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Thursday, April 14, 2022
W9YEI's Homebrew 1939 TV?
"Patrolling the Ether" WWII Video on Radio Direction Finding Efforts
I heard about this video while trying to track down information on John Stanley Anderson's 1939 television receiver. "Patrolling the Ether" is kind of hard to find. It is not really on YouTube. But there is a good BARC Vimeo video about WWII RDF efforts that includes at the end the full "Patrolling the Ether" video.
Here it is:
Thanks to BARC and to Brian Harrison for putting this together.
In the video, they discuss the invention of the Panadaptor by Dr. Marcel Wallace F3HM during World War II. I set up a very crude Panadaptor using Wallace's principals:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2019/05/diy-waterfall-quick-and-easy-panadaptor.html
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
The 17 & 12 SSB Transceiver -- Circuit and Build Info -- Video #4
Tuesday, April 12, 2022
John Stanley Anderson W9YEI -- Shep's Friend Who Homebrewed a TV Receiver in 1938
After graduation from Hammond High, Johnny went to work as a chemist at the local steel mill. On April 11, 1941, Johnny enlisted at Fort Benjamin Harrison in the U.S. Army, serving through WWII until November 27, 1945. On June 4, 1955, he married Jane H. Vanstone.
Johnny later moved to Munster, Indiana, and continued working at Inland Steel, where he held a variety of technical positions. He passed away on January 29, 1984, at the emergency room of Hammond's St. Margaret Hospital after suffering from neurogenic shock. At the time of his death, Johnny was an electrical technician at Inland Steel's quality control center. He was buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Hammond. From: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/173124396/john-stanley-anderson
Monday, April 11, 2022
Early Television, Jean Shepherd, Homebrewing, and Hack-A-Day
Hack-A-Day has an article about early (1930s) television. I was immediately reminded of a January 1973 Jean Shepherd show on WOR New York in which Shep talks about a kid in his neighborhood who built a very early television receiver. You can skip to about the 18 minute mark for the homebrew radio and television stuff.
In the 1973 show, Shep identifies the builder as John Anderson. The Flicklives web site lists the hams who lived around Shep in Hammond Indiana. Among them is John Stanley Anderson W9YEI. That's him.
Shep was born in 1921 and in the show he says this all took place when he was 16 or 17. So that would place these events around 1938. We see that on February 2, 1939 W9XZV -- the experimental station of Zenith Chicago -- went on the air with television. In August 1940 W9XBK, the experimental TV station of WBKB Chicago went on the air. That station was the one Johnny Anderson used to demonstrate TV to Shep and other friends.
Once again, Shep really captures the spirit of homebrew radio and the way it really captivates teenagers. He also explains -- very well I think -- the difference between true homebrew radio and kit building.
I really wish we had more details or pictures of W9YEI's TV receiver. I tried looking in the IRE Journal, but I couldn't find anything. Anyone have more info on this receiver or ham homebrew TV projects from the late 1930s?
EXCELSIOR! 73 Bill
https://hackaday.com/2022/04/10/retrotechtacular-a-diy-television-for-very-early-adopters/
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2008/07/best-jean-shepherd-ham-radio-episode.html
http://www.flicklives.com/index.php?pg=318
https://www.earlytelevision.org/w9xbk.html
Sunday, April 10, 2022
WD-40: Not Quite the Pope's Pee
This is the second time that Todd K7TFC has sent in a comment that is so good that it gets elevated to the main blog page. When I was typing yesterday's post about how WD-40 had restored life to the hard drive in my old Tandy 1000 computer, I knew that this would stir up anti-WD-40 sentiments. I'm grateful that Todd weighed in with such a thoughtful response.
What can I say? I was young and foolish. I thought WD-40 was the answer. Now I know better. I have can of DeOxit D5 on my shelf. I only use the WD-40 on my bicycle.
Todd K7TFCApril 9, 2022 at 7:49 PM wrote:
I think even the Pope would argue his pee has already served its only real purpose: to remove unwanted substances from the body. WD-40 is useful for that purpose as well--it's pretty good at dissolving and blasting away dirt and grease from tools, hardware, or small mechanisms. That's no doubt why it worked to get your hard-drive spinning again. As a lubricant, though, it is deeply flawed.
If you have nothing else at hand, it can also substitute as an penetrating rust buster. The purpose its developers intended is coded in the name itself: "WD" stands for water displacement, and its very good at doing that. It's not so good at many of the other uses to which it's commonly put.
A very-long time ago, I worked at a company that made its own PCBs, and they had some very-precise NC machinery (programmed with punched tape in those days) for drilling and routing the boards. After a series of baffling and costly shutdowns, the culprit was discovered and WD-40 was banned entirely from the plant. The plant-maintenance guy and janitors couldn't even have any.
