Just go to http://soldersmoke.com. On that archive page, just click on the blue hyperlinks and your audio player should play that episode.
http://soldersmoke.com
https://aa7ee.wordpress.com/2019/01/03/putting-the-hifer-brs-boris-beacon-on-the-air-finally/ From Dave's blog: The beacon sends the letters “BRS” at 10wpm, with a break of 3 or 4 seconds between the end of one transmission and the beginning of the next, with a mighty power to the dipole of about 1mW. The frequency is a nominal 13556.9KHz (13.5569MHz), which varies either way by a few tens of Hz, depending on the outside ambient temperature. I will be overjoyed if anyone, anywhere hears it!There is no battery, so it transmits during daylight hours only. It comes on about half an hour after local sunrise, and goes off about half an hour before local sunset. I’ll update this with more accurate information, as I observe the on and off times over the next few days. --------------- AA7EE is in Oakland California. His cat is named SPRAT. Please send him a report (and if possible a recording) if you hear his beacon.
We don't carry many music videos on this blog, but this one definitely belongs here. We've mentioned Brian May several times: Lead guitarist in the rock group Queen. PhD Astrophysicist. I didn't know that he went to work as a full member of the New Horizons (Pluto and beyond) mission. The video is definitely for us -- it features a lot of antennas. And it includes the computer-generated voice of Stephen Hawkings. Read more about Brian's careers and about his latest adventure here: https://www.space.com/42875-brian-may-new-horizons-song-ultima-thule-flyby.html
New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern poses with astrophysicist and Queen lead guitarist Brian May on Dec. 31, 2018 at Johns Hopkins' Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland just before New Horizons flew by Ultima Thule.
I got the HT-37 working just a few days before the New Year's Eve/New Year's Day Straight Key Night event. Looking at my older blog posts, I now see that the problems first surfaced in LAST YEAR's SKN. Wow, it took me a long time to get to that problem. But I'm glad I fixed it in time for SKN. For SKN I used the VU3XVR straight key from India that Farhan gave to me. See the picture above.
I started out on 80 meters on New Year's eve. I rarely operate on that band -- I thought it would be a good change of pace. Here is who I contacted on 80 CW: In the warm-up period before the official start of SKN I worked John KU4AF. John was running a homebrew tube transmitter and a REGEN receiver. Respect, my friends. RESPECT! N9EP Ed near Chicago was on a K3. VE9XX Don was on a KX3. NJ8D Tom in Ohio. K4IA, Buck, down the road in Fredricksburg Va. Buck was running a Drake TR4C with a Begali key. FB Buck. He mentioned that he had had a Drake 2B -- he said he regrets selling it. Indeed. VE9WW Bill in Moncton NB. On a straight key. AA8MI Gene (gosh, that name really sings in CW -- try it!) in Ohio. Gene was running 5 watts from a K3. This added a needed QRP element to the festivities. Thanks Gene. AI4SV Jack in Rockville Md. OH MY GOD! NOW I REALIZE WHO THIS WAS! Jack! Jack of Antanarivo Madagsascar! And now I understand what he said to me. He said in CW that my HT-37 has "Lots of presence." Huh? What? I couldn't figure out what he was talking about, but now I realize that he was joking about all our discussions mocking the poor audiophiles. Well, thanks Jack. I'm glad the rig has presence, EVEN ON CW! THIS QSO GETS MY VOTE FOR BEST SKN QSO. I also listened for a while to W3GMS. His signal had a lot of character and personality. He was telling the other fellow that he suspected this was the result of a soft voltage regulator tube in his DX-60. I think he was also using a Drake 2-B. I didn't get a chance to talk to Howard, but I'm sure it would have been fun. On New Year's morning I switched bands. First to 40 where I worked Greg NM2L near Atlanta. He said he fingers and wrist were out of condition, but I told him his fist was FB. Then I went to 20 CW where I worked a bit of DX. First David F8CRS then Bert F6HKA. The contact with Bert reminded me of the charms of DX contacts using CW. "VY GM DR OM." It was nice. N7AQQ Mike in Montana. So it was a good SKN for me. Working the French stations reminded me of the allure of listening to CW coming in from far away, and from a foreign culture. And it was great to hear from AI4SV that my HT-37 has "presence" even on CW. 73 and HNY to all.
