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Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
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Check out this short video of Calvin's receiver in action:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/BbcBVmmKygw
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Early on, Wayan noted that he would have difficulty getting the 1000:8 ohm AF output transformer we were using. This transformer was easy to get if you have easy access to Mouser, but a few prospective builders in Europe and the U.S. expressed deep objections to our use of this device. Some complained that we should have used a push-pull amplifier. Others complained that they didn't have one of these in their junk box. Some even hinted that we should have gone with an LM386 chip. But we stuck to our plan, noting that the very simple AF amp circuit we had developed would be understandable in ways that the alternatives were not. Still, I worried about Wayan. He might have really been out of Mouser range.
Yesterday the above video appeared. Wayan finished the receiver. It is inhaling nicely on both SSB and CW. The CW signal you hear in the recording is that of YB1IHL. That is CW from Indonesia as picked up by a homebrew recevier. FB!
How Wayan cracked the code on the transformer is inspiring. He essentially homebrewed the part. Wayan wrote on the Discord server:
At last I can hear the CW and SSB coming in. The one and only 9v battery that I have during homebrewing forcing to switch to bench PSU with 9,3v setup Pardon me for the messy board and layouts, excitement that it works with parts I have in hands is everything. I learn a lot during this project, including inability for sourcing 1k:8 audio transformer causing me to build my own xformer from 600 ohm transformer former and magnet wire from a broken relay, tedious works but I learn new things. Need to tidy up and may need to build another mixer and BPF again.
He also homebrewed the PTO coil former.
Wow, that is all really inspiring, and is a great example of the homebrew spirit at work.
And Wayan is a new ham, licensed only since 2019: https://www.qrz.com/db/YD9BAX
Congratulations Wayan!
For more info on this project and info on how you should build this receiver see:
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Aaron ZL1AUN used his homebrew SolderSmoke Direct Conversion receiver in a 40 meter SSB contact with his fellow New Zealand radio amateurs. His transmitter was a modern commercial rig, but his receiver was the Direct Conversion receiver.
I think Aaron's video is an excellent demonstration of how stable and useful this receiver really is.
The next step for many will be the construction alongside the DC receiver of a Double Sideband transmitter. You could make it with only the receiver PTO serving as the common stage. Just build another mixer, a mic amp, and an RF amp with low pass filter. Switch the DC voltage and the antenna from T to R and you will be on the air, on phone, fully homebrew.
Here is an article describing how I did this on 17 meters in the Azores in 2001:
https://www.gadgeteer.us/17METER.HTM
Here is the Doug DeMaw article in CQ magazine that got me started in homebrew DSB:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2024/04/the-doug-demaw-article-that-got-me-into.html
For more information on this project, and for information on how you could build this receiver see:
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SolderSmoke Podcast #257 is available.
Video version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOoZiHbC4Ag
Audio version: https://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke257.mp3
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https://soldersmoke.blogspot.
-----------------------------
Lot of success! So far 22 completed receivers: 35 others are being built.200 or so people are on the Discord server.
What a great achievement this is! Folks are homebrewing receivers.
Scott KQ4AOP heard his very first amateur radio signals through this receiver. FB!
Lots of great ham homebrew spirit. NE3U, N9TD and others 3d printing coil forms for others. FB
It is not too late. Dean's videos and the Discord server will remain up, even when we ourselves have moved on.
Big Picture: Farhan's Four Stages -- All you need to build a rig: Oscillator, Filter, Mixer, Amplifier.
Homebrew and Manhattan vs. Kit built with PC board. We think Homebrew is a better experience. Dean recently assembled some Ikea kit furniture. Does that make him a carpenter? No.
We do update the schematic as we learn. This is similar to what happens to software. Github? Version 2.3? In the old days, when QST came once a month, we lived a harder life. We don't have to do that anymore.
