Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Monday, October 16, 2023
Does Matching Matter? (Diode Matching for Diode Ring Mixers) -- Nick M0NTV Finds the Answer (Video)
Sunday, October 15, 2023
Spy Rigs, Para Sets, Bugs, and Enigma Machines -- Dr. Tom Perera W1TP (video)
Saturday, October 14, 2023
Paul VK3HN's Video on Scratch-Building and SOTA
Wednesday, October 11, 2023
Sunburst and Luminary: Apollo "Rope" Memory, and other items of interest
Wow. That is the method that they stored computer memory for the moon missions. When they were satisfied with a program they would say it was time to "put it on the rope."
Here's an article on the women who built the rope memory (and the integrated circuits used in Apollo). This reminded me of the women's collective in Hyderabad that "wove" the ferrite core transformers for Farhan's BITX rigs:
Here is a Wikipedia article on core rope ROM memory with some great illustrations:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_rope_memory
-- Not long before the fatal Apollo 1 fire, an MIT colleague of Don Eyles had a drink with Astronaut Gus Grissom. Grissom unloaded about the poor state of the spacecraft, saying that, "What we have here is a Heathkit." Grissom died in the fire.
-- Eyles mentions the use of 6L6 tubes in analog audio amplifiers.
-- MIT's Doc Draper used a Minox camera.
-- When the Apollo 11 astronauts came back and were living for two weeks in an isolation chamber, NASA had bulldozers on standby to bury the whole thing ("astronauts, staff and all") in case some dangerous moon bug was detected. (Is that true?)
-- At one point soon before an important missile test, engineers realized that they needed an isolation transformer. They did not have enough time to order one. So they took an isolation transformer out of one of their soldering stations and used it in the missile. It worked. Sometimes you just use what you have on hand.
Tuesday, October 10, 2023
A Low-Power (QRP) Contact from Australia to Spain (with video from both sides!)
Saturday, October 7, 2023
Charlie Brown LIKES Static (with ITU paper on radio noise)
Friday, October 6, 2023
A Pretty Good Troubleshoot -- Fixing the Transmitter in my 75/20 meter Mythbuster Transceiver -- Mind the Gap!
All of a sudden the transmitter in my 75 & 20 meter dual band homebrew Mythbuster transceiver stopped working -- there was no output at all. I went into troubleshooting mode.
The first clue was that the receiver was working fine. This meant that many stages of the rig were taken out of suspicion: It probably wasn't the VFO, the first mixer, the BFO/Carrier Oscillator, the second mixer, or the bandpass filters. Nor was it any of the receive sections in the bidirectional amplifiers I was using.
Suspicion fell on the power amplifiers and on the transmit sections of the bilateral amplifiers.
With the output going to a dummy load, I put the rig into transmit mode and put a bit of audio into the mic jack. Then with the 'scope I started to work my way back from the antenna jack. I wasn't seeing anything. Then I got back to the transmit side of the TIA amplifier between the crystal filter and the mixer. There was a strong signal at the input, but nothing at the output. Bingo! I had found the faulty stage. But where, exactly, had this stage gone wrong?
There are three transistors on each side of a TIA amp (see schematic above) -- I just started from the input of the first one with my scope probe and moved through the circuit. Finally, at the output of the last of the three amplifiers, the signal stopped. I knew I was very close to the problem.
Looking at the components, suddenly I could see the problem: At the output there is a 47 ohm resistor (R2 in the circuit diagram above) and a .1uF cap in series. The cap went to a Manhattan pad. But when I looked at it closely, the lead was kind of floating above the pad. See it?
And when I moved it, the connection between the 47 ohm resistor and its pad seemed quite flimsy.
I quickly replaced both components and was back on the air.
I don't really know how or why the lead to that capacitor broke. Maybe I had bent it repeatedly, to the point of weakness, and, over time, it just let go.
Whatever the cause, I found this to be a satisfying troubleshoot and repair. It required me to think a bit about what could be wrong, and to use some test gear to zero on on the faulty component.
Thursday, October 5, 2023
A Cuban Knack Story, and a Pandemic (SITS!) SSB version of the DSB Jaguey Rig -- Viva el Cacharreo!
First, the Knack Story. Andy CO2AFV clearly has The Dilbert Disease:
Hello my name is Andy. I had an interest in Ham radio before knowing that existed. While I was a child my entertainment was building quartz oscillators that later I tried to receive on neighbors' and friends' radios. One day I succeeded in modulating two of them and I finally established a conversation with a friend about 200 meters from my home!!!
Wednesday, October 4, 2023
Sunburst and Luminary -- A Poem about Transistors and ICs
Tuesday, October 3, 2023
Another Evaluation of the TinySA Ultra (with Teardown) (Video)
Monday, October 2, 2023
"Sunburst and Luminary" author Don Eyles was a Ham, a Hacker, and a user of Plywood who Understood Juju
-- As a kid, Eyles took a summertime shop class with W4LRO. Eyles himself went on to get his ham license -- he was K4ZHF and was active for a while on the 40 meter and 6 meter bands.
-- He writes of how the Apollo software acquired more "juju as labor and logic were poured into them." Juju.
-- He describes the electronics lab in the MIT Instrumentation Laboratory: "If you had a private project you could sometimes get some simple milling done for a smile, and you could scrounge the odd resistor or capacitor... On the second floor there was a small "hackers shop" with a drill press, metal shear, a bending brake, and a few hand tools which was open to anyone, including software engineers. That was the first use of the term "hack" in a technical context, that I can recall hearing. I took the term as referring to the sometimes messy process by which perforations of suitable sizes were made in the aluminum boxes, or chassis, that were used for constructing electronic devices." Indeed. We hack.
-- After describing the first integrated circuits, Eyles looks back at high school and notes that he and a friend, "after learning about truth tables, James Chambers and I had experimented with similar devices composed of relays mounted on a piece of plywood." Plywood.
More to follow on this book.
Sunday, October 1, 2023
Bezos Bucks! New Amazon Link Working Well! Please use it!
Click on image for a better view