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Monday, October 26, 2020
VK3YE: Solving the Direct Conversion RX -- Double Sideband TX Incompatibility Problem
Sunday, October 25, 2020
Saturday, October 24, 2020
On the Cover of The Rolling Stone (Almost) -- Jac Holzman, Elektra Records, and Ham Radio
ARRL reports that his callsign was K2VEH.
Hey, Pete plays guitar. So does Farhan. Should we have our people call Jac's people? Maybe do lunch?
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Listening in on the Deep Space Network
Not long ago we took the DISH satellite antenna off our roof. For a while I resisted pleas to put the big thing on the curb for pickup. I fantasized about using it for radio astronomy. In the end, I threw it away. I do have VHF/UHF aspirations, but being able to use that dish just seemed to be something in my distant future (if ever!).
But check out what David N2QG is doing with his dishes: He is listening to very distant spacecraft normally picked up only by NASA's Deep space network. Very cool. Truly inspirational.
Here are the links:
http://www.prutchi.com/2020/10/15/recap-of-x-band-dsn-activities-and-plans-for-the-future/
http://www.prutchi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/DSN_Lessons-_Learned_N2QG.pdf
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Too Simple? Deficiency of the Lafayette HA-600A Product Detector?
I've been having a lot of fun with the Lafayette HA-600A receiver that I picked up earlier this month. Adding to the mirth, I noticed that on SSB, the signals sound a bit scratchy, a bit distorted, not-quite-right. (I'm not being facetious; this is an interesting problem and it might give me a chance to actually improve a piece of gear that I -- as a teenager -- had been afraid to work on.)
Before digging into the circuitry, I engaged in some front panel troubleshooting: I switched to AM and tuned in a strong local AM broadcast signal. It sounded great -- it had no sign of the distortion I was hearing on SSB. This was an important hint -- the only difference between the circuitry used on AM and the circuitry used on SSB is the detector and the BFO. In the AM mode a simple diode detector is used. In SSB a product detector and BFO is used. The BFO sounded fine and looked good on the scope. This caused me to focus on the product detector as the culprit.
Check out the schematic above. Tr-5 is the product detector. It is really, really simple. (See Einstein quote below.) It is a single-transistor mixer with BFO energy going into the base and IF energy going into the emitter. Output is taken from the collector and sent to the audio amplifiers. (A complete schematic for the receiver can be seen here: https://nvhrbiblio.nl/schema/Lafayette_HA600A.pdf )
I had never before seen a product detector like this. One such detector is described in Experimental Methods for RF Design (page 5.3) but the authors devoted just one paragraph to the circuity, noting that, "We have not performed careful measurement on this mixer." The lack of enthusiasm is palpable, and probably justified.
A Google search shows there is not a lot of literature on single BJT product detectors. There is a good 1968 article in Ham Radio Magazine: http://marc.retronik.fr/AmateurRadio/SSB/Single-Sideband_Detectors_%5BHAM-Radio_1968_8p%5D.pdf It describes a somewhat different circuit used in the Gonset Sidewinder. The author notes that this circuit has "not been popular."
To test my suspicion that the product detector is the problem, I set up a little experiment. I loosely coupled the output of a signal generator to the IF circuitry of the HA-600A. I put the sign gen exactly on the frequency of the BFO. Then, I switched the receiver to AM, turning off the BFO and putting the AM diode detector to work. I was able to tune in the SSB signals without the kind of distortion I had heard when using the product detector.
So what do you folks think? Is the product detector the culprit? Or could the problem be in the AGC? Should I start plotting a change in the detector circuitry? Might a diode ring work better?
Monday, October 12, 2020
Quino, The Creator of Mafalda ("BASTA!") RIP
Putting "Basta" in the SolderSmoke search box yields many blog posts. The cry of ENOUGH! from six year-old Mafalda has been part of the podcast for many years and is now part of the SolderSmoke lexicon.
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/search?q=Basta
We don't do a lot of obits on this blog (we try to keep it all upbeat) but the passing of Mafalda's creator Quino is news that many of you may have missed, and that I think merits mention here. This link has a nice 3 minute report from NPR:
https://www.npr.org/2020/10/04/920038792/mafalda-cartoonist-quino-dies-at-88
Adios Quino. Gracias por todo.
Sunday, October 11, 2020
Ryan Flowers' Admirable Approach to the BITX40 Module
We must remember that Farhan designed the BITX transceivers -- and especially the BITX40 Module -- in the hope that these rigs would encourage hams to tinker, to modify, to change and to repair. When I read Ryan Flowers' blog post, I thought that Farhan's mission has been accomplished.
https://miscdotgeek.com/bitx40-rebuild-part-1-mistakes-planning-and-teardown/
I was also struck by how nice it is that Ryan has a sentimental attachment to this BITX40 module because it was a gift from his wife. That's the kind of thing that gives a piece of electronic circuity soul.
Above we see Ryan's module with many of the parts removed in the sections that he feels he messed up. This is obviously a good approach, but it reminded me of the nightmare I've had (and I am not the only one) where, in frustration, I take ALL the parts off a recalcitrant board.
Stick with it Ryan! You are on the right track. And it sounds to me like you WILL soon be homebrewing from scratch your own SSB transceiver.
