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Before yesterdayDave Richards AA7EE

The Belka-DX and an AM BC Band High Pass Filter

By: AA7EE
9 August 2024 at 18:44

My, how time flies. This is a post I have been meaning to write for nearly 3 years now. Back in late 2018, after a search for a small portable SW receiver, I purchased a C Crane Skywave SSB. It had a lot of the things I wanted in a portable radio and, at the time, I felt that it offered a lot for a receiver of it’s diminutive size.

Then I became aware of an even smaller receiver called the Belka-DX. Designed and manufactured by Alex EU1ME in Belarus, this positively tiny radio used SDR technology and, judging by the reviews I was reading and videos I was watching on YouTube, there was no other receiver it’s size that felt and performed like a much larger communications receiver in the way that this one apparently did. It all seemed very encouraging, so I went ahead and ordered one directly from Alex in Belarus. The first time I tried to order direct from his site, my bank denied the payment. I got on the phone to advise them that it was a legitimate charge, and they gave me a one hour window in which to put the transaction through again. I returned to the site, ordered the Belka-DX, and the order was accepted.

There are 3 ways I know of to purchase Belka receivers –

  1. Directly from Alex EU1ME, in Belarus. Alex supplies 2 versions, with and without a built-in speaker. In order to accommodate the built-in speaker, that particular version has a slightly smaller battery. The version with the built-in speaker currently costs 475BYN, which at the exchange rate at the time of writing, is about US$145. As of Aug 9th 2024, Alex’s site carries the message that international shipping is currently unavailable. I notice that in the Q&A, Alex noted in July that he hopes to resume shipping to the US in about a month. This was the message he posted, on July 18th 2024 – “We do ship to the USA but at the moment we need to to undergo technical expert appraisal so that our Belarusian customs could allow export abroad. We hope to restart shipping in a month. Shipping cost to the USA is 13 USD.”

  2. From Mobimax in Bulgaria. This is the same receiver, but with a larger speaker back that also has two small fold-out legs. This increases the depth of the Belka, but allows you to have a speaker as well as the larger 2500mAH battery. The markings for the input and output connections on the sides are etched into the metal. In addition, the LCD display is fitted with a screen protector into which are etched the words “HAM tactical RCVR”. Mobimax sell two different packages containing this receiver. The only difference is that the very slightly more expensive package includes a 3.5mm stereo to 3.5mm stereo cable, for plugging the IQ output of the Belka to your computer for use with SDR software. The version of the Belka that Mobimax supply is currently 227 Euros, which is about US$247. The package with the IQ cable is just a few Euros more.

  3. There is an eBay seller in Bulgaria who sells the same version that Mobimax does, but for the (in my opinion) rather high price of US$350. The main reason I can see that buyers might go for this seller is the convenience and comfort factor of being able to pay with Paypal on a site they are familiar with.

A few weeks after ordering, a small box arrived from Belarus. In it was the Belka-DX wrapped in bubble wrap, and a small telescopic whip antenna of about 28.5″ in length. No documentation was included in the box, though it is available online. I didn’t take any pictures of it then, so here are some of it now, 3 years later.

In the above image, the backlight is on. In the next one, it is off. The backlight can be customized to be on all the time, off all the time, or to stay on for 12 seconds after any button is pushed or the tuning knob is turned. In the next photo, to the left of the BNC is a micro-USB connector that is used for charging the receiver. Underneath it is a red LED that lights when charging. To the right of the BNC antenna connector is the 3.5mm earphone jack. It is important that a stereo TRS jack is used here. A mono jack will short out one of the channels and can damage the audio IC –

At 82mm x 50mm x 20mm, this receiver is small!

