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
Our friend and loyal long-term SolderSmoke listener Dave Wilcox K8WPE wrote to us, strongly suggesting that we repeat for our listeners SolderSmoke Podcast #166. Dave wrote:
I am listening to episode 166 and it is excellent for encouraging newbies who are thinking about starting home brewing. Please repeat it for those who think the old episodes aren’t that valuable. So repeat the same episode or redo it. It’s GOLD!
I think Dave is onto something here. If anyone else has a favorite podcast from our now VAST archive, please let me know and we will consider reposting it in this under the "Old Smoke" headline.
Thanks Dave. Here is #166.
SolderSmoke Podcast 166 is available for download: http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke166.mp3 Bench Report: Pete working on Direct Conversion Receivers. Bill on his 2B and on 20DSB rig, and an M0XPD/Kanga DDS kit, and a 140 watt amp. GETTING STARTED IN HOMEBREW: Start simple: Build an oscillator. Make it oscillate! Gather tools, simple test gear, and books. Try to understand what you build. Build a direct conversion receiver. Don't fear the toroids! Be patient. This is not Plug and Play. Build a DSB transceiver. Little tips: Protect variable caps. Use heat sinks. Use reverse polarity protection. Don't breathe the solder smoke! Ventilate your bench. China Radio International Mystery Solved. Book Recommendation: "International QRP Collection" by Dobbs and Telenius-Lowe MAILBAG
The Radio Gods seem to be directing my attention to my hometown: New York City.
I was recently in the city, observing the placement of various IBEW - WYKSYKDS stickers. And as I work on my old Hammarlund HQ-100 I note that both the HQ-100 and I may have been produced on Manhattan island at about the same time (me definitely, but the HQ-100 may have been built in Mars Hill NC).
This morning Jim W4JED reminded me that Limor Fried, MIT Engineer and founder of Adafruit, is producing a lot of amazing electronics items right in NYC, on Manhattan Island, down in Chelsea. Thanks Jim. FB Limor!
Watch the above video. I really liked the sign Limor has above her workbench:
"TRUST YOUR TECHNOLUST."
Indeed. Back to the HQ-100. This IS a case of technolust. I'm not quite satisfied with the alignment. And it bugs me. I technolust for perfect alignment. (Steve Silverman -- I think we should add technolust to the SS lexicon.)
Pete was talking about this beautiful Digital VFO dial in the latest podcast. In response, Klaus sent me an e-mail with links and the video above, describing how he used the VFO dial in a very cool Direct Conversion receiver project. TRGHS.
Here is the web site (you can easily get the English translation by clicking on the UK flag link):
Travelogue -- New York City! Stickers! And about that trip to Los Angeles for the SolderSmoke Cable TV show...
Well, it fit in well with SolderSmoke's UNFORGETTABLE appearance on the Oprah book club. And TechieTatts? Daughter worried about listeners rushing to get tattoos -- A risk we were willing to take.
Tracking down Johnny Anderson's 1939 or 1940 homebrew TV receiver.
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/search?q=Anderson Working with Joh DL6ID. Jean Shepherd's January 1973 description. FlickLives web site and Steve Glazer W2SG have lots of info on Shep and his friends. Internet allows us to look at TV articles that were being published. We've concluded: Probably 1939 or 1940, using an RCA 913 1 inch CRT tube.
Lots of ideas from IRE Journal, QST, and Gernsback magazines. Quite an achievement! Amazing how much pre-war TV progress there was.
17-12 rig All boxed up and working DX! Figured out how to display both 17 and 12 on the same LED. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAmmFZyFu8w Drain protector for speaker cover. Copper tape to cover horrible cabinet making. I think I need a Hex Beam.
Hammarlund HQ-100 Needed some maintenance. I started to look more closely at it. Got the Q-Multiplier to work -- it really adds a lot on CW. Makes me feel guilty about all the QF-1s... Using the 100kc calibrator with a 455 kc crystal as a BFO, keeping Q multiplier below oscillation point. Moved the BFO switch to the front panel. Helps a lot. Need to fix the S-meter AVC circuitry. Much more sturdy than the S-38E. S-38E 1957-61 $54.95 5 tubes. AC/DC. HQ-100 1956-60 $169 10 or 11 tubes. Power supply, regulator. You get what you pay for.
Pete's Bench
Jack Purdum and Al Peter's new SDR rig and book (featured on the SS blog Amazon ad). JF3HZB's beautiful digi VFO. Backpack antenna for Field Day? Pipsqueak Disaster -- Too simple? Peashooter Eye Candy. Build Something Different.
MAILBAG
James W0JKG CBLA -- Others are building MMM too! SM4WWG // Jörgen Wonderful message. Joined GQRP. No longer "wrong." Dennis WC8C Libraries for Max2870 board. Jack NG2E Progress on the Right to Repair movement. Jim K9JM Someone cutting into our business with Solder candles! Chuck WB9KZY Correctly identified the location of the IBEW sticker. As did Dan Random. Dave Bamford (who lives nearby) suitably impressed. Farhan wrote to us about a video on Don Lancaster. Homebrew keyboards! Yea! Dean KK4DAS QRP to the Field. HB2HB 40 SSB QRP I feel virtuous. Todd K7TFC likes my ingenious use of the drain screen as the speaker protector on the 17-12 rig. Todd had good thoughts on granular approach to homebrewing as seen in the Don Lancaster video. Lex PH2LB HORRIFIED by my reverse polarity protection circuit. This is a touchy subject! (as is WD-40!) Rogier PA1ZZ sending great info on SWL and numbers stations. Jesse N5JHH -- The guy who made the IBEW stickers -- Liked the NYC stickers. Steve N8NM has a new antenna article on his blog: https://n8nmsteve.blogspot.com/ Randy AB9GO Agrees -- Can't GIVE old 'scopes away. Dino SV1IRG Liked the 17-12 rig videos. Steve Hartley G0FUW Murphy's Law of Enclosures. Ralph AB1OP FB on the 17-12 Rig. Roberto XE1GXG --Our correspondent in Guadalajara. Petulant, irritable people on the computer scene.
