Bry Carling can get you the crystals you need.
SolderSmoke Podcast #218: S-38E Woes; CW filter for uBITX; A Teensy Explosion; Mint, Cheese and Peaberries; Mailbag; A SPECIAL PLEA FOR FEEDBACK
Bry Carling can get you the crystals you need.
SolderSmoke Daily News — Ham Radio Blog
Serving the worldwide community of radio-electronic homebrewers. Providing blog support to the SolderSmoke podcast: http://soldersmoke.com
SolderSmoke Podcast #207 is available:
http://soldersmoke.com/soldersmoke207.mp3
— Giants of Radio
— Pete on 15 Meters
— Bill on 60 Meters with the uBITX
— Pete’s Sudden and Heath Filter Transceivers
— Cubesats to orbit! To the moon! And to Mars!
— Bill rebuilds his 2 meter “Ray-Gun” Quad (for Farhan’s Cubesat)
— Homebrewing Variable caps and stockpiling NP0
— My “by ear” Minimal Discernible Signal Technique
— Thoughts on Direct Sampling SDR and the Radio Art
MAILBAG
— A request for feedback from GQRP
— G4WIF reports G3ROO on UK TV with spysets
— VU3XVR builds FB rig from EMRFD
— M0KOV Charter member of the 3 Scratch-built BITX club
–KD4PBJ’s PTO Turtle DC Receiver
— AB1OP builds Pete’s LBS receiver and gives us a new acronym: SITB
— KD4EBM — Thanks for the scanner Bob!
— A possible sponsor from California…
— Pete’s dream neighborhood…
SolderSmoke Podcast #195 is available. Link appears below (scroll down)
We’ve got a problem: Pete Juliano and the QRP Hall of Fame 🙁 PLEASE HELP!
Oh man, run — don’t walk — to the N6QW blog and check out Pete’s amazing 60 meter DIFX transceiver. DifX is another N6QW contribution to the lexicon: it refers to a transceiver that has an architecture DifFERENT from that of our beloved BITXs. Pete means no disrespect to the BITX — he just sees the value in sometimes doing something different. I understand this completely — I myself am on my FIFTH BITX (three scratch-built and two modules) and definitely felt the need to do something different. (That’s why I built the OLED NE602 rig.)
Once again Pete Juliano shows himself to be a man ahead of his time: Anticipating FCC approval of a VFO tune-able segment in the band, Pete has made Channel 3 on his rig tunable with a rotary encoder. Hopefully, we will all soon need this. Pete is already there. FB OM.
My reaction to 60 meters has been very similar to Pete’s. We will talk about this on the next podcast (this Saturday).
Pete’s blog has a great description of the new rig, complete with a really nice video. Check it out:
http://n6qw.blogspot.com/2017/03/a-new-line-of-transceivers-difx_23.html
Here’s an update on my BITX 60 project. The modified module is in the lower box. An Arduino Uno and an Si5351 (this one with unreleased smoke) is in the Heath QF-1 box on the top. I am using an Arduino sketch written by Don ND6T. It spits out the needed 17 MHz LO freq needed for each of the five 60 meter channels. You can scroll through the channels by just holding down the rotary switch interrupt button.
There is a move afoot to liberate from channelization about 15 kHz of the 60 meter band. When that happens, I’m ready to go — I’ll just reconnect the rotary encoder for the Si5351 and load some new code. I suspect that by the time that happens, Don will have modified his code so that the 15kHz “tunable” segment will be integrated into the current program and will appear as one of the options as you scroll through the choices.
For reasons that most readers will understand, I have resisted channelization for many years. But here I am, channelized on 60. It is not so bad. I’m having fun listening to a new band, using a modified BITX, an Arduino, a bit of Heathkit and code from a fellow ham.
Inspired by Don ND6T, I decided to put a BITX40 Module on the 60 Meter band. All you really have to do is modify the bandpass filter. Don showed us how to do this by simply adding three 100pf caps. I was going to order SMD caps, but this just didn’t seem right — I found three of the old “with wires” kind and easily soldered them into position. The bandpass shifted as Don had promised.
You also have to change the VFO freq. You need it to be in the 17.3 MHz range. Don has a nifty program for the Raduino that also works with the Si5351/Ardunio Uno combo that I use. It keeps you on the five channels currently authorized on 60. Unfortunately I managed to let the smoke out of yet another innocent Si5351 breakout board. Amazon and Lady Ada are sending me another one, but in the meantime I pressed into service an old AD9850 DDS. I had a little trouble getting the 17MHz signal through the BITX’s VFO 4 MHz VFO system, but I eventually figured it out. (More on this later.)
The receiver is working nicely. I like the relaxed 60 meter conversations.
The free-range rig is coming along! I’m receiving with decent sensitivity (my generator’s only calibrated to -100 dB/m, and I hear a CW note there just fine) and I’m getting about -2 dB/m out of the mixer. Yippee!