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Monday, April 21, 2025

SolderSmoke Podcast #259 FCC ban of DC Receivers. Pete and Stickers, Mouse Knob, MHST. DC RX Update. Dean and SDR RX, Mythbuster Transceiver, Frequency Counter. Bill's Shack -- Suburban Renewal, Boatanchor Removal, DJI Drone . MAILBAG

Dean KK4DAS's 20 Meter Transceiver

Video Version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RslKbpBuYDI

Audio Version: http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke259.mp3

Reports of FCC action against Direct Conversion receivers. Outrageous!  They are going to prosecute Dean and Bill.  The 85th harmonic was apparently interfereing with Starlink satellites over Melbourne Australia, Bali, New Zealand's North Island, the UK, Sweden, Holland and Argentina. Who knew? 

Here's the question:  How many paragraphs of this post did you read before you realized this was an April 1 thing?  C'mon, please let us know.  Bill falls for one or two every year.  This year he believed that Warren Buffet really had bought Tesla. So, don't feel alone.  Fess up.  

Travelogue:  Pete's trip to Los Olivos.  DMV Real ID Blues.  Going back to San Francisco? Pete, we have some new stickers... 

Pete's Bench:  MHST progress. Raspberry Pi.  VWS.  Transceiver.     K7TFC's Mouse Knob. 

Dean and Bill update on the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Challenge:  56 receivers built.  And 56 is a lot! Info and especially Dean's videos are still up on the Discord server and on YouTube.  Not to late to build!  All builders should try to encourage at least one other person to build this receiver.  In this way, builders become Elmers and homebrewing can spread.  Others have already done this -- you can do it too!  W4KAC built a second one for a friend.  WZ5M built one, helped a friend do a second, and a third one may be on the way.  MakeIt Labs in Nashua, NH is responsible for 4 DC receivers.  See all the completed receivers here: 

https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/search/label/DC%20RX%20Hall%20of%20Fame

Once you have the receiver going, start the mods!  Front panels!  Antennas! Better tuning!  Si5351s! DSB transmitters! Tell us about your mods. 

SHAMELESS COMMERCE DIVISION:   Become a Patreon Sponsor!  MostlyDIYRF.  Buy Amazon stuff through the Amazon link on our blog site.  Subscribe to our video YouTube channel. 

Dean's Bench:  SDR Receiver project.  20 meter Mythbuster build (a thing of beauty).  Homebrew Frequency Counter.  Balloons!  

Bill's Bench:  Suburban renewal.  New floor, new paint, got rid of a lot of junk.  New operating table from Husky.  DX-60, DX-40, VF-1, and maybe even the Lafayette HA-600A receiver have to go. Many books and magazines too.   Lightening the load!   But keeping the DX-100, HQ-100, HT-37 and, of course, the Drake 2-B.  Boatanchors station. Beacon operations. 

N2CQR's new operating table

Boatanchor Corner at N2CQR

Bought a new DJI Drone, but will use it in the Dominican Republic (not here!).  And I got my Drone TRUST Certificate. 

Mailbag:  

Dave W2DAB doing Manhattan building on the island of Manhattan!  

Rich K2GJ (ex WA0CGM) -- Nice ham radio memories of his HT-37.  Thanks Rich. 

Wes W4JYK -- A VWS DC receiver. 

A nice note from Farhan VU2ESE. 

Todd K7TFC -- Simple vs. Complex

Paul WA1MAC Gluestick 80 meter QRP

Armand WA1UQO Regen receiver highlighted by AA7EE

Dave AA7EE -- FIGHT BACK AGAINST THE FCC!  Build the DC Receiver! 

Rogier PA1ZZ Many great videos, including one on Heathkit

Bruce KC1FSZ --  Nominated us for ARRL award.  Thanks Bruce. 

Bob KD4EBM--  Looking into Polar Modulation. https://qrp-labs.com/qmxp/ssbbeta.html

Peter VK2EMU -- Thought of Peter when I briefly took down the N2CQR sign he made. 

Victor HI7S -- 46 km away from my place in the DR.  Says I won the lottery...  He is right. 

Jim KI4THC        Got his Extra ticket.  Congratulations Jim. 

