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Wednesday, September 29, 2021
N2CQR (WN2QHL) Novice Station Re-Created
Tuesday, September 28, 2021
The World Friendship Society of Radio Amateurs
Rod's son David Newkirk is radio wizard himself and has produced many great articles for QST and other publications. His dad is a Silent Key and David has taken his call.
This morning I was looking at an article on David's web site in which he looks at some of his dad's old QSL cards. Most of the affiliations on the cards (ARRL etc.) are easily recognizable, but there was one that was unclear: WFSRA.
David figured out what it was:
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A W9BRD Affiliation Mystery Solved
My father's pre-World-War-Two QSL cards include the usual list of affiliations: ORS (Official Relay Station), RCC (Rag Chewer's Club), WAC (Worked All Continents), A-1 Op (A-1 Operator's Club). One affiliation, WFSRA, remained mysterious. A clue in the correspondence column in March 1938 QST pointed me to an "I. A. R. U. News" item on page 74 of July 1935 QST, and I had my answer:
W.F.S.R.A.:
The World Friendship Society of Radio Amateurs has requested publication of the following pledge, which is the sole obligation for membership in the Society:
"I hereby promise that I will, to the best of my ability, make such use of my amateur radio station as will be conducive to international friendships; that I will never voluntarily permit by station to be used as the tool of selfish nationalistic interests; and that I will do what I can, as a radio amateur and as an individual, to promote world peace and understanding. (To be followed by the signature, address and station call.)"
Membership in the Society is open to all amateurs in all countries. All that is necessary to become a member is to copy and sign the pledge, and send it to the secretary, Duane Magill, W9DQD, 730 N. 6th St, Grand Junction, Colorado, U.S.A. Copies are preferably to be made in English or French, but may be made in the language of the member."
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The WFSRA was apparently one of the many, many peace organizations that were born in the interwar period in response to the carnage of WWI. In addition to the QST correspondence mentioned by David, Google shows WFSRA in many articles in UK ham and SWL publications, and there is one mention of it in the May 1954 edition of Boy's Life magazine.
Much as the CBLA seems to have been presaged by the FMLA, the IBEW seems to have much in common with the WFSRA.
Monday, September 27, 2021
Lighthouse Larry's GE Sideband Handbook
Saturday, September 25, 2021
VE7SL's Beautiful Single Tube Transmitter and Single Tube Regen Receiver
RECEIVER: https://qsl.net/ve7sl/neophyte.html
TRANSMITTER: https://qsl.net/ve7sl/neotx.html?fbclid=IwAR3cM6tSRjyTsNouHWVz_buuzz4C9O-IwQbdZM5dekkle69ZW7-JBQcHTVI
Three cheers for Steve VE7SL! I've been linking to his blog for several years, but somehow I missed this magnificent red rig.
Steve's online notebook: https://www.qsl.net/ve7sl/
Steve's blog: http://ve7sl.blogspot.com/
Friday, September 24, 2021
Video: N2CQR Talks About Homebrew SSB with The Vienna Wireless Society's Makers Group
Thursday, September 23, 2021
Great News for Homebrewers: JF1OZL's Amazing Web Site is Back!
https://www.qrp-ja.net/jf1ozl/index.html
There is a LOT of tribal knowledge and lot of great ideas on his site. Kazuhiro-san has apparently quit wireless, but is climbing mountains near his home. We hope is doing well and that he will someday return to radio (perhaps for the peak of cycle 25).
We last posted about him back in 2011. In the comments to that post you can see the sad news about the demise of his web site (which is now back on the web):
http://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2011/12/homebrew-hero-kazuhiro-sunamura-jf1ozl.html
JF1OZL's bio:
My name is Kazuhiro Sunamura. I am a 50 year old mechanical engineer, born in 1956. I am not an engineer in electronics. I have been interested in electricity and radio from the age of ten. For the last ten years, I have been active on my ham radio station JF10ZL. I have also written articles about my some of my radio projects in Japanese for the Japanese CQ Magazine. Now I have decided to get onto the internet and will take the opportunity of showing you my equipment and ideas. Please have a look at my schematics. I will be very happy if this material helps you with your own radio projects. I am a member of the J.A.R.L. affiliated Tsuchiura Club, the local ham club in my home town.
