BTW. MXM stand for 1990, the year Bruce started his kit adventures. I worked Bruce on the first beta build of the transceiver Denton TX to Smithville TX on 40m during the day.
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Thursday, May 2, 2024
Chuck Adams' Modification of the MXM Simple Transceiver -- An Early QSO with the MXM Thirty Years Ago
Wednesday, May 1, 2024
KE5HPY Builds a QRP Transmitter
Thought you would appreciate a recent project inspired by the fabulous EMRFD. This started as a test bed W7ZOI universal tx to evaluate my stock of RF BJTs and employ some FT-243s in the shack. That was interesting by itself but the 16-32 dBm output (choice of device really matters!) did not reach the intended targets using my 40m dipole. So, add a W7EL RF PA and a nifty, clean 7W emerges after damping output from Q2. The final is pleasantly efficient and needs only a modest heatsink to survive key down for 60 seconds. KFS then reported S7-9. Success. Time to box it up and go XTO, add a meter output at 30dB down and an RF driven LED indicator. Left room to add an ATtiny85 CQ keyer but ran out of time. Had to move house and knock down my 40-6m antennas. That was the most painful part of moving. So this rig sits while I find a new place to hang antennas. Eventually, the TX will get a RX mate when it is possible to box up a 40m DC RX with Si5751 and OLED display. Am still trying to solve how to mount an OLED display cleanly in an aluminum box. First, I have to reconstruct my workbench.
Keep up your good work, and that is no April Fool’s joke.
73,
Chuck KE5HPY
Monday, April 29, 2024
Old Tricks, Lore, and Art -- Freezing and Baking our LC VFOs -- An Example from Cuba
Pavel CO7WT explained why Cuban hams used a process of thermal endurance to improved the frequency stability of their homebrew rigs:
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I'm CO7WT from Cuba, I started my endeavor in ham radio with a islander board.
They (FRC, like ARRL but in Cuba) made a print of a PCB to build the Islander, with component numbers and values, making construction fool proof, I think it was on the 90 or end of the 80...
Mine was built with scraps from an old KRIM 218 Russian B&W TV as Coro's explain, later on I get the 6bz6 and 6be6 tubes for the receiver (this worked better than the Russian parts) the VFO was transistorized, made with Russian components. A friend CO7CO Amaury, explain me a trick: thermal endurance:
For a week put a crust of ice on the VFO board by placing it in a frosty fridge during the night. Put them in the sun by day. This indeed improved stability, this was an old trick.
By thermal endurance I
mean improving thermal resistance vs tolerance, meaning that tolerance doesn't
vary as much with temperature changes.
I remember that my vfo was on 7 MHz, with Russian kt315 as normal Russian transistors and capacitors, nothing 1-5%, 20% at most, it ran several khz in 5-10 min, mounted on a Russian "Formica" board (no PCB) and wired underneath.
After that treatment to the complete board with components and everything, including the variable capacitor; I managed to get it to "only" noticeably in the ear after 30-40 minutes.
To me it was magic!!
Basically, what I'm describing is just "thermal annealing", but Cuban-style and with more extreme limits.
In a refrigerator you could easily reach -10 c and in the sun for a day in Cuba 60-80 celsius at least.
In Cuba in the 1990s-2010s many designs of DSB radios proliferated, both direct conversion and super heterodine (using an intermediate frequency)
At first tubes and then transistors, mostly using salvaged parts, so it was common to find 465/500 kHz (if common Russian) 455 khz and 10.7 Mhz with or without "wide" filters since narrow filters for SSBs were not scarce: they were almost impossible to get.
Not only that, crystals, ifs, PCBs, transistors, etc.
Then, around the 2000s, Russian 500 khz USB filters began to appear (from Polosa, Karat, etc. equipment from companies that deregistered and switched to amateur radio) and that contributed to improving... Even though at 7 MHz 500kc if is very close.
I made many modifications with the years mostly from 1998 to 2004 ish... better filters in front of the first RX stage (same IF described between stages) improved selectivity and out of band rejection, remember we had on that days broadcast as low as 7100 khz
Tx part was a pair of russian 6P7 (eq. RCA 807) in paralell, etc.
The Jagüey and others is one of those evolutions...
73 CO7WT
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This is not as crazy as it sounds. We can find versions of the same technique in the writings of Roy Lewellan W7EL, Doug DeMaw W1FB, and Wes Hayward W7ZOI. I found this 2007 message from our friend Farhan VU2ESE:
I think the word 'annealing' is a bit of a misnomer. the idea is to thermally expand and contract the wiring a few times to relieve any mechanical stresses in the coil. after an extreme swing of tempuratures, the winding will be more settled.
this techniques owes itself to w7EL. I first read about it in his article on the 'Optimized transceiver' pulished in 1992 or so.
but all said and done, it is part of the lore. it needs a rigorous proof.