Kirk NT0Z    -- On Kits, Hombrew,  and the influence of Russian Homebrewers. 

Were Russian spies taught how to homebrew their own spy radios? 

Rich K2GJ with his 2B, and Heath GR-91

Inside Dean's Transceiver

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Agent Sonya -- Did Soviet Spies Really Homebrew Their Rigs?

Ursula Kuczynski (Agent Sonya), 1936.Credit...via Peter Beurton

My recent blog post about the intrepid Soviet hams who homebrewed versions of the UW3DI SSB transceiver led to a comment about early Soviet era overseas intel officers who -- supposedly -- homebrewed their own transmitters and perhaps receivers.  

Here is a New York Times review of the book that mentions the homebrewing by spies:

Here's the Wiki page on Sonya:

Tony Percy took a look at the homebrew claims:

Percy seems quite well informed about radio and about how believable Sonya's claims about her radio activities were.  He uses the Morse acronym QRP, talks about Maximum Useable Frequency, discusses antennas and the relative difficulty of building a receiver.  He also talks about the need for crystal controlled transmitters if the QRP transmitter was to have any hope of reaching Moscow Center.  In sum, he thinks the reports of Sonya's radio derring-do are just nonsense.  

I agree with Tony Percy.  I just think it would be impossible to take a newcomer, show them how to scratch-build a radio, send them to a foreign country, have them buy the needed parts, expect them to build the rig and the antenna... oh and learn to use the Morse Code along the way.  I just don't think that is possible.  

Is Tony Percy a ham?  What do you folks think about the plausibility of the claims about Sonya's radio prowess?  


Friday, April 18, 2025

A Homebrew Crystal Filter Shaped Like the Desired Passband -- by Andy KB7ZUT

 
Over on our Discord channel, some of those who have successfully built the SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver are starting to experiment with Double Sideband and even Single Sideband.  Andy KB7ZUT is experimenting with QER filters.  He recently wrote: 

My second attempt at a SSB crystal filter using the QER topology.  I think laying out the crystals to resemble the filter profile you want should help 😏

I think the Radio Gods would be pleased Andy. 

Here is a free invite to our Discord server: 

Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

Thursday, April 17, 2025

"Seems Like Radio is Here to Stay" -- Old Radio, Radio Magic


The first 12 minutes of this podcast are pretty good.  I think it captures well the wonder of radio -- magic carpets, signals taversing the Himalayas and all that -- but the presentation is kind of confused.  The PRX podcasters keep saying that it was recorded in the 1930s, but then we hear references to the Nuremburg trials and the possibility of sharing the atom bomb. So there is some confusion in the presentation. 

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/champions-of-old-radio/id453044527?i=1000702716017 

Can anyone find the original recording from the 1930s about the wonder of radio, without the references to things that happened in the late 1940s? 

Thanks to Rogier for sending this to me. 

Norman Corwin

Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Homebrew vs. Kits -- The influence of Russian Homebrewers

 
Click on the image for a better read. 

Like Kirk, I too was influenced by the Russian and Eastern European homebrewers.  As a kid, every issue of QST seemed to contain (especially in the "How's DX?" column) pictures of intrepid Russian homebrewers seated next to their HOMEBREW stations.  I wanted to be like them. 

When I first launched the Direct Conversion Receiver Challenge, someone decided that it would be better to make the receiver into a kit. He criticized me for deciding to keep this project homebrew. There seemed to be a lack of understanding of the difference. This morning I got an e-mail from Kirk NT0Z. He attached his column from the February 2013 issue of Monitoring Times. I think he captures very well the difference between kits and homebrew. An excerpt from the column appears above. I need to get a portrait of UW3DI to hang above my workbench. Thanks Kirk.

Here is more info on the UW3DI transceiver:

Monday, April 14, 2025

DJI Drones -- How it All Began (with a shout out to Frederick Terman)


Lots of interesting stuff in this video, including a short clip of non-other-than Frederick Terman, of Stanford University and Silicon Valley.  Like many of you, I have Terman's "Radio Engineer's Handbook" on my shelf. 

