasionally included band concerts and speeches, it was most famous for its nightly time signals. The three towers known then as "The Three Sisters" stood 600 feet, 450 feet and 200 feet (183, 137, and 61 m) above the ground. The site was referred to as "Radio", Virginia. The towers were the second largest man-made structure in the world behind only the Eiffel Tower. The word "Radio" was first used instead of "Wireless," in the name of this Naval Communications facility. The First Trans-Atlantic voice communication was made between this station and the Eiffel Tower in 1915. The Nation set its clocks by the signal and listened for its broadcast weather reports. The Towers were dismantled in 1941 as a menace to aircraft approaching the new Washington National Airport. The towers stand today at United States Naval Academy in Maryland, on the edge of the Chesapeake Bay.
Be sure to read about the de-icing system for the antenna. It uses more power than the actual transmitter!
From Brad:
Bill, Pete,
Here's the current status of the 24 KHz NAA SID receiver. All the major sub-assemblies are mounted in the chassis and power is hooked up. For convenience, I've been using the PowerWerx USBbuddy switching DC-DC converter to supply +5V power to the Raspberry Pi from the +12V input. I've found them extremely RF quiet, clean and stable; capable of supplying 3A though this project will only need about 1.5A @ +5V. At this point, I'm just waiting for Adafruit to send the A/D chip I'll wire up to the Pi on that empty protoboard just under the meter. Speaking of the meter, it's not really needed as the Pi records and broadcasts over Wi-Fi the received signal level. However, I like my projects to have some sort of physical human interface so I added the signal level meter and an LED for SID event alarms :).
As previously mentioned, my bench test of the receiver using my signal generator was successful. Once everything is wired, I'll do an actual on-air signal test receiving NAA.
Brad WA8WDQ
Labels:
antennas,
Old radio,
propagation,
radio history
Monday, August 22, 2016
Radio New Zealand Booming in on 7245 AM
The day is off to a good start here at SolderSmoke HQ, with Radio New Zealand booming in on my homebrew Mate for the Mighty Midget receiver. I was listening from around 0900 to 1030 UTC on 7245 kHz. Once again we see that The Radio Gods favor homebrew receivers. Gray line propagation also played a role.
Above we see a technician at work at RNZ in 1945. More historic photos here:
http://www.pcc.govt.nz/About-Porirua/Porirua-s-heritage/Porirua-s-suburbs/Titahi-Bay/Historic-site--Radio-New-Zealand-Transmission-Station
Above we see a technician at work at RNZ in 1945. More historic photos here:
http://www.pcc.govt.nz/About-Porirua/Porirua-s-heritage/Porirua-s-suburbs/Titahi-Bay/Historic-site--Radio-New-Zealand-Transmission-Station
Labels:
New Zealand,
Old radio,
propagation,
radio history,
Short Wave Listening
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