Let's talk about the boards one by one:
The Oscillator (VFO or PTO):
-- Started out as an amalgam of Farhan circuits: We liked the very simple oscillator he used in his Hyderabad DC receiver project for the girls schools. No need for a hard-to-find variable cap. But we found we needed a 3.3 k ohm resistor in the emitter to make it go. We took the buffer/amp from Farhan's "Daylight Again" circuit, but later (much later!) added a .1uF cap across the source of the J-310.
-- With brass screw, not really a permeability tuned oscillator. Brass has same permeability as air. Works via Eddy currents. But the screw thing is very reminiscent of the old Collins PTOs, so we call it a PTO. And it IS s PTO if you used a steel screw. You should study the doc in the mods section about how to modify the PTO. Metalurgy matters!
-- We used silver mica caps in the frequency determining circuits. This is important.
The Mixer:
-- We started with a simple two diode, single transformer singly balanced mixer. Only LO signal would be balanced out. This would work, but we got a lot of AM breakthrough from Radio Marti, just above the 40 meter band. So we went with a homebrew diode ring mixer.
-- Important to unserstand how the diode ring really works: LO just switches on and off the diodes. Very cool that several builders sought to understand how diode ring works.
-- Best way to test the PTO and the Mixer? Put them together and look at the waveform at the mixer input. Is it flat topping? Then both stages are working.
-- Diplexer: From QRP legend W7EL's Optimized QRP transceiver. Seemed to help knock down Radio Marti. But we kind of knowingly disregarded AF amp input impedance. It would have been too complex to fix. We were going for simplicity.
BP Filter:
-- We actually got to do the NanoVNA test with one set of the high school students. This was very cool. Proves the worth of the NanoVNA.
-- Again good to learn the theory.
AF Amp:
-- Kind of an amalgam of a Forest Mims amp and the amp from the Herring Aid 5.
-- Sure, an LM386 would have been simpler. But we did not want to use ICs. And IC AF amps oscillate too. You learn more by going discrete.
-- We used a transformer. For simplicity. We know the push-pull circuit, but wanted to avoid it. Some guys are going to other AF amp circuits becasue of the transformer. See this as an interim measure... You can fully meet the challenge later, when you get the transformer.
-- We also -- in the name of simplicity -- did not use feedback amps. We have an optional bandaid resistor across the oscillator to lower overall gain.
-- It can oscillate. But keeping leads short, keeping inputs away from outputs, putting adequate electolytics on the 12V power rail can prevent this. This is a good lesson in good construction practices. And with the real world of amplifiers (they all aspire to be oscillators!)
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Some Tales of Woe:
Some “lessons learned” taken from the Walk of Fame Channel
Parts sourcing: We were surprised at how much time people spent on this. Parts sourcing struggle reminds us of the importance of 1) understanding the circuit and 2) having a decent junkbox. 3) scrounging old parts when necessary.
Looking ahead: Antennas are important! You probably can use Cat 5 cable instead of real coax. Noise is natural. Mods are fun. CW in some ways harder than DSB. Lot of antenna info on the internet.
You can modify the PTO for easier tuning. See the doc. Add a front panel, or a case. Once your basic receiver is done, you can experiment with better circuits. See the mods doc for ideas.
Final Comments:
-- It is ultimately the builder who has to make the machine work. Homebrew means that YOU the builder are going to make it work.
-- Be careful about who you take advice from or give advice to. Don't be afraid to say "I don't know." Ask yourself: Is the guy who is giving me advice really an experienced homebrewer? Am I?
-- We learned a lot in this process. You guys have made this a better receiver.
-- Be careful about starting over... Bill and Dean's homebrew nightmare!
Just 30 minutes prior to this, my wife Elisa happened to see on Instagram a map showing the flight path of the Falcon 9. We didn't know that this was coming! I checked and got a live feed from Cape Canaveral of the launch. I figured we might see something if we looked to the north-west. Wow, did we. The Falcon 9 put on an amazing display. On January 25, 2025 we had seen a meteor-bolide fireball on a similar track. That was quite something, but this was really amazing. You can hear our excitement in the audio.
