Author: Peter Marks
An Amazing Catalog of Circuits from HA5KHC
HA5KHC is a club station in Budapest, Hungary. The photo above shows a portion of their worshop. The link below is for their really amazing collection of links to ham radio circuits.
http://konstruktor.ha5khc.hu/linkgyujtemeny/linkgyujtemeny.htm
Tribal Wisdom from KE3IJ
He has many regen circuits. And his Drake 2-B dial skirt looks just like mine.
Antennas, Money, and Ham Psychology
make it fit. (on the back fence).
WIth 5 watts CW on 40m I can hit the USA reverse beacons most mornings.
It was about £9 ($11) to make – but if you count the Spiderbeam
12m pole, it was another £98 ($120).
I have a little George Dobbs story relating to aerials. Probably around
him and have a beer with afterward.
Emilio’s Mirror of JF1OZL’s Site

JF1OZL’s site was for many years a real treasure trove and source of inspiration for homebrewers around the world. It recently disappeared from the internet. And I find no listing for JF1OZL on QRZ.com. I hope Kazuhiro is OK.
Emilio in Mexico has put up a mirror site. Thanks Emilio. We need to protect and preserve JF1OZL’s work.
https://www.emilio.com.mx/jf10zl/
Here is a SolderSmoke blog post on Kazuhiro from 2011:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2011/12/homebrew-hero-kazuhiro-sunamura-jf1ozl.html
Radio Art from QST December 1951
SolderSmoke Podcast #222 Antennas, Phasing, VFOs, 2-Bs, 6 years of N6QW, MAILBAG
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| After 46 years, finally a dial skirt |
Peter VK2EMU notes no animals were harmed in the making of my videos. But many electrons were agitated.
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| N6QW Phase Shift Success — It aint over ’till the fat lady sings |
I,Q, and HRO: VK2BLQ’s Phasing Receiver with an HRO Dial
Replacing Electrolytic Caps in my Drake 2-B (Video)
Every dark cloud has a silver lining. Here is a very small silver lining for this terrible COVID-19 situation: I had time to do a proper replacement of the electrolytic capacitors in my Drake 2-B.
Three cheers for Hayseed Hamfest LLC for providing the replacement capacitor.
Go to their website to find capacitors for many other old rigs:
http://hayseedhamfest.com
SolderSmoke on Ham Radio Workbench Podcast
Homebrew Az-El Satellite Antennas from the Philippines and Australia
https://nightskyinfocus.com/2020/05/18/diy-satellite-tracker/
DU1AU is way ahead of where I was when I was working with Low Earth Orbit satellites. I just aimed the antenna about 45 degrees up from the horizon, and spun it around with a TV rotator with me –not the computer — as the controllers of the rotator. In essence I did the AZ manually and completely ignored the EL. This design moves the antenna in Azimuth and Elevation, and has the computer control the movements via an Arduino. FB.
DU1AU points to the work of VK3FOWL and VK3YSP. Their site has very detailed info on how to build several versions of this kind of Az-El rotator:
https://www.sarcnet.org/rotator-mk1.html
This Az-El project represents a great opportunity to move beyond hand-held satellite antennas, and beyond my Az-only manual approach. It also give us a way to bring some real homebrewing into a part of ham radio that has come to be dominated by commercial equipment. There are some Arduinos and some lines of code, some motors and some metal work. Great stuff!
Video on Galaxy V VFO IN USE with BITX40 Module — 40 meter Bandsweep
Check out that fancy frequency readout. No glowing numerals here. But it does the job.
Nick M0NTV’s Quarantine Rig: The Bread Bin 80
Hi Bill,
N5GTF’s FULLY INDOOR Quarantine Receiver and Antenna
Video on the Galaxy V VFO Project
This is the second version of this video. I had some technical difficulties getting it to upload in High Definition, but I was able to work it out in this version.
In this video I describe the VFO project, talk about how I made use of the e-bay Galaxy V parts, talk about the circuit (series-tuned Colpitts), conduct some stability tests, and discuss many of the ways a VFO like this one can be useful to the radio amateur.
Thanks to Pete Juliano for inspiring this effort.
An Understandable Chip: The LM386
So, I don’t use voltage regulator chips — I use Zener diodes. I prefer analog LC oscillators to AD9850s or Si5351s. And I have repeatedly built discrete component audio amplifiers when most normal people just put an IC AF amplifier in the circuit.
When I built the Q-31 Shortwave AM receiver, I kind of ran out of gas at the end. I wanted to get the receiver going and I didn’t want to build yet another discrete AF amp. So I used an LM386.
I rationalized this deviation from cherished values by noting that the discrete AF amplifier circuitry that I was using was remarkably similar to what exists inside the LM386. So that little chip is just as understandable as my discrete component creations. It wasn’t REALLY a mysterious black box…
Around this time I found a web site that made me feel mush better about all this. It explains very nicely how the little LM386 does such a great job. It really packs a lot of amplification into a very small package. Here is the web site:
https://www.electrosmash.com/lm386-analysis
Shortly after my transgression, Jenny List over at Hack-A-Day posted a nice piece looking at the inner workings of Op-Amps. Who knows, I may seen be using 741 chips too!
Here is the Hack-A-Day piece:
https://hackaday.com/2020/05/09/an-op-amp-from-the-ground-up/
Bill Meara Graduates with Honors from James Madison University
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| Deep thoughts where Faraday lectured |
This video demonstrates Billy’s early interest in biotechnology:
And of course, he is the guy who says “Ooo! That’s awesome” in all of the podcasts.
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| 2020 Virtual Graduation |
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| Billy’s mom, sister and dad watching the graduation |
Solar Sailing During the Pandemic — Light Sail 2 Video Update
QSO Today — Episode 300 — Panel Discussion
N6ORS’s Hot Mustard Phasing Board. And how Phasing Works.
Its been a while. Lately I’ve been working on a phasing transceiver
that fits in a tiny can. Its called Hot Mustard. You need hot mustard
when you hamming. I finished the phasing board, its 10 poles , 5 in each
phase branch. here is a pic. Building the cpu board
next. I’ll document this one for a change hihi.
73,
Keith N6ORS
A while back I did a little diagram that — for me — explains how phasing cancels one of the sidebands. It appears below. I think Keith’s board is for the 90 degree audio phase shift. You can see how, by changing the shift from you can affect the degree of sideband suppression. I guess by going from -90 to +90 you could completely switch sidebands.

