- farhan
And here is another example of coil boiling:
https://www.qsl.net/kd7rem/vfo.htm
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I can almost hear it, all the way from across the continent: Pete N6QW should, please, stop chuckling. Obviously these stabilization techniques are not necessary with his beloved Si5351. Some will see all this as evidence of the barbarity and backwardness of LC VFOs. But I see it as another example of lore, of art in the science of radio. (Even the FCC regs talk about "Advancing the radio art." ) This is sort of like the rules we follow for LC VFO stability: keep the frequency low, use NP0 or silver mica caps, use air core inductors, keep lead length short, and pay attention to mechanical stability. Sure, you don't have to do any of this with an Si5351. Then again, you don't have to do any of this to achieve stability in an Iphone. But there is NO SOUL in an Iphone, nor in an Si5351. Give me a Harley, a Colpitts, or a Pierce any day. But as I try to remember, this is a hobby. Some people like digital VFOs. "To each, his own."
Thanks Pavel.
Sunday, April 28, 2024
A Soviet Tube in Cuba: The "Little Spider"
I hope readers have picked up on the discussion of the Islander DSB rig out of Cuba. We had a bit of a breakthrough on this recently. I've been writing about it on the blog:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2024/04/re-building-islander-dsbcw-rig-in-cuba.html
Saturday, April 27, 2024
Cloud Chamber Finale
Today's aparatus (above). Chamber is larger and I left the bottom sealed. It sits directly atop a chunk of dry ice. The spongeat the top is soaked in alcohol.
Friday, April 26, 2024
Re-building the Islander DSB/CW Tube Rig in Cuba
Pavel CO7WT is making great progress in re-building an Islander DSB rig, the same kind of rig that got him started in ham radio, and that was so popular in Cuba years ago. Here are some background blog posts on this rig: https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/search?q=Islander In essence, the Islander was the earlier tube DSB/CW rig; the Jaguey was a later, solid-state DSB/CW rig.
When they get this Islander going, hams outside Cuba should definitely try to work this re-creation of an important rig.
Thanks Pavel for all the information. I will share with the group info that Pavel sent about temperature stabilization techniques used on this rig.
Pavel CO7WT writes:
The 600V is 300ish V from the transformed DOUBLED stright from the transformer and if you look closely on the diagram the doubling capacitor need to be of good quality otherwise it will explode in the spot.
As you can imagine, using scrapped parts means that very often this capacitor explodes, even after a few months of duty, that was a common problem.
We used to use 47uF/800v from Germany that was almost easy to obtain, but exploded like fireworks a given day.
Later I learned that if you put a resistor of about 1k 5W in series and work it for a while like this [no real voltage at the end] it will behave in the future and this trick saved many, a trick that was shared with Coro CO2KK and he found the explanation on the taming/training of the dielectric after storage/inactivity will prevent it from exploding.
I think he made mention this on a DXers Unlimited program...
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Big Success with Cloud Chamber
Here's the C.L Stong book. My project begins on page 307
http://www.ke5fx.com/stong.pdf
So what band would this be? Something in the nanometer range, right?
Here is a video showing what you see in a large cloud chamber:
https://www.exploratorium.edu/video/cloud-chamber
Tuesday, April 23, 2024
EXCELLENT Video Series on RF Amplifier Design
Sunday, April 21, 2024
The War of the Worlds -- In CW -- By Chuck Adams AA7FO
This is for CW fans, or for those wishing to improve their CW skills. You can now listen to the entire H.G. Wells book in CW, thanks to Chuck Adams, AA7FO.
This seems very timely becasue my son and I are watching the NETFLIX version of "The Three Body Problem" by Cixin Liu. This deals with an entirely different war of the worlds.
Check out Chuck's CW version of the book. Thanks Chuck!
Friday, April 19, 2024
Deep Space Station 43 -- Canberra, Australia
DSS-43 boasts a pointing accuracy of 0.005 degrees (18 arc seconds)—which is important for ensuring that it is pointed directly at the receiver on a distant spacecraft. Voyager 2 broadcasts using a 23-watt radio. But by the time the signals traverse the multibillion-kilometer distance from the heliopause to Earth, their power has faded to a level 20 billion times weaker than what is needed to run a digital watch. Capturing every bit of the incident signals is crucial to gathering useful information from the transmissions.
The antenna has a transmitter capable of 400 kilowatts, with a beam width of 0.0038 degrees. Without the 1987 upgrade, signals sent from DSS-43 to a spacecraft venturing outside the solar system likely never would reach their target.
Tuesday, April 16, 2024
The Rad Receiver from N6GWB
Geoff N6GWB and his eldest have produced a really wonderful receiver, and have joined the elite ranks of those who have built their own receivers. Congratulations to both! ( Be sure to watch the video below.)
Geoff writes:
Though I built it, my eldest has retained naming rights. Behold the Rad Radio Receiver, an Soldersmoke inspired build. It’s a 40m DC reciever. I had planned on making this a truly 50-50 N6QW N2CQR build, but I needed to get it done for a show and tell this Wednesday. I have N6QW dual JFET RF amp and mixer modules. I have the N2CQR ceramic ocillator circuit from the 2017 DC receiver project. I had planned on including the all analog audio amp from the more recent N2CQR DC project, but alas, time got the best of me. I was hoping to make the whole thing all-analog. (I thought the all analog would get me more “hard work” kudos at the show and tell.) I ended up including a LM386 audio amp making this a bit of a cyborg.