Look, it has been 60 years, so I'm not looking for my money back or anything, but having just repaired the LV power supply choke on my very venerable Hallicrafters HT-37, I started thinking about how and why it failed. Clues: -- I found it with four of the windings broken, with the eight broken leads kind of sticking out of the winding wrap.
-- The four broken leads were on the outside of the winding (thank God!) an were at the part of the winding closest to the chassis and the back of the cabinet. (See picture below.) -- There was evidence of burning on at least two of the leads. -- The choke is located in the extreme back corner of the chassis, near the back of the cabinet. -- The paper and cellophane wrapping around the windings was a bit deteriorated. So, what is your diagnosis? What happened to cause the choke to go open?
I had some time over the holiday to finish off my second
scratch-built rig. I am very thankful that I got the work done on these
projects before I read Pete's "Don't Build It" diatribe. That
would have been very demoralizing. :-)
Scratch build #2 (called Peppermint III) is still fundamentally
BITX although I've made changes this time around. I've
switched to ADE-1 mixers with LO ports driven by adjustable gain buffers
(ala N6QW LBS). I've noticed that performance can be improved a lot if
you can buffer/tweak the LO levels of the VFO and BFO (particularly carrier
suppression on TX). I did W7ZOI TIAs in the IF chain. I've also
taken the shielding/layout of the finals more seriously and have been able to
dial up the power a lot (I did the KB1GMX thing with cutting off the drain pin
on the IRF510 and using the tab). The software is also greatly improved
and now supports LSB/USB modes as well as software-driven PTT control for
RTTY/FT8 and the hooks for my poor man's panadaptor. I've been working
lots of stations on QRO.
Total build time was about three months (half the time of #1)
and the layout came out much smaller than before. I made a trip over to
Williams/Sonoma after Christmas and picked up the 2018 edition of the
Peppermint Bark candy tin on discount and I think I can make it all fit.
More to follow ...
This week I found myself with some unexpected free-time, courtesy of the government shutdown. And of course, my thoughts turned to the HT-37. I started thinking about the open choke in the power supply. Four wires were sticking out of one side, four sticking out of the other. Figuring out which went to which would have driven me nuts. But it occurred to me that I could just wrap the four one on both sides together, and then just connect them with a piece of wire (see above). I'd end up sacrificing three windings, but that shouldn't matter.
It worked. My AADE L/C meter won't measure up into the full Henry range, but the choke was no longer open and the resistance looked right (about 230 ohms).
I put it into the HT-37. It works. I had a long rag chew with AE2EE -- a guy who really knows his boatanchors. He said it sounded great. This contact was like icing on the cake. TRGHS.
Thanks to everyone who wrote in with offers of parts or suggestions on how to acquire a suitable replacement.
Special thanks to Steve Murphy, N8NM who removed the LV choke from a junker HT-37and mailed it to me JUST AS I WAS LEARNING THAT THIS REPAIR WOULD WORK. I feel bad about putting Steve to the trouble. I blame the shut-down. Idle hands are the devil's workshop. And that broken HT-37 was bothering me.
This was a very satisfying repair. It was great fun to put the old rig back on the air. And I did it without injuring myself. Straight Key Night is right around the corner.
Terminal strip for newer caps. Repaired choke went to the two ends of the strip.
Ryan W7RLF has joined the small and elite group of radio amateurs who have homebrewed a receiver. And it is a receiver filled with soul, juju and mojo; the project was inspired by Wes Hayward and Farhan, and used components from Hans Summers. Congratulations Ryan and thanks for all the work you did in documenting your experience. Who will be the next intrepid ham to join the homebrew receiver club? Hello Sirs!
This month I read Wes Hayward's post on the history and heritage of DC receivers in ham radio and it brought a lingering interest to a head. I had to build one. I run the BITX40 and uBITX group on Facebook, and I posted to the other hams there: Which DC receiver should I build? Farhan recommended his DC40. Mind you, I've never homebrewed a radio before, so this is all new territory for me.