It was found that once completely dry, the oils and waxes in it would slowly polymerize (as they were intended), leaving behind a sticky film that protected from moisture and rust just fine, but it gummed up precision machinery. The Chief Production engineer (my father) got the company brass to ban WD-40 entirely.
Why ban it from even plant-maintenance and janitorial work? Because you couldn't keep the PCB-production crew from resorting to it in a "crisis" if they could find any at all in the building. It meant they weren't careful enough to keep the proper lubricants in stock. You could either fire them for their shade-tree-mechanic mentality, or you could ban WD-40.
Needless to say, I've kept my congenital anti-WD-40 animus alive all these years, but I do have a can I use for cleaning and water-displacement purposes. When tempted to use it otherwise, though, the memory of my father sniffing the air suspiciously for its distinctive odor flashes in my head, and I reach for something else. --73, K7TFC
Saturday, April 9, 2022
WD-40, a Hard Drive, a Coat-Hanger Antenna, Dumpster Diving, and Amateur Radio Satellites from the Azores
Thursday, April 7, 2022
The Vacuum Tube's Forgotten Rival: The Magnetic Amplifier
The video above shows one application of the principal, but be sure to check out the IEEE article:
Wednesday, April 6, 2022
The First Commercial SSB Trans-Atlantic Radiotelephone System
Tuesday, April 5, 2022
Tim Hunkin's (The Secret Life of ...) New Series , and First Show (on Sensors) (Video)
Monday, April 4, 2022
The Next Time You Hear Someone Complaining About Winding Toroids....
Sunday, April 3, 2022
Video of SolderSmoke Podcast #236
SolderSmoke Podcast #236 is available!
Podcast Posted on 1 April 2022:
http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke236.mp3
Winterfest! Many Boatanchors. Lots of old good analog test gear. Talk with Dean KK4DAS. Met up with Armand WA1UQO and Charles AI4OT.
Friday, April 1, 2022
SolderSmoke Podcast #236 -- Bill's 17-12 Rig, Pea Shooter, VFO Wisdom, Temp Compensation, Need Code for Max2870, Making Enclosures, MAILBAG
SolderSmoke Podcast #236 is available!
http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke236.mp3
Winterfest! Many Boatanchors. Lots of old good analog test gear. Talk with Dean KK4DAS. Met up with Armand WA1UQO and Charles AI4OT.
Wednesday, March 30, 2022
Mike WU2D Looks at the "Dream" SW Receivers of the 1960s and 70s (Video)
Monday, March 28, 2022
Vienna Wireless Winterfest Hamfest 2022
Saturday, March 26, 2022
Getting More Rigorous About Receiver Design (Video)
The author of the software seems very cool"
My name is Alfredo Accattatis; I love electronics and software, and I have been working for years in commercial companies as software/firmware engineer and software designer. I've been writing programs for embedded systems (with DSP and MICROCONTROLLERS), for PC, for Avionic Computers and even for Mainframes, using C, C++, Pascal, Ada, REXX and assembly. I starting write VA during my free time just for fun and using (also) my DSP experience. The program was and is completely FREE.
More info about Alfredo here:
https://www.sillanumsoft.org/about_the_author.htm
Do you folks think I need to buy the kind of True RMS Audio Voltmeter that is being used at the end of the above video?
Wednesday, March 23, 2022
First Ever Contact on 12 Meters: Homebrew, QRP, SSB, DX (Video)
There is a LOT of soul in this new rig. Here is a partial list of contributors:
-- Overall BITX design: Farhan VU2ESE
-- Termination Insensitive Amplifiers (TIA): Wes Hayward W7ZOI and Bob Kopski K3NHI.
-- TIA boards from Todd K7TFC
-- ASK-1 Mixer from Armand WA1UQO
-- VFO design parameters from Joe Carr K4IPV (SK)
-- VFO stability ideas from Frank Harris K0IYE and Mike Murphy WU2D.
-- HT-37 Tuning Capacitor bought from e-bay at suggestion of Pete Juliano N6QW.
-- Pine board base of the rig: Frank Jones (SK) W6AJF's preferred building technique.
-- DTC Band-Pass filter circuits from Han Summers G0UPL.
-- Low pass filter values from G-QRP web site.
-- Idea of using RD06HHT instead of IRF-510 in the final: Pete Juliano
-- Heat sink from Chris KD4PBJ
-- Trifilar Toroids used in many places from Farhan VU2ESE.
Thanks to all. 73 Bill
Tuesday, March 22, 2022
Receiver Dynamics -- How Good is my Receiver?