Wednesday, September 22, 2021
Some Initial Thoughts on FT-8
-- This is really interesting technology. Three cheers for Joe Taylor and colleagues. This mode would obviously be very useful for fast, weak signal contacts as are needed on meteor scatter or EME.
-- FT-8 does give you the chance to work DX that would have been difficult on other modes.
-- Chinese hams showing up on FT-8 -- more than other modes.
-- I think FT-8 is good for hams who just want to have a lot of "contacts." It is definitely not for the rag-chewer.
-- I find it it kind of cold and antisocial. More like a computer game than ham radio. A bit like sending short text messages on a cell phone.
-- I think FT-8 contacts are in some ways more meaningless than a "59!" contest exchange -- unless you look, you don't even know the report you got, nor do you know the report you sent.
-- For me it is more impersonal than CW. But at least we let the technology decode the characters instead of having to memorize dot and dash sounds. In a phone contact you can hear the other person's laugh. In a CW QSO, you hear him key "HI HI." FT-8? No laughter at all.
-- With PSK Reporter, FT-8 gives you a good feel for how propagation changes during the day. But it is kind of like 2-way WSPR. As with WSPR, it is -- at first -- fascinating, but then it loses its charm. Yes, everyday you are heard in Belgium.
-- It seems to be getting kind of crowded. The passband for FT-8 contacts is often full, and it is hard to find an open space.
-- There is little opportunity for the homebrewer. I hooked it up to my homebrew transceivers and had a small bit of fun using a 2N3904 as a switch triggered by the RTS signal for T/R. But that's about it.
-- I get the sense that the ham himself is not really needed in FT-8. This mode seems like it could easily be automated or run by an AI. Just tell it to go out there, make a lot of contacts and log them. Maybe prioritize the DX you "need." Has this already been done?
-- After a session with FT-8, I had a really nice 17 meter ragchew SSB QSO. That SSB contact left me happy. The FT-8 session was a bit like spending time on social media or a video game. It left me edgy. FT-8 made me appreciate phone even more.
But hey, to each his own. A lot of people really like FT-8. I hope they have fun.
Monday, September 20, 2021
Opening up an Apollo Command Module Microwave Radio System
Sunday, September 19, 2021
Much SSB Tribal Knowledge in Bill Orr's 1959 Handbook
Here is the link to the Orr book:
Thanks to Tony K3DY for sending us the link that led us to this book. There are many other great books there: http://www.rsp-italy.it/Electronics/Books/indexhtm
Saturday, September 18, 2021
SolderSmoke Goes FT-8 (Briefly, I Think)
Thursday, September 16, 2021
The HBR-13C Receiver and the Poetic License of Homebrewers
I've been hanging out on 17 meters with my homebrew VXO-controlled BITX transceiver. The antenna is my 75 meter doublet fed with window line through a homebrew tuner made from dead ( I swear) DX-40s and DX-60s. I can tune it up just fine on 17 meters, but I realize I probably have lots of nulls and lobes in the radiation pattern. Apparently one of the lobes is over my old stomping grounds in Panama. Almost everyday I talk to either HP9SAM or HP3SS.
Robby, HP3SS, is using SDR gear now, but he was a real homebrewer back in the day. Years ago he built an HBR-13C receiver. That's quite an achievement.
Robby -- formerly VY2SS -- told me that he sold his HBR-13C to none other than Joe Walsh, the rockstar from The Eagles. FB.
As I was talking to Robby yesterday, I came across this wonderful web page about the receiver:
https://sparcradio.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Restoring-a-HBR-13-Amateur-Receiver.pdf
Robby told me that his receiver looked almost exactly like the one on the SPARC site, but he didn't recognize the small box with what looked like a speaker on the chassis. I told him that my guess was that this was a crystal calibrator in an oven.
I also told Robby that I feel an affinity with the HBR project, not just because I like homebrew superhets, but also because my call in the UK was M0HBR.
There are some great quotes in the SPARC pdf:
The SPARC page led me to the amazing website of Kees K5BCQ:
https://www.qsl.net/k5bcq/HBR/hbr.html
Here is Kees's QRZ page: