Author: Peter Marks
Packets from Farhan’s Space Ship
Farhan’s AISAT flew over this morning. Using HD-SDR software, an RTL-SDR Dongle, and my Dominican Republic refrig tubing quad I was able to capture some the packets. Above you can see one of them, floating like a flying saucer in the waterfall. Pretty amazing that that signal came from a machine put in space by our friend Farhan.
Congratulations to Farhan on New Amateur Satellite Launched 1 April
This is not an April 1 trick. Farhan and Exseed Sat have put another bird in orbit.
Details here:
http://amsatindia.org/
This site in Argentina gives pass information:
http://amsat.org.ar/pass?satx=aisa1
I will be listening tonight!
Congratulations Farhan!
Malicious Code in the Si5351 — Pete quitting podcast
Those of you who have been reading Pete N6QW’s blog (and all of you should be reading it!) will have seen a recent post about his efforts to modernize (digitize) the VFO in an old tube-type Ten Tec Triton IV model 544. Pete complained that –oddly — in spite of replacing the old analog tube-type VFO, the rig with a modern, rock-stable Si5351 VFO, the old rig CONTINUED TO DRIFT. That had Pete and a number of us scratching our heads. How could that be?
Pete then completely removed the Si5351 VFO from the old boatanchor. Sitting on his bench, all by itself, THE DAMN THING EXHIBITED ALL THE CHARACTERISTICS OF ANALOG VFO THERMAL DRIFT. Wow! Why? Pete was really pulling his hair out on this one.
We immediately began to see if others were getting the same results. Nope. None of our Si5351 VFOs were doing this. This was REALLY strange.
At this point we had to turn to a real Arduino expert, a guy who I had met during my time in Italy: Luigi Bugiardo from the Arduino research center in Bocalupo, Calabria. Pete gave him remote access to his computer and he began to poke around.
It didn’t take long. Luigi quickly found the problem: He found several lines of malicious code “embedded in the Si5351.h and si5351.cpp files –sort of lurking out there and not easy to spot.”
Pete then removed this code and — BINGO — no more drift.
Now I know some of you guys are thinking that this was just a bit of harmless fun. But Pete is really angry about this. He feels like he has been played for a sucker by some ham who was pretending to collaborate with him. Pete sees this as yet another violation of the unwritten ham code of conduct. To him this is another intrusion of computer/hacker noob hazing into the ham radio world. And worst yet, he thinks this malicious code came to him because of this involvement in the podcast and his blog — that participation resulted in the widespread exposure that got him into this mess.
Pete is so upset that he has vowed to drop out of the podcast and shut down his blog.
So come on fellows. It is time to ‘fess up. If you did this, or if you think you know who did this, please send an e-mail to me at soldersmoke@yahoo.com I think being able to pinpoint the prankster will help Pete deal with this whole thing, and hopefully get him back into the SolderSmoke…
So Much Cool Stuff on Pete N6QW’s Blog
There is so much tribal knowledge, so many good ideas. Be sure to visit Pete’s blog regularly.
http://n6qw.blogspot.com/
He needs the meter from an SBE-33. Somebody out there must have one.
Check out his stepper motor antenna tuner video.
And be sure to leave some comments or to send Pete an e-mail with feedback. I live in fear that he will think no one is reading and then stop posting. We can’t let that happen!
Apollo 11 — The Documentary
My wife is a kind and tolerant person. Proof of this is that she went with me to see the Apollo 11 documentary that we recently posted about.
Amazing New Geostationary Amateur Satellite — LISTEN ONLINE!
Wow, quite a step forward in the amateur satellite world. Qatar and AMSAT-Germany have collaborated to put an amateur radio repeater in geostationary orbit. That’s pretty amazing. Read more here:
https://hackaday.com/2019/03/18/eshail-2-hams-get-their-first-geosynchronous-repeater/
Read about a group of Norwegian students working on a satellite station for this bird:
https://www.la1k.no/2019/02/20/getting-ready-for-e%CC%B6s%CC%B6%CC%B6h%CC%B6a%CC%B6i%CC%B6l%CC%B62%CC%B6-qo-100-part-2-how-we-did-it/
And this is really fun: LISTEN TO THE DOWNLINK LIVE VIA WEBSDR!