Thr bright object is Venus. The rocket appears to turn off its engines shortly after (from our point of view) it passes Venus.Our friend Todd (Vasily) had recently been thinking about this on his excellent Popcorn Electronics blog:
https://qrp-popcorn.blogspot.com/
There are many answers to this question. Todd's post made me think about a message from Farhan VU2ESE on this same subject. See: https://www.vu2ese.com/index.php/2022/08/04/daylight-an-all-analog-radio/ My comment and a quote from Farhan appears below:
Hello Todd! I have been thinking about the same things. As you know there is a lot of magic in using gear that you have built yourself. And it is still possible to do this. But I think the builder has to make some choices: Building it yourself might -- as you say -- require you to move away from the perfection, bells and whistles of the modern ICOM 7300 style rigs while embracing the simple functioning of analog rigs. Farhan was thinking of this three years ago:
"So here we are, talking analog radios in 2022. Here is the memo : The analog never died. The world is analog all the way, until you descend into Quantum madness. The antennas are analog, Maxwell died a content, analog man. Our radios, ultimately, are analog machines and we are all analog beasts too. Amateur Radio technology has evolved into the digital domain. However, it has only made it easier for us to do analog with computers to simulate and print our circuits. So, it’s time to bid good bye to our Arduinos and Raspberry Pis and build an Analog Radio for ourselves. So let’s see what we can achieve in hindsight, a return to our native land and a rethink of our approaches. The radio is called Daylight Again, a nod to being back at the FDIM in 2022 after a gap of two years. It is named after the Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young’s song that had been humming all the time while put this radio together, emerging after 2 years of lockdown. This radio that took two days to come together, no actually two years! That’s: parts of it got built and stowed away, thoughts were struck in the shower, questions popped up during early morning cycle rides and notes and circuits were scribbled in the notebook. I must take the first of many diversion here: I hope you all maintain a notebook. Write down the date and whatever you thought or did on the bench and the result. Nothing is trivial enough to leave out. Wisdom comes to those who write notes. I started to build this on Saturday the 14th May and I checked into the local SSB net on Monday morning, the 16th May 2022. Back to the radio. What can an analog radio do that will appeal to us homebrewers?"
More to follow. 73 Bill Hi7/N2CQR
So there I was, early Saturday morning (earlier here -- we are one hour ahead of the East Coast) listening -- as I do -- to the Old Military Radio net. 3385 kHz AM. I use the K3FEF Web SDR in Pennsylvania. I heard a station that sounded familiar: Chris W4SVA. He said he was in the Shenandoah valley and was receiving on an R-390A and transmitting with a homebrew rig. I kind of remembered talking to a guy with a station like that. I searched through the SolderSmoke blog. No joy. Then I remembered it was probably a log entry. There he is, W4SVA. Here is his QRZ page: https://www.qrz.com/db/W4SVA I was almost certainly on the K2ZA DX-100.
Here's my log entry:
------------------
12 August 2018
75AM W4SVA Chris in the Shenandoah, 15 miles south of Harrisonburg. Very FB. AM guy. Building rack-mount rig. Lots of HB stuff. Sent him the Shenandoah rocket pictures.
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I also heard Buzz W3EMD from the Hudson Valley -- the dynamotor was clearly audible. FB Buzz.
Thanks Chris. And thanks again to John Zaruba for the DX-100.
SolderSmoke Challenge – Bonus Episode – Using your oscilloscope to test your DCR
New homebrew radio builders often struggle with test and measurement. You can build a board perfectly but if you don’t have your tools setup correctly you won’t be able to tell if your board is working, or worse you’ll thing it is not working when it is working perfectly. In this bonus episode Dean, KK4DAS takes us through the basics of configuring and oscilloscope to test the boards, particularly the PTO oscillator, buffer, and the mixer.
We say this often, but if you really want to learn about oscilloscopes and test and measurement there is no better resource than our friend Alan, W2AEW’s YouTube Channel. Check it out!
Alan Wolke, W2AEW’s YouTube Channel:
https://youtube.com/@w2aew?si=
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