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Showing posts with label Weber-Steve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weber-Steve. Show all posts

Saturday, February 29, 2020

How to Measure Output Impedance (video)



Thanks to Tony Fishpool G4WIF for alerting us to this very useful video by Alan Wolke W2AEW. 

Alan's video channel is a real treasure-trove for homebrewers.  

It was very cool to see "AEW" inscribed on the function generator that Alan built 30 years ago. 

Be sure to stay to the end of this video for some electronics humor from Alan.  (Steve Silverman:  Take note -- we might want to add this to the lexicon.) 

Now I'm going to search Alan's YouTube channel for a video on how to measure input impedance. 

Friday, April 8, 2016

From Vietnam to Washington DC -- Jonathan-san KC7FYS W0XO 7J1AWL XV2OC Stops By With His AT3b

I first saw that QRP Altoid-tin ATS-3b rig  around 8 years ago in pictures that Jonathan-san sent from a beach in Vietnam.  He and his family were there on vacation from Japan.  (Included was a memorable picture of his young son in an NVA helmet.) During this time period Jonathan also tried (unsuccessfully, I'm afraid) to teach me how to properly pronounce the name of that famous electronics market in Japan.  

Jonathan and his family were in Washington yesterday and we got together for lunch.   It was great to finally meet them.  And to see that well-travelled ATS-3b.




Jonathan is a big fan of the ATS-3b, and for good reason.  A very neat rig.

Plug in filters for the ATS-3b.


Monday, September 23, 2013

BITX Build Update #9 -- Discretion



With the exception of the PA, all of the stages of my BITX 17 are built.  Over the weekend I put in the DC wiring for the receiver and the inter-stage connections (using the Belden coax with the exposed shield and Teflon di-electric).  It looks nice. 

In my experience, almost all new superhet receivers require a certain amount of debugging and coaxing before they will work.  This one is no exception.  The VFO and the BFO work fine, and all three RF and IF amp stages are also good.  The bandpass filter  that I built passes the desired band and tunes up nicely on the right frequency.  The product detector was acting weird and wasn't balancing out properly, but I got that all sorted.  

I can put an 18.110 MHz signal at the antenna connection and see the signal go through the bandpass filter (with loss), on to the RF amp stage, to the first mixer where it meets the 23 MHz energy from the VFO.  A very messy mixture goes from the mixer to the first IF amp which sends it to the 5 MHz Cohn filter.  The filter works, but it has a lot of ripple, so I need to work on the termination impedances.  Second IF works fine, then the signal goes to the product detector.  AF comes out.  

Here's where the discretion comes in.  Instead of the LM386 chip, I built a 40db two transistor direct coupled AF amplifier. 

So it all works, but the receiver is quite deaf.  I think I just don't have enough gain in the whole system.  I looked at the schematic for the BITX-17 kit.  It very helpfully has total (net) gain figures for the RX.  I can see that my current configuration comes up short.   

Here is what I'm thinking of doing:  I might replace the 40db direct-coupled AF amp with a 100 db Darlington pair.   I really like the discrete Darlington AF amp that KD1JV has in his "all discrete" transceiver:
http://kd1jv.qrpradio.com/ADC/ADC-40.htm  Nice.  3 2N3904's driving a speaker.  I may use that.  
 
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Monday, January 12, 2009

KD1JV's Surface Mount Video

OK SolderSmoke fans, here's a video for YOU! Steve "Melt Solder" Weber has put out his first video. It is about surface mount soldering. It is all very interesting, and some actual solder smoke is released, but I was a bit disturbed when Steve put the PC board on an electric stove and then started using this purple thing that looked and sounded like a hair dryer. Made me yearn for my Weller soldering gun. Great video Steve, thanks!

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