We can’t hear this thing from North America — it is flying over the Congo. But stations in its footprint are putting their receivers online — you can listen to the 10 GHz downlink via WebSDR:
UK WebSDR: https://eshail.batc.org.uk/nb/
Brazil WebSDR: http://appr.org.br:8902/
DISAPPOINTED! No Takers on Mechanical Filter Question! SAD!
We have lost our spiritual leader: George Dobbs G3RJV, SK
Yesterday we received the very sad news that George Dobbs, G3RJV has died.
I think it is no exaggeration to say that with George’s passing, we have lost our spiritual and philosophical leader. The founder of the G-QRP Club and Editor of our beloved SPRAT journal, George took his strong technical skills and his talent for writing and combined it with the wisdom about life that came from his religious vocation. He was a prolific writer and speaker, and in all his work you will find a unique combination of the technical and the philosophical. Not only did he teach us how to build our own rigs, but he taught us why we should build them.
We talk a lot about tribal knowledge — George was definitely the source of much of that. But he went beyond that and also became a major source of what we can call tribal wisdom. He was one of our tribal elders. Instead of speaking to the tribe around a roaring fire, George spoke to us through SPRAT, through articles in other ham magazines, through his books, and through his talks at rallies and hamventions, many of which have been preserved in YouTube videos. George’s friend Tony Fishpool sent us the one embedded below.
We are of course very sad to see George go, but we can all take comfort in the fact that he will — through his writings and through his recorded talks — remain with us. For years to come people who feel a strange urge to build their own radio equipment will find themselves reading George’s work or listening to recordings of his melodious voice. They will find there not only the needed technical information, but also the encouragement and tribal wisdom needed to carry on. There will be a bit of George Dobbs in all their rigs. In that way G3RJV will stay on the air. And I know that George would be delighted by that.
73 G3RJV.
We have lost our spiritual leader: George Dobbs G3RJV, SK
Yesterday we received the very sad news that George Dobbs, G3RJV has died.
I think it is no exaggeration to say that with George’s passing, we have lost our spiritual and philosophical leader. The founder of the G-QRP Club and Editor of our beloved SPRAT journal, George took his strong technical skills and his talent for writing and combined it with the wisdom about life that came from his religious vocation. He was a prolific writer and speaker, and in all his work you will find a unique combination of the technical and the philosophical. Not only did he teach us how to build our own rigs, but he taught us why we should build them.
We talk a lot about tribal knowledge — George was definitely the source of much of that. But he went beyond that and also became a major source of what we can call tribal wisdom. He was one of our tribal elders. Instead of speaking to the tribe around a roaring fire, George spoke to us through SPRAT, through articles in other ham magazines, through his books, and through his talks at rallies and hamventions, many of which have been preserved in YouTube videos. George’s friend Tony Fishpool sent us the one embedded below.
We are of course very sad to see George go, but we can all take comfort in the fact that he will — through his writings and through his recorded talks — remain with us. For years to come people who feel a strange urge to build their own radio equipment will find themselves reading George’s work or listening to recordings of his melodious voice. They will find there not only the needed technical information, but also the encouragement and tribal wisdom needed to carry on. There will be a bit of George Dobbs in all their rigs. In that way G3RJV will stay on the air. And I know that George would be delighted by that.
73 G3RJV.
Viking Rigs Save the Day!
SolderSmoke Podcast #210 Boatanchors, Magnetostriction, VFOs, AM, CW, SSB, Mailbag
2 March 2019
SolderSmoke Podcast #210 is available:
http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke210.mp3
Alexa, Marie Kondo, berets, and ham radio
Bi-Coastal Boatanchors
BATTLE CRY: The Vintage SSB Preamble! “We are NOT ashamed!”
Bill’s HT37 and Drake 2B
Pete’s National National NCX-3 TRGHS
Mechanical Filters
Magnetostriction
Why did Collins go with mechanical vice crystal filters?
The foam deterioration syndrome in mechanical filters. Sad.
Please send any unwanted Mechanical Filters to Bill.
BONUS QUESTION: Look at the filter below. What is different/special about this one?