Sunday, April 13, 2025

The Amazing Technological Development of DJI Drones


Yes, the ability to hover is a really big deal. 

Kalman filtering.  Who knew? 

GPS, compasses, intertial navigation, redundancy.  Great stuff. 

NZ showed DJI that quadcopters were the way to go.  

The importance of brushless motors. 

It is really amazing how quickly quadcopters took over from ordinary helicopters.  The regs in the DC area that prevent us from flying quadcopters here were probably developed BEFORE the quadcopters were developed. 

I still wonder about why we still fly normal helicopters:  Take you hands off the controls of a helicopter and it will soon start to flip and fall.  Take you hands off the controls of a quadcopter and it will just hover in the sky.  When the batteries get low, it will return to the start point and land.    

I have a video taken by my Hanmilt drone on my Patreon channel.   I have already bought a DJI Mini 4K to fly in the DR. 

Friday, April 11, 2025

Mike KA4CDN's Engraved SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver -- Another VWS RX!


Mike KA4CDN is an experienced homebrewer and a member of the Vienna Wireless Society.  He took the SolderSmoke challenge and built the direct conversion receiver.  Congratulations Mike, and welcome to the Hall of Fame!  

Mike writes:

The goal of the project was mainly to test my conversion of my Ender3 3D printer into an engraver for making PC boards. Thank you Bill and Dean for leading the project. It had been a while since my soldering iron was hot on an RF electronics project. It is amazing how fast I get rusty and forget stuff. Now I'm going to pick back up on my crystal filter that I started I think two years ago
 ;-(  Awesome! 


For more information on how you too can build the receiver: 


Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Thursday, April 10, 2025

The History of MOSFETs -- Let us Remember the 40673. The IRF510. And others...


Lots of great history explained in this video.  I found myself thinking about our beloved 40673 dual gate MOSFET: 

https://hackaday.com/2016/03/21/the-curse-of-the-40673-zombie-components-that-refuse-to-leave-the-building/ 

And, of course,  about the IRF510.  

Monday, April 7, 2025

Asianometry on MOSFETs, MESFETS, CMOS and Moore


Asianometry does a pretty good job here.  I am sure people will quibble about some of his descriptions of radio, AF, and RF.  But overall, pretty good.  I did see what looked like a direct conversion receiver in his block diagrams, but it was described as a superhet.

I was also struck by what looked like the lack of shielding in the modern cell phones.  Some hams seem to believe that we cannot live without shielding.  But apparently we can.  

I also like how the bloc diagrams have the LO feeding mixers both on the receiver side and on the transmit side.  I realize that you can do this by switching the LO, but I like to feed both mixers at the same time.  

Asianometry talks about the need for inductors in the chips, and how this was often a show-stopper.  This made me think about the Gilbert Cell that we find in our beloved NE-602s.  Wasn't Barry Gilbert trying to create a balanced mixer that would not need coils? 

Finally, there is a nice review of the history of Silicon Labs.  I was hoping to see the Si570 and, of course, the Si5351.  But no, these seem to have come later than the slide used by Asianometry.  

Sunday, April 6, 2025

The Hall of Fame -- Completed SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receivers (So far --- more to come!)

Dean KK4DAS's Receiver

Please let us know if you spot any errors, or if we have inadvertently missed anyone.  Don't worry about being late to the game -- the challenge continues.  All of the info is still available (see below). 

As of April 29, 2025  0942Z:

So far 59 completed receivers, with 4 honorable mentions:  

NE3U (KY4EOD)  Matt 
KQ4AOP       First ham signals ever heard! 
N9TD             Derek
AC3NG          Ryan
VK3TPM       Peter Marks  
W4KAC         Ken 
W4KAC         Ken built a second one! 
N2EPE           Erik
VA3NCA        Wayde    
KI5SRY          Mark -- Gears on PTO screw
 
KA1MUQ       Frying pan receiver
AA1N              Adam
ZL1AUN         Aaron -- Using SSB transmitter
W8UC             Never before homebrewed. 
VK4PG           Phil -- Nice case, "really pleased"
G7LQX           Working well, video of CW and SSB. 
KE2AMP        John     Spring on PTO screw -- great
N9SZ              Steve  nice receiver
KD9NHZ        Piotr  Nice one
KE8ICE          Calvin, Very cool receiver. 
 