A while back we built a blog with many nice mods for the BITX40 Module:
http://bitxhacks.blogspot.com/
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Chip Replaced, GSC 6000 Counter Fixed
This thing has been half-broken for a long time. I needed to get the input for 40 MHz - 650 MHz working I got the a replacement SP8630B Plessey divide-by-ten counter chip on e-bay, and yesterday I extracted the old chip and put in the replacement. I took great care NOT to solder this one in upside down (as I had done with another chip replacement in this counter). I used solder flux and solder wick to gradually get the pins free of the board. (You can see the old chip in the picture above.)
As to what happened to the original SP8630B chip, John over on the Vintage Test Gear Facebook page wrote:
The Plessey SP8630A/B is an ECL divide by 10 prescaler, with a upper working frequency of 600MHz. That generation went out of production in the late 1980s. Plessey was bought by a Canadian company now called Micrel. You may be able to find one from one of the specialist obsolete component companies, but it may be dead on arrival. Those ECL ICs had a fairly high mortality rate if they are very old.
It is the old story of "metal migration". In early semiconductors very small impurities in the silicon structure cause minute bits of the metallisation to leach out into the essentially non-conducting silicon insulation. Many old devices, although they have never been used, were found to be very leaky and this degrades the gain of the active devices. The worst types are the very old Germanium transistors.
As the semiconductor scientist learnt more about the super cleanliness required and the better purification of the metals the problem tended to improve. The Marconi company I worked for back in the 1980s had a real problem with comms satellites failing after a few years of service. Of course you can't go up there and swap out the faulty devices. Accelerated ageing of a backup satellite showed that some devices just stopped working after being subjected to high and low temperature cycling, which is a common problem with satellites in orbit!
I am liking this little machine more and more. It is very simple -- no microcontroller, just a collection of gates. I discovered that the main main crystal oscillator is actually built inside a little oven to keep the temperature stable -- oscillator and the oven stay on as long as the counter is plugged in, even when the device is switched off. I calibrated the counter with WWV and with my HP8640B and with my little Feeltech sig gen counter. I wish I knew how to calibrate the counter in the Rigol DS1102E oscilloscope.
Friday, October 9, 2020
The Bitsy -- Homebrew Double Sideband from Scotland
This is such a beautiful project: it involves DSB, homebrew, troubleshooting, George Dobbs, SSDRA, J310s, a box kite, and ham radio nostalgia. I was struck by how similar the Bitsy looks to some of my own DSB creations (but the Bitsy is nicer). I'm really pleased to find a DSB project coming out of the UK -- when I was there, DSB was kind of frowned upon by spectrum preservation zealots. I say there is plenty of room for the very few homebrew DSB rigs that will ever grace the airwaves with their presence. Thanks John. Have fun with all your projects. 73 Bill
Hi Bill
In the early 80's I built and experimented with Direct Conversion Receivers and had a lot of fun with them. I came across a 40M DC cw transceiver by the late Rev. George Dobbs in a Practical Wireless magazine and decided to build it. Whether I was just lucky I'm not sure but it worked first time and I had several cw contacts with it. It was called “The PW Severn”. I then discovered DSB and looked into modifying the wee rig. I gave George a phone, no internet in those days, and explained what I was proposing to do and if there was any advice he could offer. His reply was , “it should work so try it and see, any problems get back to me”. It worked and I had a lot of fun with it. I used to take it portable and with a box kite to support a long wire and worked all over Europe.
It was after reading and learning about
circuits and home brewing I wondered if I could design and build a DSB
transceiver of my own. I had plenty of articles and most importantly a copy of
Solid State Design, now well thumbed.
So the “Bitsy” was born. It is an 80M DSB
transceiver. The PA produces about 2 watts. I took what I thought was the best
for each module and built it using six circuit boards which I designed and
etched myself. Nowadays I use the Manhattan method for one of circuits. It is
much easier and quicker.
Like most home brew projects, the fun is in
the building and the wee rig lived in a box for several years. Probably over
30. My doesn't time fly. I came across it again while looking through my boxes
and decided to give it an airing. Expecting it to work on power up I was quite
shocked when it produced nothing on both receive and transmit. After staring at
it for a couple of minutes I unscrewed the lid and studied the wiring for a dry
joint. Nothing so I switched on my Digital Multimeter and Oscilloscope. I soon
found out that the output from the VFO was missing. The VFO uses one FET and
two PNP Transistors for the buffers. The scope soon proved that the FET was
faulty. I used an MPF102. These are hard to get so I replaced it with a J310.
While I had the VFO out I also replaced the 9.1v zener diode, which provides a
regulated voltage for the FET, with a 78L05 connecting the centre pin via a
580ohm resistor to earth. This gives me a 9.3v regulated supply for the
oscillator. It is now back in full working condition.
With the Covid 19 epidemic I, like a lot of
the Amateur Radio fraternity, am spending a lot of time in the shack and
looking for new projects. I am buying back my old FT200 which was my first rig.
An old friend and lapsed amateur has still got it and agreed to sell it back to
me. It is still in a good condition for being nearly 50 years old and just
needs some TLC. When it is finished it will take pride of place beside my
restored Heathkit SB104A. And they say nostalgia is not what it used to be!!
John Forsyth
GM4OOU
Thursday, October 8, 2020
HA-600A Gets a New Coat of Paint -- After Almost 50 years!
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
Solar Cycle 25 - The Gleissberg Cycle Dashes Hopes for a Big Solar Max
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
TRGHS -- My First SW Receiver Offered FREE for Pickup -- The Lafayette HA-600A (Looking for Globe VFO Deluxe)