Pete’s antenna trouble
Pete’s FB amplifier troubleshooting
Recent improvements in the uBITX finals
Pete’s design for a VFO for Bill (and an indoor antenna tuner!)
Bill’s VFO for Pete: HRO dial and gearbox driving a rotary encoder
Guido PE1NNZ puts the QCX on SSB
“The Secret Life of Machines — Radio”
HB HRO dial from DL6WD
WA1QIX’s USB D-104
“The High Frequency Oracle”
DeMaw’s LC filter receiver
Godzilla and Ham Radio
Bill’s poor quality SSTV images from space (what happened?)
Listening to AM on an SSB receiver
Mixed feelings about CW
MAILBAG
M0KOV’s mom took him to the doctor due to THE KNACK.
M0JGH getting married (ALWAYS LISTEN TO PETE!)
Jac’s FB Receiver
An Update on Jac’s Homebrew Receiver
About four years ago we posted a report on the FB homebrew receiver of Jac KA1WI Here is the original report:
https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2015/09/jacs-homebrew-receiver-video.html
As most of us do, Jac has continued to work on his creation. He sent me an update:
Bill:
Basically I have finished it, from a tentatively working model to a more definitive set. For example there are three IF filters, LSB, USB and CW switched by relays grounding the un-used filters. The AGC was optimized for a good sound. So was the multistage audio circuit, avoiding unnecessary filtering which in my opinion masks the sound of some very good sounding transmissions, not to mention the terrible ones.
Note how well you can hear the band’s noise floor when the antenna is reconnected in the third video.
The Shortwave Radio Audio Archive
Dig out those old tapes and make a contribution to the archive. Lots of good stuff in there. The Sandinista recording from 1979 was quite something. Radio Moscow’s Mailbag brought back Cold War memories. Check it out:
https://shortwavearchive.com/
An Awesome Radio Painting from Germany
Shortwave Radiogram
On 18 Feb 2019 I talked to Kim KD9XB on 40 meter SSB. Kim — who is retired from the Voice of America — told me about a really interesting retirement broadcast project of his. “Shortwave Radiogram” uses a variety of amateur digital modes to transmit what are essentially text and image bulletins. The really cool part is that Kim uses commercial shortwave broadcast transmitters to get his programs out. He uses transmitters in the U.S. and in Europe. Listeners around the world tune in via shortwave (sometimes through WEB-SDR receivers) and then use FLDIGI or similar software to read the messages. You can see one of the radiograms being received in the video above. There are more like it on YouTube.
Kim’s site has more information, including his broadcast schedule on his web site:
http://swradiogram.net/
All of this reminded me of our old idea about putting the SolderSmoke podcast on a commercial shortwave transmitter. I have my eye on the Bulgarian station… Stay tuned.
Thanks Kim!
RE-RUNS OF VINTAGE SIDEBAND NET — To fill those lonely hours between SolderSmoke podcasts…
I have now listened to the mp3 recordings of three of your Saturday morning sessions. They are really great. I tried to listen via the airwaves, but I am too far east. To whoever is recording and posting these sessions: please keep up the good work! These recordings allow the FB ham spirit of the net to reach a GLOBAL audience. Please make the older sessions available — many of us only recently learned of the net and would like to listen to earlier episodes. If server space is a problem, maybe I could help. Let me know. I don’t know if you realize it, but you guys are producing a very cool podcast every Saturday morning.
SSTV from SPAAAAACE! International Space Station Sends Images
Here is the RTL-SDR Dongle Receiver in an Altoids Box:
Listen to our Podcast while wearing a beret!
This is the official headgear of the Color-Burst Liberation Army.
For a mere 16 dollars, you can wear the kind of beret worn by Pete Juliano, N6QW.
Here at SolderSmoke, we are all about style, panache, savoirfair, je ne se qua…
If you send us a picture of yourself wearing a beret while either operating or building a rig, you will win FOR FREE a one year subscription to the SolderSmoke on-line podcast. ACT NOW! Please tell them that SolderSmoke sent you.
N8NM: Homebrew FT8 Worked All States
Congratulations Steve!
https://n8nmsteve.blogspot.com/2019/02/homebrew-was.html









