Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
Podcasting since 2005! Listen to our latest podcast here:
Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Saturday, May 30, 2020
An Amazing Catalog of Circuits from HA5KHC
HA5KHC is a club station in Budapest, Hungary. The photo above shows a portion of their worshop. The link below is for their really amazing collection of links to ham radio circuits.
http://konstruktor.ha5khc.hu/linkgyujtemeny/linkgyujtemeny.htm
Thursday, May 28, 2020
Tribal Wisdom from KE3IJ
Lots of homebrew wisdom on OM Rick's web site. Excerpts:
----------------
Why am I not on the air as much as I'm tinkering with toy radio circuits? Well, if some of the hams reading this don't mind my saying so, the manners of many of the people using the bands these days leaves so much to be desired that I often find more pleasure in futzing around with "minimal" QRP [low-power] ham-band transmitters and receivers, as well as good-old AM broadcast receivers, than in getting on the air anymore.
So I've found a certain twisted fascination with trying to build the simplest pieces of junk possible, and seeing what I can pick up with them. I usually start by drawing a rough schematic on paper, then tack-soldering a haywire "spider-web" of components, as a 'first pass,' and then I rebuild the circuit more neatly once its design is finalized.
It still amazes me that we can connect some modified "rocks and sticks" together (that's basically what copper wire, silicon transistors, etc. really are, when you think about it) and hear voices and music magically appear out of nowhere...
-------------
He has many regen circuits. And his Drake 2-B dial skirt looks just like mine.
Visit Rick's site: http://ke3ij.com/radios.htm
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Antennas, Money, and Ham Psychology
During SolderSmoke Podcast #222, Pete lamented the fact that many hams are willing to spend significant amounts of money on "manufactured" dipole antennas that are little more than pieces of wire. Tony Fishpool G4WIF sent a graphic on the wire antenna he uses (see above). He also shared an anecdote about G5RV antennas and G-QRP Club founder George Dobbs:
From Tony:
The aerial that I’ve had so much fun with, an End Fed Half Wave, cost me £8 ($9.80) for the toroid and the rest came from the junk box. The reel of wire was probably a £1 ($1.25) from a radio rally. You never pay big money for wire at a rally. People take it there to get rid of
it!
It covers 80m and all harmonically related bands.
My garden is too small so I cheated by using some linear loading to
make it fit. (on the back fence).
WIth 5 watts CW on 40m I can hit the USA reverse beacons most mornings.
It was about £9 ($11) to make - but if you count the Spiderbeam
12m pole, it was another £98 ($120).
I have a little George Dobbs story relating to aerials. Probably around
make it fit. (on the back fence).
WIth 5 watts CW on 40m I can hit the USA reverse beacons most mornings.
It was about £9 ($11) to make - but if you count the Spiderbeam
12m pole, it was another £98 ($120).
I have a little George Dobbs story relating to aerials. Probably around
15-20 years ago. He was speaking at a radio club near to me so I went along to support
him and have a beer with afterward.
him and have a beer with afterward.
He gave his usual entertaining (and always funny) talk during which he
paused - and said, as if in confidence to the audience:
“Do you know, I’ve heard, and I don’t know if it is true, that there are
people who actually pay real money for a pre-made G5RV”
I swear that it went very quiet and there may even have been the odd foot
shuffled. Tony
---------------------------------------------------------
Coincidentally Mike, WU2D put out a VERY ILLUMINATING YouTube video on the psychological aspects of ham radio operators and their antennas. Here it is:
Emilio's Mirror of JF1OZL's Site

Emilio in Mexico has put up a mirror site. Thanks Emilio. We need to protect and preserve JF1OZL's work.
https://www.emilio.com.mx/jf10zl/
Here is a SolderSmoke blog post on Kazuhiro from 2011:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2011/12/homebrew-hero-kazuhiro-sunamura-jf1ozl.html
Monday, May 25, 2020
Saturday, May 23, 2020
SolderSmoke Podcast #222 Antennas, Phasing, VFOs, 2-Bs, 6 years of N6QW, MAILBAG
![]() |
| After 46 years, finally a dial skirt |
SolderSmoke Podcast #222 is available:
No travelogue but… SolderSmoke
Almanac!