WV3V              Jayson!  Got it done!
GM5JDG         Martin.    
KF8BOG          Jim:  A long struggle, but success.  
Chris Wales    Fantastic video.  
YD9BAX        Wayan! Homebrew transformer! 
N0NQD        Jeff 
WN3F              Roy -- Made new stickers! 
AB5XQ            Bill  
KB7ZUT          Andy  
AA1OF            Jer

VictorKees        Holland
KC9OJV           John -- Manhattan-style convert
WZ5M              1, 2 or maybe even 3 receivers!
K1KJW             Jim in Vermont
KC5DI              Dallas -- friend of WZ5M
Gary                 Australian -- Wooden PTO form
LU2VJM          Juan in Argentina
K1OA               Scott "Most fun in 50 years"
KC9DLM         Ben -- Had EFHW problems
PH2LB             Lex  Yellow, Glue Stick

AI6WR             David
G6GEV            Dave (It was a blast!) 
KC1ONM        Wayne  MakerLabs NH
KB1OIQ          Andy    MakerLabs NH
KA1PQK         Jay       MakerLabs NH
W1TKO           Mike    MakerLabs NH
K5KHK            Karl
SM0TPW         Mikael
KI7LKB           Brian (coat hanger tube)
M6CRD            Chris

W2DAB           Dave in NYC
W4JYK            Wes of VWS
KA4CDN          Mike of VWS
M7EFO             Adrian 
VK5RC             Rob
KD8KHP          Dave
VK1CHW         Chris
KA0PHJ           Brian
W0IT                Louis
-------------------------
Honorable Mentions: 

*AA7U            Steve No PTO
*VK7IAN        Ian -- No Manhattan boards 
*KC1FSZ        Bruce's build on a PC board
*CT7AXD       Graham -- different AF amp
-----------------------------------------

Candidates for the Hall of Fame: 

SA5RJS              Rasmus
KA9TII               James
W2AEW             Alan
AA7FO              Chuck 
K7WXW            Bill 
W1PJE               Phil  MIT
VA3ZOT           Tony  Surface Mount -- Honorable Mention? 
KM5Z              Mike Yancey
AB2XT             John (Done, just need the video)
KO7M              Jeff (Piper Cub)
KD4PBJ           Chris

For more information on how you too can build the receiver: 


Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Thursday, April 3, 2025

Wes W4JYK's FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver by a Vienna Wireless Society Makers Group Member


I was very glad to see Wes W4JYK finish this reciever.  Wes is a member of our local radio club -- the Vienna Wireless Society, and is part of the club's Makers Group.  

Wes writes: 

The DCR is up and running.  Listened to East Cars Net along with a few other stations.  Very cool! and good project.

Thanks Wes and congratulations on entering the Hall of Fame!
-----------------------------------------

For more information on how you too can build the receiver: 


Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:



Dave W2DAB's NEW YORK CITY Homebrew SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver. Manhattan Construction IN MANHATTAN! FB!


Dave W2DAB is a long-time friend of the SolderSmoke podcast.  When Steve Silverman was moving out of NYC, Dave went on the subway down to lower Manhattan to retrieve (for me) Steve's HP-8640B signal generator. And that thing is heavy!  Months later I picked it up from Dave.  Dave is also rumored to have participated in some of the SolderSmoke sticker operations in New York City.  I will neither confirm nor deny his participation.   

Dave obviously did a beautiful job on this receiver, and it sounds great.  Dave's reception is hampered by his high-rise location -- he is currently limited to the use of a mag loop.  I thought about suggesting that Dave take his receiver down to Central Park or to the banks of the East River, but I worry that this device might be too much even for the famously tolerant residents of the Big Apple.  

By the way, that station Dave heard was Percy, KF2AT, right up the road from him on E 106th Street.   

Dave writes: 

The really nice part of this project is that it’s so broken down that I can understand all of the parts and I can keep working on this to make it better and better. Improvement and patience are necessary traits for successful home brewing.  I don’t rule out a Park DCR Activation, as I like to say Manhattan construction is so much more interesting done in Manhattan.

