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Before yesterdaySolderSmoke Daily News

A Really Cool Homebrew Computer

26 May 2024 at 10:15

Wow, very cool.Β  On Hack-A-Day this morning:

It caught my eye because the architecture seems similar to that of the MostlyDIYRF PSSST rig.Β Β 

There is a lot to learn from this little machine, especially for an analog guy like me.Β 

Mostly DIY RF PSSST

Jens OZ1GEO's AMAZING Radio Museum

11 May 2024 at 17:09


Brace yourselves.Β  This is just too much, too much radio history, too much cool stuff.Β  We are into ham radio sensory overload territory here. The rigs, the radios, the radioactive stuff (including tubes!).Β  Lots of Whermact stuff.Β  A Chinese receiver.Β  Tesla coils and Faraday shields.Β  Much more.Β 

Thanks to Helge LA6NCA for alerting us to this and for shooting these videos.Β  And thanks to Jens OZ1GEO for putting this magnificent collection together.Β  I hope they find sometplace to keep this all together so that future generations can benefit from it.Β 

George WB5OYP points out there is more from Jens here:Β 

The Wizard of Schenectady -- Charles Proteus Steinmetz

7 March 2024 at 09:17

Such a beautiful article.Β  Β Ramakrishnan VU2JXN sent it to me.Β  It reminded me of how puzzeled we were when we found "Schenectady" on old shortwave receiver dials, amidst truly exotic locations.Β  Rangoon!Β  Peking!Β  Cape Town!Β  Schenectady?Β  Β Obviously this was due to General Electric's location in that New York State city.Β  But reading this article, I am thinking that the presence of Charles Proteus Steinmetz had something to do with it. His informal title (The Wizard of Schenectady)Β  confirmed that we have been right in awarding similar titles to impressive homebrewers.Β 

Here is the Smithsonian article that Ramakrishnan sent.Β 

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/charles-proteus-steinmetz-the-wizard-of-schenectady-51912022/#ixzz2lRMjrfit

And here is a link to a PBS video on Steinmetz:Β 

https://www.pbs.org/video/wmht-specials-divine-discontent-charles-proteus-steinmetz/

Here is a SolderSmoke blog post about "Radio Schenectady":

https://soldersmoke.blogspot.com/2020/07/radio-schenectady.html


N6ASD Builds a Zinc-Oxide Negative Resistance Transmitter (and a Spark/Coherer rig)

6 March 2024 at 12:46

I saw this video and post on Hackaday this morning:


I got the fellow's callsign fromΒ  his Morse CQ.Β Β 
It is N6ASD in San Francisco.Β 

Check this out from his QRZ page:Β https://www.qrz.com/db/N6ASD

My journey into the world of amateur radio began in a very primitive way. My first "rig" comprised of aΒ spark-gap transmitter and a coherer based receiver. A coherer is a primitive radio signal detector that consists of iron filings placed between two electrodes. It was popular in the early days of wireless telegraphy.

Spark transmitter (using a car's ignition coil to generate high-voltage sparks):

Coherer based receiver (using a doorbell for the "decoherer" mechanism):

When I keyed the transmitter, a high voltage arc would appear at the spark-gap andΒ this produced (noisy) radio waves. The signal would beΒ received by the iron-filings coherer on the other side of the room. A coherer is (usually) a one-shot receiver. You have to physically hit it to shake the filings and bring the detector back to its original state. That's what the doorbell hammer did. It would hit the coherer every time it received a signal. It amazed me to no end. A spark created in one room of my house could make the hammer move in another room. Magic!

Soon after this project, I started experimenting with *slightly more refined* crystal detectors and crystal radio circuits. As most of you would know, these amazing radios don't require any batteries and work by harnessing energy from radio waves. I guess these simpleΒ experiments instilled a sense of awe and wonder regarding electromagnetic waves, and eventually, this brought me into the world of amateur radio in 2015.

My main HF rig is an old ICOM IC-735. The only modification on this is radio is that it uses LED backlights (instead of bulbs):

Icom IC 735

With space at a premium in San Francisco, the antenna that I have settled for is an inverted vee installed in my backyard (and it just barely fits). I made the mast by lashing together wooden planks. For this city dweller, it works FB:

I have recently gotten into CW, and it has definitely become my mode of choice.

I'm a self-taught electronics enthusiast and IΒ love homebrewing radio circuits. I'll be sharing more info about them soon.

Thanks for checking out my page. I hope to meet you on the air!

73,
N6ASD

Β 

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