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
A video about the Kon-Tiki expedition got us wondering about how you could generate hydrogen gas for an antenna balloon while on a raft at sea. (That's the kind of question that keeps Knack victims up at night.) This led us to the Gibson Girl rescue radio. This morning I found a fascinating web site that gives the long, multi-country history of the curvaceous rescue rig:
Tonight I have had my first experience with the joy of oscillation! I'm so happy to have my M3 oscillating! This was a great first project and look forward to seeing if I can't build a lowpass filter to go with it. As you recommended Bill, I reconfigured my initial board to make things much more compact thus keeping the lead length short. For the coil, i used a 1.25in wooden dowel and it worked great! Here are a few photos. Thanks a lot for the crystal! Video will be coming soon.
Looking forward to Pete's 40m transceiver project. Keep up the great podcast!
I just had my first QSO with my ZIA transceiver! Contact was with W8ERN in Brighton Michigan, which is approximately 300 miles from my QTH in Nashville Indiana. W8ERN said I was barely audible and was surprised that he could hear me at all. Especially when he found out that I was running less than 5W on an end-fed wire. From what I heard, band conditions were pretty poor due to a magnetic storm.
Sorry I didn't get any video of the QSO. I heard him calling CQ and just answered. I didn't expect him to return my call. Btw, this was my first QSO as an amateur. I was a bit nervous, I don't know why. I plan on installing a 40M dipole before winter sets in so, hopefully my signal will get out a little further.
I have one other question. I am considering purchasing a used rig in the next few months. What would either one of you recommend? I am not abandoning my home-brewing but it would be nice to have a back up rig when conditions are bad. My budget is around $200 or so, and I don't mind something that might need some repairs. There is a hamfest in Fort Wayne(my hometown) next month, so I might go up there and do some shopping.
Thanks again for all of your encouragement and knowledge.
73's
Dean AC9JQ
------------------------------
Hi Dean,
Congratulations on your first contact on the TIA AND your 1st contact as a ham. Bravo. Time to have a real celebration. Get cracking on that antenna before you have snow on the ground!!!
W8ERN, Angelo is an outstanding amateur and and a real gentleman. He has a very interesting past life. I think he worked for Multi Elmac and Central Electronics. During the 1940’s to 1960’s these companies produced some of the best ham gear. The AF-67 Transciter and the PMR8 were used mobile and of course the CE 100V and 200V were the first No Tune vacuum tube transmitters. So you were talking to one of the radio gods.
Again Congratulations Dean --- Bravo.
73’s
Pete
--------------------------
Dean:
Wow that's great. Indeed the band conditions are about as bad as they get. So bad that they are seeing Northern Lights (Aurora) far south into the USA. Give it a few days and you will find much better conditions.
My advice on a commercial rig: DON'T! You may think that they'd do better when conditions are poor, but they really won't. If you want a bit more power, build an amp for the TIA.
You are off to such an amazing start as a true homebrew ham. Stay on the homebrew path. Build a completely homebrew station! Congrats!
Thanks very much for the mention in your tenth anniversary podcast! It is great to know I am embedded in internet history even though I am not that important.
I enjoyed listening to you and Pete on the recent Soldersmoke Podcast. I really got a kick out of the various discussions and thought I would weigh in. I am sure you have heard someone say "Well actually...", so here are a few from me
Grand Pooh-Bah is, as you say, a Flintstones character, but it is not the the origin of the term. It actually goes back bit more than a century. The original character was named Pooh-Bah and was Lord High of nearly everything. He appeared in The Mikado by Gilbert and Sullivan in 1885.
There really are a fair number of non-software experiments that can be done with SDR. My first SDR was a set of boards assembled by Gerald when he was first starting Flexradio in 2002. His plans were very much homebrew and were published in QEX July/Aug 2002. My second SDR was a homebrew kit put together by Tony Parks, KB9YIG in 2005. He still sells SDR kits as fivedash.com. All this is very much home brew and does not rely on obscure hardware blobs. Have a look at the schematic for the current softrock at Ensemble II Schematic.pdf. It only uses "jellybean ICs".
According to the Smithsonian magazine, "Despite their modern reputation, the original Luddites were neither opposed to technology nor inept at using it...A seemingly endless war against Napoleon’s France had brought 'the hard pinch of poverty,' wrote Yorkshire historian Frank Peel, to homes 'where it had hitherto been a stranger.' Food was scarce and rapidly becoming more costly. Then, on March 11, 1811, in Nottingham, a textile manufacturing center, British troops broke up a crowd of protesters demanding more work and better wages." It was only later that they became associated with resenting the machinery.
I am also enjoying your discussion of the changes to our technology and how it affects hams and other technical people. I came into electronics as a young boy and at that time transistors were just beginning to displace tubes as a dominant force. I definitely remember the older techs saying, "These new transistor things are just sand-in-a-can; how can anyone know how a circuit operates with them."