Sunday, March 20, 2022
17 - 12 Dual Band SSB Transceiver On-The-Air
Flick Lives -- More from a Great Web Site about "Jean Shepherd"
Friday, March 18, 2022
Help! Can You Write the Software to Control the MAX2870 Board?
Thursday, March 17, 2022
Colin M1BUU's Homebrew Manhattan SST
Wednesday, March 16, 2022
Pete N6QW Looks at Tapped Capacitance Impedance Matching
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
VK2BLQ's Two-Tube Regen with a SolderSmoke Dial
Monday, March 14, 2022
"Fashion" for Fans of LC Analog VFOs
Sunday, March 13, 2022
Video #3 17/12 Transceiver -- Receiver is Working on 12 and 17 meters (Listen! Video!)
Wednesday, March 9, 2022
Video #2 17/12 SSB Transceiver -- Receive RF Amplifier Needed?
Tuesday, March 8, 2022
Soldering to Aluminum with Mineral Oil
Hack-A-Day has a potentially useful workshop tip. Has anyone tried this?
https://hackaday.com/2022/03/06/how-to-solder-to-aluminum-easily/
Thursday, March 3, 2022
Tuesday, March 1, 2022
Dennis WC8C's FB Homebrew 6 Meter Rig -- Any Ideas or Suggestions?
This is my 6 Meter homebrew transceiver, currently work in
progress. It is a single conversion
super –heterodyne design. I constructed
each stage independently with SMA connectors.
This is so I can re-make sections as needed, and will allow me in the
future to swap sections to experiment with alternate designs. The VFO and BFO are controlled using a SI5351
with an Arduino micro controller. I
currently have separate SI5351 modules for VFO and BFO because I suspected
issues with cross-talk. These issues may
not actually be real, so once I am happy with the performance, I will test
again with just one module to see if it is OK.
The Power Amp is still on the to-do list, so output is well under 0 DBm
The Blue boards were designed by me and ordered
on-line. The other boards I etched
myself. Construction is mostly surface
mount because I find it easier than drilling all the holes. SMD components are mostly 805 and 1206 size.
Transistors are SOT23.
The Band Pass filter is a 5 coil design made with air-core
inductors.
3 bi-directional termination insensitive (TIA) amps are used
(blue boards). Total RX gain is about
44db. Total TX gain is about 16db. Each board has its own independent RX/TX
switching circuitry (mosfet based) and is fed with +12.5, GND, and RX/TX logic
signal from the Arduino (3V logic and up will work)
The Mixer and modulator are both Diode Ring mixers.
The 12 MHz SSB filter is a crystal ladder filter similar to
the one used in the uBitx.
The Mic and audio pre-amp (also a blue board) is made on a
modified TIA amp board. I had 10 of
these boards made, and the needed circuitry was largely the same, so I modified
the board with a rotary tool and jumpers.
The Audio amp is a PAM8403 module and drives a headset. I did make some modifications to the module so
it runs in-spec and to eliminate the power on audio pop.
The challenges I have been having are mostly related to
spurs, splatter, carrier suppression and TX audio quality. I have been gradually tweaking these things
to improve operation before I start on a power amp. My IF is 12 MHZ, and I was using the LSB side
of the crystal filter because it is sharper (VFO 62 – 66 MHz) but have recently
changed over to the USB side of the filter (VFO 38 – 42 MHz). This eliminated the spurs I was seeing near the
pass band. I still need to make some
adjustments to the crystal filter as it is too broad.
I still have some splatter and audio quality seems low, but
I am starting to doubt my test setup. I
see the splatter on the RTL SDR, but I don’t see it on the Tiny SA. The spatter happens at ~160 KHz
intervals. I am hoping to find someone
local with a better spectrum analyzer to help me verify if it is the rig or my
SDR dongle/test setup.
The modules to the side of the picture are my
rejects/experiments. The one covered in
copper shows how I eventually will shield all the modules. I 3D printed a cover for the board, when
wrapped it with copper tape, soldered to the bottom ground plane. The one shown is a diode ring modulator. For some unknown reason the carrier
suppression is rather poor. I had
previously made a junk-box modulator that had much better carrier
suppression. I don’t know why it is
better than the one I more carefully made for the radio, but until I figure it
out, I am using the junk box version.
The junk box modulator uses unmatched schottkey diodes, whereas the
“final” one uses a 4 diode SMD package because I wanted them matched – I
thought this would be better, but maybe not.
Monday, February 28, 2022
Free Download of AADE Filter Design Software
Very useful when homebrewing filters. I am using it now to build crystal filters.
http://www.ke5fx.com/aadeflt.htm
Thanks to KE5FX