Have some gear looking for a good home: Tek 465 'scope from Jim AL7R W8NSA. SBE Transceivers. Windsor Signal Generator. Let me know if you are interested and can either pick up or arrange shipping.
I like this old receiver, with all its shortcomings. I picked it up in the Dominican Republic in 1993 or 1994. I've been using it on AM with my K2ZA DX-100. It needed some contact cleaner, and I took the opportunity to work on a few of the circuits that were getting kind of decrepit.
I came to a new understanding of -- and appreciation for -- the Q-multiplier.
While of similar vintage, this receiver is MUCH nicer than the Hallicrafters S-38E:
S-38E 1957-61 $54.95 5 tubes. AC/DC, kind of flimsy.
HQ-100 1956-60 $169 10 or 11 tubes. Power supply, regulator, much sturdier construction
You get what you pay for.
In Part II I'll show you how this thing sounds and what it is like to use it for SWL, CW, SSB and AM.
Of course, this has to be taken with a huge grain of salt. "General" Sarnoff sits there and claims that Vladimir Zworkyin "invented" electronic television. But Philo Farnsworth really did that. Zworykin's claim to invention has about as much validity as Sarnoff's claim to having been a General!
But still, there is a lot of interesting info amidst the RCA propaganda. Again, it is really striking how far they had come before WWII put things on hold for four years.
Heck, he has an S-38E on the shelf above his bench. He is clearly one of us. What is his callsign?
This morning I watched the first and last of his 10 videos on his superhet receiver project. Very cool. Lots of good info in there. And there is something for everyone: Arduinos and Si5351s, along with a lot of standard analog circuitry. The first episode appears above.
The variable bandwidth filter looks very interesting. And there was a nice shout-out to Charlie Morris and one to Hans Summers.
I really like his effort in episode 10 to measure Minimum Discernible Signal using commonly available test gear. This helped me in my effort to get more rigorous and serious about receiver performance measurement.
Darren has many other excellent projects on his YouTube channel. My Hammarlund HQ-100 receiver started giving me trouble this week, and I was debating whether or not to fix the old thing. Darren's channel provided the inspiration I needed. It will be fixed!
Please subscribe to Darren's channel. And spread the word about his videos. We definitely want him to make a lot more.
I moved the 17/12 Rig off the workbench and placed it (as planned) atop the Mythbuster rig. Now I have four bands easily accessible. In these pictures you can see all four bands being displayed on the San Jian Frequency Counters.
I found a kitchen drain screen that is an ideal cover for the 3 inch speaker in the 17/12 rig.
I reconfigured the Low Pass filters in the CCI .1 kilowatt amplifier. I put a 12 meter LP filter in there in place of the 40 meter LP filter (that I haven't been using much).
I have been working a lot of DX on both 17 and 12.
Even though it is outside my normal analog comfort zone, I really liked this video. Farhan sent it to me, along with this note:
--------------
As a kid, do you remember Don Lancaster's books? I learnt most of my digital electronics from him. I still have the 7 dollar video generator book on my shelf. He predates the Homebrew Computer Club. In fact, he is probably the reason for the HCC, because he put in the pieces that were used by others like the two Steves to build their own computers.
His most brilliant hack was to build a "TV typewriter" out of standard TTL parts that were just coming out in the surplus market. For $120, you could, if you build etched your own PCBs and managed to pry parts of fellow builder's dead fingers, build a circuit that, if you typed your name, it showed up on the TV screen! Never mind that dad wanted to get back to watching football or mom wanted the kitchen counter to be cleared out. Those days, parents had no appreciation for their kids being on TV, I guess.
In an earlier hack, he encouraged people through his articles in Radio Electronics to build their own Qwerty keyboard. With this in hand, you could, um .. um... well type something and sit back. There was nothing to connect it to. The fun thing was, there were no key switches available. You had to build those as well. Wind your own springs, make your own keytops, Once it was built, you could use a VOM to check that the ASCII bits corresponding to the key you held down would correctly show up on the 7 data lines. I guess the girls were surely impressed. You just needed to carry the power supply with +5, -5v, +12v, the keyboard itself, an ASCII chart and a VOM to school to show off.
Jokes apart, he kept building things and builds them to this day. His TTL cookbook and CMOS cookbooks were the goto books for almost all digital elecctronics hackers. It is a pity that no one acknowledges his knack. He has scanned in a few of his books on his 1990s www.tinaja.com. Check https://www.tinaja.com/ebooks/cmoscb.pdf
Joh DL6ID sent me the above video. We have been e-mailing each other about the W9YEI Television Receiver built in 1939 or so. We have kind of concluded that the builder used an RCA 913 tube as the CRT. This was an oscilloscope tube and was often described as looking like a metal 6L6 with a tiny screen on top. This is kind of neat -- like using something from the old days to peer into the new world of video.
We wondered about the image persistence of this tube. Fortunately for us, we found several YouTube videos showing recent builds or repairs of oscilloscopes with RCA 913 tubes.
Of course, Mr. Carlson has a video on one of these devices (and -- as expected -- has another in his junk box. Mr. Carlson has at least two of everything.)
Here are a few other videos showing RCA 913 tubes in action.
"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
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