Analog TO THE MAX! An Old School Readout for the BITX 40

Perhaps this was a reaction to a frustrating morning spent trying to get a 20×4 digital display to work with an Si5351 and an Arduino Uno via an I2C bus (I feel my blood pressure rising just due to the typing of those words). After much digital fiddling, I declared a “BASTA!” and looked around the shack for an antidote for the digital frustration. There on the bench was my fully analog BITX40Module rig, with its homebrew L-C analog VFO. It needed a better frequency readout. And this morning, it got one.

The pointer is Sharpie ink on a bit of PC board. It is held in place by superglue, suspended by a piece of wood about 1/4 inch off the chassis (to reduce dial parallax). The numerals are in Dymo tape — there was not enough room for the “7” but I think I will be able to remember this.

Very therapeutic and satisfying.

5 thoughts on “Analog TO THE MAX! An Old School Readout for the BITX 40”

  1. Bill replacing digital with analog, ive seen the analogue to this analog before.. he he he. Btw rubber hose makes a good grommet on those scary looking cable holes. Keith n6ors

  2. Hi Bill, That is an absolutely simple and very practical solution. I would even go so far as to say an elegant solution. In the true spirit of what Frahan intended. Let us not forget –this is how it was first done. Cheers and Bravo. de N6QW

  3. Apparently there was a time when protractors were used for dials. They come pre-marked, a logging scale at least. I can’t say I’ve seen it dine much, but in the eighties Bill Hoisington had a converter article in 73 where he used them for the dial, and he said they’d been used in the past for the purpose. Michael

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