(Percy KF2AT is also in Manhattan.) 

Thanks a lot Dave, and congratulations,  Welcome to the Hall of Fame!  

--------------------------

For more information on how you too can build the receiver: 


Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:


My Hanmilt HK 22 Drone -- Video and a still picture


This is the beginners's drone that I was using in the Dominican Republic this past winter.  It was really great.  The hover capability was amazing -- this made it very easy to learn to fly.  If it looked like I was getting into trouble, I would just go up a bit, hover, and figure out what to do. Obviously I could not do this with a fixed wing R/C plane.  Photography was excellent. See picture below -- I took this shot from my drone this winter.  I have a video on the Patreon channel.  

I flew this thing dozens of times, and only had one crash.  It was very minor.  I am still using the original propellers. 


The brand names change on these things very quickly, and Hanmilt might not be available anymore. But there are a lot of drones like this.  I paid about $100.  

I think my next drone will be a DJI drone.  But this will have to wait until I return to the Dominican Republic in June (I am in the FAA's "No Drone Zone" around the national capital.) Here is a really interesting video on DJI: 

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Chris M6CRD's FB SolderSmoke Homebrew Direct Conversion Receiver


Chris M6CRD built a really nice looking recceiver.  And it sounds great too, both on CW (above) and SSB (below). 

Chris writes: 

Hi Bill.  It is using an audio transformer on the output but its an ebay one of unknown impedance. The description said 1.3k:8r but I have my doubts how accurate that is. The radio runs fine after I quenched some initial oscillation with larger caps on the power rail of the audio amp, its just a little quieter than I suspect it should be with the correct transformer. 

I told Chris that Dean and I had also had some early trouble with AF transformers of questionable specifications.   But in any case his receiver was clearly inhaling very nicely. 

Congratulations Chris.  Welcome to the Hall of Fame!

  

For more information on how you too can build the receiver: 


Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

FCC to Ban Direct Conversion Receivers

From the FCC News Line:  

The Federal Communications Commission announced today that it will soon ban a wide range of communications equipment due to interference that this equipment is causing to Starlink communications satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO).  The banned equipment includes a range of legacy analog-type circuitry that, according to the Commission, has "lost relevance" and constitutes "an archaic electromagnetic nuisance."  Under the proposed Commission action, banned equipment will include all regenerative, super-regenerative, and direct conversion receivers.  

The interference potential of regenerative receivers has been known since the 1920s.  Direct Conversion receivers were thought to be less prone to Problematic Spurious Emission (PSE),  but in recent months  LEO satellites have experienced serious interference from terrestrial sources.  

An FCC official was nearly apoplectic when speaking about the devices that are causing this interference:  "They have no shielding.  They are built on wooden boards, and are made with superglue!  Heck, the main tuning device is -- get this -- a screw! A screw!  To think that something like that could threaten an entire LEO satellite system.  This is really unacceptable."  The official said that two persons in Northern Virginia had encouraged the construction of these "terrorist devices."  The FCC is working with the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security to bring these people to justice. 

The vast majority of the interference is believed to come from home-made ("homebrew")  direct conversion receivers.  These devices employ simple oscillators in the 7 MHz range.  The 85th harmonic of these oscillators falls in the middle of the UHF frequencies used by the satellite system.  The interference appears when the satellites are over areas known to be used by ham radio direct conversion enthusiasts.  There have been communications issues near Melbourne  Australia, the North Island of New Zealand,  Bali Indonesia, all across the U.S. (especially in the area of Nashua, NH), Canada, the UK,  Holland,  and Sweden. Recently there have been reports of interference from Argentina. 

A satellite company CEO of has been briefed on the matter, and promised to use his influence in the U.S. government to "squash this problem like a bug."  The spokesperson for a major ham radio organization in the United States reassured members: "Don't worry, commercial SDR transceivers will not be affected by this ban." 

Monday, March 31, 2025

Brian KI7LKB's SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver with a FB Unique PTO Coil form Using a Coat Hanger Tube!