Memorial Day in
U.S.
End of Ramadan so Eid Mubarak!
#222 marks SIX
YEARS of Julian-ismo. He started on SS 161. Thanks Pete.
Thanks to all who sent
good wishes on Billy's graduation. He heads to Boston and the lab in a
week or so. Very proud.
------------------------------------------
Bill was on Ham Radio WorkBench Podcast
-----------------------------------------
PETE'S WORKBENCH
-- Antenna Ideas --
Don't Buy that $165 dollar dipole! It is just wire!
-- THE PHASING
RIG. Does this point to a
need for meditation? Or at least some temporary disengagement? Tribal wisdom from Pete.
-- DEAN KK4DAS's
rig. The Furlough 40. Troubleshoot. Tribal knowledge.
-------------------------------------------
-- SHAMELESS COMMERCE
DIVISION: AMAZON BOX -- SEARCH FOR ANYTHING OU WANT THERE.
-- PLEASE PUT COMMENTS ON
THE SOLDERSMOKE BLOG POSTS.
-- PLEASE CHECK OUT THE SolderSmoke YOUTUBE VIDEOS.
------------------------------------------
BILL's WORKBENCH
n
Shortwave dials and
exotic locations. Java!
n
Galaxy V VFO
Project. Series-tuned Colpitts.
n
DRAKE 2-B.
Hayseed Recap. Put the skirt back on the
old rig. Reduction drives?
SHOPPING BAG:
I got a replacement
for the Xtronics 4000 soldering station. Yaogong worked!
Ordered screws and
stuff from McMaster -- Came very fast!
Working on a resistor
kit from Mouser.
MAILBAG:
VK2BLQ's Phasing RX
with an HRO dial. Cool Retro.
Adam N0ZIB -- Cool
station. TFT screen Aluminum welded box. FB.
Karl G7AFT
BITX 40 doing USB and LSB by changing the VFO freq. Pete's
trick!
Jerry KI4IO out
in nearby Warrenton. Hope to be able to meet up soon.
Keith N6ORS's Hot
Mustard Phasing Board.
Mike N5GTF'd FULLY
INDOOR Quarantine Receiver. Need a
slogan for the antenna!
Nick M0NTV's Bread Bin
80 Quarantine rig
Bruce KC1FSZ
Quarantine 10 -- Brave man in solar minimum. But I hear 10 is opening.
Talking to Grayson
Evans KJ7UM TA2ZGE about Collins 9.9 MHz
transformers.
Talking to Alan Wolke W2AEW
about Drake 2-B stuff Was there a
reduction drive?
Paul VK3HN about
Ceramic filter spurs.
Peter VK2EMU notes no animals were harmed in the
making of my videos. But many electrons
were agitated. ![]() |
| N6QW Phase Shift Success -- It aint over 'till the fat lady sings |
Friday, May 22, 2020
I,Q, and HRO: VK2BLQ's Phasing Receiver with an HRO Dial
I had occasionally fantasized about connecting Armand's HRO dial to the rotary encoder of an Si5351, but I think this was more of a nightmare than a fantasy. I don't think Stephen VK2BLQ went this far -- I suspect that his HRO dial was connected to an analog VFO. But still, the combination of HRO with I&Q seems a bit edgy... FB Stephen. Please send us more info on this amazing receiver.
Hi Bill,
Hope you are safe there with the bad weather.
Recently you mentioned HRO dials and the need to build a radio around one and Pete has been discussing phasing SSB; attached photo is a phasing receiver on 80 and 40 m, a combination of both HRO and IQ that I built many years ago, and thanks to Pete I shall get it running again.
