Congratulations Adam!
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Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
Congratulations Adam!
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This one is kind of "out there," on the fringes of radio respectability. But on the other hand Nate KA1MUQ has just took to a new limit the old ham radio tradition of raiding the kitchen for items that will serve the bases of support for new rigs. Usually, these items are wooden breadboards (hence the term). Nate has taken this quite a bit further, appropriating an entire frying pan because of its copper bottom. Nate reports that there is good news and bad news: The good news is that the receiver is working. The bad news is that his wife has banned him from the kitchen. It takes a brave and dedicated homebrewer to do something like this. Kudos Nate. But you probably should stay out of the kitchen.
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Nice job Piotr! Congratulations! In his comments he captures well the excitement that comes from listening to receiver as it first comes to life:
Piotr writes:
It's alive! Thank you Solder Smoke team. My winding on PTO bit loose, I think I'll just hot glue gun it. Tuning is delicate, but front panel added some friction. Need to swap audio pot (used linear I had handy), and speaker is 12R (from junk box). Audio stage has a lot of gain - that stage alone did pick up loud AM station with my finger as antenna :). Thanks again de Piotr KD9NHZ
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Mark KI5SRY came up with a very innovative solution for the tuning dial problem. See above. My solution was much less sophisticated: At the suggestion of VK3YE, I just put a calibrated card underneath the screw. By looking at the screw edge from above, I could get a rough estimate of where I was in the band:
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It was highly appropriate that Wayde's first reception report should be of CHU Canada, the Canadian time signal on 7.850 MHz, a bit above the 40 meter band, but clearly in tuning range for an unmodified SolderSmoke direct conversion receiver. CHU is probably unique in the world in that it is transmitting the carrier and JUST ONE SIDEBAND. It transmits only the upper sideband. This makes it clearly detectable by our receiver. As Dean pointed out to Wayde, all he had to do was "zero beat" the carrier with the PTO signal (tune to the point where they are on the same frequency and the audio tone disappears). Because there is only one sideband, the direct conversion receiver can demodulate it very well. If there had been two sidebands, this would have been a standard AM signal, and our little receiver -- which does very well with SSB and CW -- would have been unable to demodulate the signal without distortion. (For an explanation of why this is, see: https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2022/12/but-why-why-cant-i-listen-to-dsb-or-am.html Warning -- this is kind of in the "advanced course" category.)
Here is an overhead shot of Wayde's receiver:
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Jim wrote:
I am not just an appliance operator now but only half way through. Time to make a transmitter!
A little about me I became interested in Ham radio about 45 years ago in Boy Scouts I tried really hard with my Radio shack straight key and morse code chart to learn code by myself and just could never get it. Fast forward to last year and I had a friend who did CERT and he told be about it and said he used 2 meter for communications I was impressed and said “how did you learn morse code?” he replied “ I didn’t you don’t need it anymore” I promptly signed up for Ham in a day in June and got my technician license and my then my general in August. I have been studying radio ever since. This project was perfect for me. I like to make things I have been a mechanic for 40 years plus ASE master. Fixed all sorts of crazy electrical issues but DC and RF are way different lol.
Again Thanks Bill and Dean you don’t know what you have started. 73s KF8BOG
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In many ways it was for guys like John W8UC that we launched this project. These are guys who have been hams for a long time, but -- like most hams -- never built anything. Most guys don't see this as a problem. But some guys just don't like to think of themselves as "appliance operators." For years the ARRL and others told hams that receivers were just too difficult for them to build. We found this not to be true. So we launched this project, first at a local high school, then to a larger group.
In his comments John says he has been an appliance operator for 48 years. Well, you are an appliance operator no more John -- you have built a receiver.
John wrote:
I can hear the signals on a receiver I built so I am super happy about that... I have learned more in the last month about how a receiver works than I have in the last 48 years of being an appliance operator. Thank you Dean and Bill. 3. Would like to build a transmitter next. Also a receiver for another band.
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