About 12 years later when I was in college I heard exactly the same comment as "jellybean" Integrated Circuits (7400 and 4000) began to displace discrete transistors. There was much musing about how the future would be one of just plugging ICs together and no design talent would be needed or developed. Fast forward another 20 years and the microprocessor moved from Primary CPU, to cheap CPU, to PICs and Atmels. Here came the same comment lamenting the loss of ICs that "we could understand" and "no more electronics is needed, just hook the blocks and write the software."
Now about 10 years from then we are seeing complete transmitter and receiver modules, zigbee, wifi, and many other Adafruit style drop-in modules. I figure it is about time to hear that old saying once again. You and Pete need to be careful as you dance about it, don't fall into the trap !
So in the immortal words of Blaise Pascal in 1657, "I have only made this letter longer because I have not had the time to make it shorter." Keep up the good work and great podcast!
In our last podcast I mentioned that I had a very interesting contact on 17 meters with Raul Midon AE3RM. This morning Raul's song "Tembererana" popped up on my Pandora feed. The song is great, but is was the album cover that attracted my attention.
Raul has an amazing personal history. Born in Argentina, he and his twin brother have been blind since birth. They have both obviously triumphed -- his brother is a NASA engineer.
From the Wiki: Midón's album State of Mind was released on May 10, 2005. The album features a guest performance with Stevie Wonder, one of his idols, another one with Jason Mraz, and a song written in tribute to Donny Hathaway entitled "Sittin' In The Middle." Midón is an avid amateur radio enthusiast,[2] and in this song he also incorporates his call sign (KB5ZOT) by using Morse code.
Here is his QRZ page: http://www.qrz.com/db/KB5ZOT In it he writes: "He has been an amateur radio enthusiast since Mrs. Redmond introduced he and his brother to the hobby back when they both attended the New Mexico School for the Visually Handicapped." Good work Mrs. Redmond!
Here is Raul's antenna in Maryland. Maybe he was thinking of this when he designed the album cover!
The rules and regulations in this part are designed to provide an
amateur radio service having a fundamental purpose as expressed in the following
principles: (a) Recognition and enhancement of the value of the amateur service to
the public as a voluntary noncommercial communication service, particularly with
respect to providing emergency communications. (b) Continuation and extension of the amateur's proven ability to
contribute to the advancement of the radio art. (c) Encouragement and improvement of the amateur service through rules
which provide for advancing skills in both the communication and technical
phases of the art. (d) Expansion of the existing reservoir within the amateur radio
service of trained operators, technicians, and electronics experts. (e) Continuation and extension of the amateur's unique ability to
enhance international goodwill.
----------------------
On a recent podcast I mentioned that I like the phrase "the radio art." I also mentioned that I heard some objections to this term. A couple of guys wrote in on this --see below. I found out that the phrase features prominently in Part 97 of the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations. This is the document that establishes ham radio in the U.S. (see above) I really like the last line of the first section of Part 97: e) Continuation and extension of the amateur's unique ability to enhance international goodwill. Yea! That's us! The International Brotherhood of Electronic Wizards!
------------------------
Bill:
Was listening to episode 180 and heard you mention that some people had taken exception to using the label “Art” for radio electronics. You should refer them to the Webster’s definition of art,
art. noun \ˈärt\ : something that is created with imagination and skill and that is beautiful or that expresses important ideas or feelings.
Often the patent office, much older than radio, will invalidate a patent application based on “prior art”.
Keep up the great podcast! As soon as I finish a couple of other projects, I’m going to try to build Pete’s LBS design. First, I have got to get a mobile rig installed in my new truck, commuting without it is just too boring.
Going even further, the basis for our patent system is in Article One, Section 8, Clause 8 of the US Constitution:
"To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries;"
Tom Hall does amazing things with solder and electrons in the heart of New York City. I give him extra credit for doing this on the island of Manhattan because 1) that's where I'm from and 2) EVERYTHING is more difficult there.
I may have presented this video before. If I didn't, I should have. And if I did, well, here it is again (I guess my NYC attitude is showing here).
Look at the ease with which Tom switches bands. Fantastic! But even more important, LISTEN to the quality of the reception. Listen as Tom tunes in on strong CW and SSB signals. Do you hear any signs of the dreaded phase noise that is supposed to plague the Si5351 chip? I do not. I think this receiver sounds great.
I don't know why the Si5351 got such a bad rep for noise. Could it be that some people were testing it with boards other than the Adafruit or NT7S products that we have been using? Could it have been that in the tests the boards weren't completely installed? (It is important to have the VFO and BFO signal lines properly shielded.) Could it be that in the tests they were using physically adjacent clock outputs from the board? (We use CLK0 and CLK2, skipping CLK1 to avoid the "bleedover" problem that was noted by early users.)
"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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Master Homebrewer
Dean Souleles KK4DAS
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