I did build it, and it does work. It also uses QRP Labs stuff from our friend Hans Summers. This thing has a lot of QRP heritage :) I documented it every step of the way including all of my dumb moves and things I got wrong, and my desire is to inspire others to try homebrewing the way Wes, Farhan, Hans, and you YOU GUYS have inspired me to try it. I am hooked, of course! Here's a link to my blog to Part 1:
It's a four part series (unofficially 5 really) with 8000 words to it, and I hope you guys enjoy it and I'd be ticked pink if was worthy of mention on your show. Here's a video of it too:
First -- Happy Boxing Day to all our UK and Commonwealth friends. Oscar 11 is a UK-built amateur satellite launched in 1984. It has been dead (well, almost dead) for many years. But when the sun shines on the solar panels, it wakes up and transmits. I've been able to hear it and -- more usefully -- see it on my RTL-SDR HD-SDR receive system. My antenna is my re-born (from the Dominican Republic) three element homebrew 2 meter cubical quad (see pictures below). I'm sorry the video is a bit out of focus, but you can clearly see the trace of the signal from the satellite. Realize that my HD-SDR software is about 10 kHz off calibration. You can see the Doppler shift, and you can see the signal fading in and out as the old satellite tumbles through space. Any ideas on what the other signals seen off to the side are? Is anyone else listening for Oscar 11? https://amsat-uk.org/satellites/telemetry/uosat-2-oscar-11/
Following my own advice to prepare for Straight Key Night, I tried to fire up my venerable Hallicrafters HT-37 transmitter. It didn't work. I quickly determined that none of the oscillators were working, so my troubleshooting focused on the power supply. Sure enough, the choke in the low voltage power supply is open. That's bad. I briefly considered giving up on this old rig. I don't really like working with tubes anymore. And this thing is very heavy -- a real beast. DX-100-like in its heaviness. It can be hazardous to your health just moving this thing around. Opening up the case is not easy. And there are nasty voltages in there.... But I have had this transmitter since 1973 or 1974. I have fixed it many times, in several countries. I got it from a member of the Crystal Radio Club when I was a kid. There are parts given to me by Pericles, HI8P in the Dominican Republic. I used it to transmit through Russian satellites. That transmitter is like an old friend. I just can't give up on it. So I need to replace or repair the choke. Is there anyone out there who has a junker out in the garage or some other source of L25? Or does anyone know of a business that could rewind the choke. Please let me know. I have decided to leave the rig on the bench until I get this thing fixed (it is too heavy to move multiple times!) It it Hallicrafters Part Number 056-300259. L25 -- 9 Henries at 135 ma. Help!
SolderSmoke Podcast #208 is available: http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke208.mp3 15 December 2018 Pete and the California fires Bill goes to Brooklyn 2 meter simplex A return of the trivial electric motor Audio from Mars HF Conditions -- a real mixed bag Pete looks back at 2018 -- The Year of the SSB Transceiver -- Lessons Learned Hans Summers, the QSX and the virtues of SDR W7ZOI's DC Receiver Retrospective The 1972 Solar Flare and the Vietnam War SHAMELESS COMMERCE: Buy your gifts through the Amazon link to the upper right. Consider SolderSmoke the book as a gift. Visit Pasta Pete's for cooking ideas. Don't Build It! Sage -- but unexpected -- advice from Pete. Straight Key Night approaches. Book Reviews: --"What is Real?" (Quantum Physics) -- RHdb by K6LHA. Movies "Bohemian Rhapsody" "First Man" (Not yet!) MAILBAG: Steve G0FUW Ed KC8SBV
I feel a moral obligation to put these projects on the blog every time I see one. It just seems like the right thing to do. Great work on the Pilotron. Great workshop video also.
I agree completely with the e-mojis. Wow! Cool! I love it! Hans Summers is a genius. This is almost enough to make me get with the program and embrace SDR. Hans has done what seemed to have been impossible: true homebrew with SDR.
How long will it be before NASA starts getting critical comments on the audio quality, along with very confident statements about how to change the audio settings on the menu? Well, at least they have "presence." The Elser Mathes Cup awaits a winner!
Today's SpaceX Falcon 9 launch of Farhan's Exseed Satellite was really spectacular. Congratulations Farhan! Really inspirational stuff. Now we wait to hear the bird. If I have loaded the orbital information correctly, I should have my first chance this evening. I have my antenna positioned.