Brian KI7LKB has built a very FB SolderSmoke direct conversion receiver.  He made the PTO coil form himself, using the cardboard from a coat hanger as the tube. (I have used these tubes for many homebrew inductors.  I thought I was alone!  FB Brian.)  In the video above we see Brian's receiver pulling in SSB signals. 

Brian writes: 

Finished the DCR! Even with S-7 noise, from here in Southern Nevada, picked up stations in Canada, Texas and Louisiana. Built to plans, except the PTO coil form was fabricated from a clothes hanger tube mounted in a fiberglass frame. Antenna is an inverted “V”. A ham since 2017, I’m always looking for something to build, and the Soldersmoke podcast provided an educational and appropriately challenging project. I particularly like the fact it is modular, and I’ve already identified other applications for the audio amplifier. Your guidance was excellent and I learned a bunch. Thank you!

Here is Brian's receiver at work in the CW portion of 40 meters: 


Thank you Brian.  Congratulations!  You homebrewed a receiver! 

For more information on how you too can build the receiver: 


Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Mikael SM0TPW's FB SolderSmoke Direct Conversion Receiver from Sweden

 I was very pleased to see Mikael's video.  This is our first receiver from Sweden.  In his QRZ page Mikael talks of learning CW while in the military, and of making a few contacts with the equpment of his regiment.  I had a similar experience -- I once made a CW contact with the rig assigned to our team.  

Mikael writes: 

Thank you Bill.

I’ve been a Ham for 35 years with a long gap in the middle of 20+.

I am of course a Soldersmoke listener and tried to build this dcr when you built it in the highschool project, but I didn’t succeed that time and gave up.

But with all the guidance here on discord I gave it one more go, and succeeded. 😊

The hardest thing was, as for many other, the af stage and oscillation. But some bypass caps and problem solved.

I got so much help just reading all posts here so thank you all in this community!

Now I will lean back for a while and listen to my baby. I am a proud father right now.

----------------------------------

Indeed Mikael, that is what Farhan advises:  sit back and enjoy the receiver that you have built.  Congratulations!  The receiver sounds great on CW and on SSB.  

-----------------

For more information on how you too can build the receiver: 


Join the discussion - SolderSmoke Discord Server:

https://discord.gg/Fu6B7yGxx2

 

Documentation on Hackaday:

https://hackaday.io/project/190327-high-schoolers-build-a-radio-receiver

 

SolderSmoke YouTube channel:

Checking in to the Old Military Radio Net, March 29, 2025

This was a fairly typical session of the Old Military Radio Net. 3885 kHz AM 0500 local on Saturday mornings. (Distant listeners can tune in via WebSDR.) This clip shows W3EMD, N2CQR (me) and, N1SNG. Buzz W3EMD from the Hudson Valley of New York was on with his KWM-1. Normally he uses a BC-348 powered with a Dynamotor. Last week he told the group that someone had COMPLAINED about the noise that his mic was picking up from the Dynamotor. Geez! I told Buzz that we had been commiserating with him about this on the SolderSmoke podcast. Later in this morning's session I heard WU2D, WA1HLR, AJ1G, and others. I reported on an emergency De-Oxit spraying of my HQ-100's band switch, just minutes before net call up. I also noted that I had found a crystal for 3885 kHz; the radio gods have spoken (TRGHS).

Thursday, March 27, 2025

The MakeIt Labs of Nashua, New Hampshire -- Four Successful Direct Conversion Builds

 
This picture came in on February 27, 2025 from Nashua, N.H. 

On February 27, 2025 they wrote:

 Hello from MakeIt Labs (a makerspace in Nashua, NH, USA).  Andy (KB1OIQ), Jay (KA1PQK), Mike (W1TKO) and Wayne (KC1ONM) are building the DCR as a Tuesday Night Project Night activity.  This week we all experienced the joy of oscillation 😂

On March 27, 2025 all four builders completed their projects, submitted "proof of life" videos, and entered the Hall of Fame.  





And it looks like they had a lot of fun.  That MakeIt Lab looks like a great way to pull people together for projects like this.  Well done guys!  Thanks and 73! 

Designer: Douglas Bowman | Dimodifikasi oleh Abdul Munir Original Posting Rounders 3 Column