Podcasting since 2005! Listen to Latest SolderSmoke
Friday, January 10, 2025
Please Listen for my 10 Meter Beacon! 28.2335 MHz
What Homebrew Looks Like (And W9BRD comment on the High School receiver project)
Dave Newkirk is the son of Rod Newkirk, the guy who wrote the inspirational "How's DX?" column for QST for so many years. Dave is obviously a very prolific and proficient homebrewer himself. I really appreciate his comment on the High School receiver project. Thanks Dave.
Dave wrote on QRZ.com:
Rummaging around the net for such phrases as "TJ receiver" or variations that include AA1TJ and receiver returns no solid hits, but by following clues I found a/the article with schematic at https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver. That's a well-thought-out design that'll provide fun, fun, fun.
I think I have something like 8 homemade receivers available at the moment at W9BRD, tube-based and solid-state, regenerative and superhet. all told covering 160 through 17 meters (if I include my tube-based and solid-state converters), and about the same number of homemade transmitters. With some exceptions for particular on-air celebrations and events, commonly my entire station lineup is homemade from stem to stern, so to speak.
I've been building radio gear since 1968. Here's some recent fun:
Zed thread covering the development of a converter-plus-regenerative-tuner combo that I came to call the "Super 3-in-9":
https://forums.qrz.com/index.php?th...ceiver-using-one-9-pin-miniature-tube.897249/
Zed thread covering construction of my version of a coffee-can-based receiver/converter combo my father used for 15ish years as his main station receiver after beginning its construction in 1951ish "on a kitchen table in Hartford" while working at ARRL HQ:
https://forums.qrz.com/index.php?th...building-a-160-meter-coffee-can-regen.938709/
To which discussion our own @N2EY kindly posted the mid-1960s "How's DX?" lead in which Dad laid out his station design/configuration/construction philosophy ( https://forums.qrz.com/index.php?th...0-meter-coffee-can-regen.938709/#post-7021505 ).
To us, commercial/mil/pro gear has been and always will be various shades of inspiring to fabulous, but only with homemade gear are we home.
A little Night Radio Romance at W9BRD, featuring the BRD-160CC 160-m regenerative receiver and converter (transmitter and antenna tuner not shown).
Thursday, January 9, 2025
A Saw the Southern Cross (Crux) This Morning (first time in 30 years!)
Here is what Heavens Above predicted for this morning from Punta Cana:
Tuesday, January 7, 2025
Steve G0FUW talks Homebrew and Kits with Charlie NJ7V
Our homebrew direct-conversion receiver challenge (see below) has led to a discussion of the differences between homebrew and kits. Our intent in designing this rig was to come up with something that was simple enough to actually homebrew (that is the challenge: homebrew it!) . Building it from a kit would be something different. I like the way Charlie and Steve talk about the differences between homebrew and kits in this video. Around 33:49 Charlie mentions that after a while you just get good at building kits. Steve points out that building kits is a bit like "painting by numbers" (a great metaphor). Steve then goes on to talk about the formation in G-QRP of the "scratch-built group." Steve tells us that he has built some 84 radios. Steve talks about "the joy of building it yourself" (43:49)
Steve gives a very kind shout out to SolderSmoke at around 23:58. The references to Tony G4WIF and Ian G3ROO were also very nice. And there are many great mentions of Pete Juliano N6QW.
And remember: If you are not a member of G-QRP you are just wrong! Join here: https://www.gqrp.com/join.htm
Thanks Charlie and thanks Steve!
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November 13, 2024
Bill's appearance on the Ham Radio Workbench. (Bill made some overly harsh comments about radio rejuvenation, and was trying to make amends.) But now we throw down the gauntlet. WE CHALLENGE the HRWB guys to build -- to homebrew - our TJ DC RX. They will experience JOO, JVO and the elite status that comes with having built their own ham radio receiver. And if they go on to build a 10 minute transmitter, they can use it for CW contacts. Like on POTA (Thomas!)
December 13, 2024:
Bill was on Ham Radio Workbench: https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2024/11/bill-n2cqr-appears-as-guest-on-ham.html Our challenge to HRWB. Gauntlet thrown down... OUR CHALLENGE HAS BEEN GRACIOUSLY ACCEPTED! We now extend the challenge to the entire SolderSmoke community: Build one of these: https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver
Homebrewing is not for the faint of heart! Accept the challenge! Build stuff!
Monday, January 6, 2025
A Tale of Woe -- Troubleshooting my 15-10 Rig in the Dominican Republic
Scott KQ4AOP's PTO Coil Forms for the High-School Direct-Conversion Receiver (Video)
Saturday, January 4, 2025
Donnie WA9TGT's Direct Conversion Receivers
Wednesday, January 1, 2025
Happy New Year from the Dominican Republic! SKN from HI7/N2CQR
Sunday, December 29, 2024
Other Kinds of Workshops -- Making a Clock with a Lathe
Somehow, this video fits well with the SolderSmoke theme. It may be that Uri cheerfully acknowledges that the lathe can kill you (the same is true of much of our gear). Or it may be his repeated use of the term "Bob's your uncle" (has he been listening to SolderSmoke?). Whatever the reason, this beautiful video fits here. This is from Uri Tuchman's channel: https://www.youtube.com/@urituchmanpigeon. Uri is in Germany. Thanks Uri!
Friday, December 27, 2024
Derek N9TD's Magnificent Build of the TJ Direct Conversion Receiver
Derek wrote:
Bill,
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
So Many Great Pictures, So Much Radio History
Monday, December 23, 2024
More Shortwave Listener Cards
Here are some cards from earlier (in some cases MUCH earlier):
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2023/11/some-short-wave-listener-qsl-cards.html