Farhan posted this message and the above video to Facebook today (I have the video cued up to around the 5 minute point): We are all set for the launch of ExseedSat... There are two tiny switches at the bottom of the satellite that keep the satellite switched off while it stays in it's container. Once the satellite is ejected, the switches are released and the satellite wakes up. There are 36 satellites on this launch, some belong to close friends in the satellite fraternity. We wait for all the satellites to drift out and after 45 minutes, the antennas are depolyed and we will start beeping signals home. Here is a test of that process. You can skip to the fifth minute to watch the antenna depoly . I really like the tape measure antenna. This recalls the earliest OSCAR satellites. And let's not forget that OSCAR 1 also launched from Vandenberg. So there a lot of good tradition flying with Farhan's bird. Press reports indicate a launch time of 1:31 pm Eastern time today. I think you can watch it live through the video window below. Or try this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wq8kS6UoOrQ
I walked into the shack this morning hoping to read good news about the InSight landing and the impending launch of Farhan's satellite, but instead I found this message from Farhan in a police station. This is really absurd and disheartening. Someone (not Farhan!) altered the Indian flag and put it into an image of Farhan's CubeSat. So with 24 hours to go before the launch, our friend Farhan finds himself in a police station.
Stay strong Farhan! You have a lot of support around the world.
I understand the launch of Farhan's CubeSat has been delayed a few days. That's the way it works in the rocket launch biz --patience is required. In the meantime, I've been practicing with my receive system. Today at 1000 local the Max Valier satellite flew to my west. It rose 78 degrees above my horizon to the W NW. I left my three element quad pointed in that direction and waited for the satellite (which had been launched from India) to fly through its pattern. The CW beacon was quite strong, very visible and audible through my RTL-SDR dongle and HD-SDR software. You can see it and hear it in the video above. There is something quite charming about this very personal Morse message coming down from orbit and then passing through all that digital technology. More info on the satellite:
"Max Valier Sat" is an amateur satellite built in cooperation by:
"Max Valier" High School in Bolzano/Bozen (Italy)
OHB System AG from Bremen (Germany)
Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics from Garching (Germany)
Its main payload is an X-Ray telescope devised and made by MPE. Data generated by this detector will be transmitted, together with housekeeping data, over an amateur radio link with frequency 145.860 MHz.
A second payload is an amateur radio beacon transmitting a message in Continuous Wave. The beacon's frequency is 145.960 MHz
"Max Valier Satellite" was launched by the Indian Rocket PSLV-C38 on June 23, 2017 at 9:29 am IST (05:59 am CET) from Satish Dhawan Space Centre.
SpaceX will live-stream the launch as well on their YouTube stream. Also - this will be the first SpaceX booster to fly three times, and the first to launch from all three SpaceX pads.
http://w7zoi.net/dcrx68.pdf Farhan and Pete WB9FLW alerted me to this wonderful article by Wes Hayward, W7ZOI. I guess my interest in DC receivers must have been noticed by the Google algorithm because I am bombarded by ads extolling the virtues of "Zero IF." Hey Google -- I'm already a believer! I was converted by W7ZOI's 1968 article in QST. And my belief in the technique has been greatly reinforced by his November 2018 50th anniversary article. There is so much good stuff in Wes's look-back piece. The travails of trying to write for QST are presented very well. And we learn that none-other-than Doug DeMaw himself is responsible for the use of the word "presence" in describing amateur radio audio. This article has inspired me to take a new look at the DC receiver I built last winter. Mine needs some work. I think it is kind of deaf. It could probably benefit from a diode ring detector. But it already has presence. http://w7zoi.net/dcrx68.pdf Thanks Wes. And thanks to Farhan and Pete for the heads up.
I've been getting ready for the November 24 launch of the CubeSat that Farhan and his friends in India built. I started out with my trusty Drake 2-B and a Hamtronics 2-to-10 downconverter, but I quickly switched to an RTL-SDR dongle and HD-SDR software. My 3 element quad antenna is visible in the first video. So far, I am using the Armstrong method to turn the antenna. In that first video I keep saying that I am waiting for AO-71. In fact is was AO-73, the "FunCube" from the UK. I think it is similar in power and antenna configuration to Farhan's satellite, so I think we are almost ready for launch. (Any ideas on what that mysterious pulsating sig in the satellite passband signal is in the first video?)
"SolderSmoke -- Global Adventures in Wireless Electronics" is now available as an e-book for Amazon's Kindle.
Here's the site:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004V9FIVW
Bill's OTHER Book (Warning: Not About Radio)
Click on the image to learn more
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Pete Juliano N6QW
Master Homebrewer
Dean Souleles KK4DAS
With beret and with a Michigan Mighty Mite in hand
HRWB 245 - Projects with Pat Hensley, W5WTH
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In this episode our good friend Pat Hensley, W5WTH, joins us to talk about
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will carry a live feed of the launch