And Bill, like you I am from the IGY of 1958 and retired with more free time on my hands.
Best regards to you and your family, especially young Billy.
Stephen,
VK2BLQ
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Replacing Electrolytic Caps in my Drake 2-B (Video)
Every dark cloud has a silver lining. Here is a very small silver lining for this terrible COVID-19 situation: I had time to do a proper replacement of the electrolytic capacitors in my Drake 2-B.
Three cheers for Hayseed Hamfest LLC for providing the replacement capacitor.
Go to their website to find capacitors for many other old rigs:
http://hayseedhamfest.com
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
SolderSmoke on Ham Radio Workbench Podcast
It was great fun talking to George and Jeremy of the Ham Radio Workbench Podcast last week. You can listen to the episode here:
Thanks to George and Jeremy.
Monday, May 18, 2020
Homebrew Az-El Satellite Antennas from the Philippines and Australia
https://nightskyinfocus.com/2020/05/18/diy-satellite-tracker/
DU1AU is way ahead of where I was when I was working with Low Earth Orbit satellites. I just aimed the antenna about 45 degrees up from the horizon, and spun it around with a TV rotator with me --not the computer -- as the controllers of the rotator. In essence I did the AZ manually and completely ignored the EL. This design moves the antenna in Azimuth and Elevation, and has the computer control the movements via an Arduino. FB.
DU1AU points to the work of VK3FOWL and VK3YSP. Their site has very detailed info on how to build several versions of this kind of Az-El rotator:
https://www.sarcnet.org/rotator-mk1.html
This Az-El project represents a great opportunity to move beyond hand-held satellite antennas, and beyond my Az-only manual approach. It also give us a way to bring some real homebrewing into a part of ham radio that has come to be dominated by commercial equipment. There are some Arduinos and some lines of code, some motors and some metal work. Great stuff!
Saturday, May 16, 2020
Video on Galaxy V VFO IN USE with BITX40 Module -- 40 meter Bandsweep
Check out that fancy frequency readout. No glowing numerals here. But it does the job.
Friday, May 15, 2020
Nick M0NTV's Quarantine Rig: The Bread Bin 80
Hi Bill,
Hope you are keeping well and staying safe.
Just thought I’d let you know about a homebrew project I’ve just completed. I call it the Bread Bin 80 - you’ll see why!
It is a single band (80m) SSB transceiver that puts out 25-30W of clean RF. It uses the familiar pairing of Arduino Uno + Si5351 (with 16x2 LCD screen and rotary encoder for tuning). Other than this though it is largely an analogue beast - which I thought you might like!
I made my own double balanced mixers which work really well. But the Si5351 can’t generate the 7 dBm of local oscillator signal to drive them so I then had to build a simple one transistor RF amp for each clock of the Si5351. I even went above and beyond the call of duty and home-brewed my own IF crystal ladder filter (although this was actually a kit).
The rig has a three stage IF cascade amplifier with 2 back to back JFETs in each stage + AGC and analogue S meter. There is something very satisfying about seeing the needle bob about as you are listening. I also put in a switchable analogue audio filter in front of the audio pre-amp which cuts out some of the higher frequency noise on the band.
Overall I’m really pleased with the rig. I’ve been working stations all over the UK and into continental Europe and getting some great reports. Except the one guy (who shall remain nameless) who wasn’t the least impressed that I was working him on a homebrew rig: he was only keen to point out that my antenna must be far too low to give me such an attenuated signal!!! I guess you can’t please everyone.
Anyway, I’ve done a bit of a write up and included some photos (outside and in) on my QRZ page if you are interested:
Thanks for sharing your home brewing story about your short wave receiver on YouTube. I’ve enjoyed following that and seeing it progress. Those little ‘Altoid’ tins are great aren’t they.
Thanks again for all your encouragement through the Soldersmoke podcast. I really enjoy it.
Stay In The Shack!
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