I’m not sure if this is still true of the version that comes with the internal speaker direct from Alex, but the speaker holes in mine were slightly imperfect. It was evident that they had been drilled by hand. Not a big deal, but I thought it worth noting –

On the right side is the tuning encoder. It rotates smoothly with no click stops, for that “big receiver” smooth tuning feel. Also on the right side is a 3.5mm jack for the IQ output –

This was the second iteration of this receiver. The first one, named the Belka-DSP, covered 3.5-31 MHz. The Belka-DX covers 1.5-31 MHz. There is now a newer version, known simply as “Belka”, that has impressively continuous coverage from 0.1 MHz – 31MHz. Yes – 100KHz to 31MHz!

There are, by now, a number of quite detailed reviews of this series of receivers online. One such review, which gives a good overview of the capabilities of this pint-sized communications receiver, was written by Dave N9EWO. Since purchasing my Belka-DX almost 3 years ago, I have used it regularly. There are several features that I find very compelling, which distinguish it from many other shortwave portables –

  1. There is no chuffing or soft-muting in between frequency steps. As a result, when on the smallest frequency step of 10Hz, the effect is of smooth, continuous tuning.

  2. Unlike the CC Skywave SSB and, I believe, many other portables of it’s type, it is absolutely solid on SSB and CW receive. The carrier injection on my C Crane receiver was unsteady on strong signals, leading to chirping on CW, and similar frequency instability on SSB. For a short while, I owned a CountyComm GP-5 SSB, which was even more unsteady. The Belka-DX handles like a proper communications receiver in this regard, being rock steady on strong and weak signals alike.

  3. The frequency display is accurate. As far as I can tell, it is accurate to better than 10-20Hz across the frequency range. Because of this, I can easily tune it to a frequency, and know that it is there. The Belka-DX employs a 0.5ppm TXCO and as a result, has a high level of frequency stability. My Skywave SSB only tunes in 1 KHz steps. To interpolate between those steps, you have to push a button to engage the fine tuning, but are not able to read the frequency accurately in between those 1 KHz points. For many users, this might not be an issue, but for those who listen out for weak beacons and other signals that are not on 1 KHz “channels”, the continuous tuning and accurate frequency readout on the Belka makes such monitoring much easier. A couple of years ago, I went on a 4 /12 month long campervan trip around 6 Western states. At the time, one of my interests was listening out for low-powered unlicensed HF beacons. Standing in the vast expanses of the desert with the little Belka-DX in my hand, hearing a weak low-powered CW beacon from hundreds of miles away was magical. These beacons are home-made affairs, and usually running somewhere between 30mW and a watt. Being able to dial in the precise frequency on a handheld receiver that is even sensitive with the set-top whip is a boon with such pursuits.

  4. You can tailor the passband for each mode. With my C Crane Skywave, and I believe many other similar receivers, the adjustable filtering (if available) is audio filtering, and doesn’t occur in the RF stages. The Belka is an SDR, and the custom adjustable filtering is the equivalent of filtering in the RF or IF stages of a conventional superhet.

Two things that I wasn’t too keen on, and which have been amended in the 0.1-31MHz version –

  1. In CW mode, the frequency display doesn’t indicate the operating frequency. For example, with a 700Hz sidetone pitch selected, if you want to receive a CW signal on 7030 KHz, you have to tune the receiver 700 Hz below that frequency i.e. to 7029.3 KHz. You do get used to it, but it would be nice to have it display the actual operating frequency in CW mode. In the newest version, the 0.1-31MHz version, I have read that the receiver displays the actual operating frequency in CW. If you’re concerned with being able to read out the exact frequency (if searching for weak beacons on non-standard frequencies, for example) you’ll still need to ensure that you tune to the correct sidetone frequency in order for the frequency readout to be accurate. Personally, I’d love a sidetone feature for this, but I doubt that too many others would consider it to be an essential feature in a receiver (as opposed to a transceiver).

  2. When stepping through the memory channels, you cannot hear those channels as you cycle through them. In order to hear the selected channel, you have to press the appropriate button to select and load it. Thus, you cannot easily scan through a number of preset memory channels to listen for activity. As with 1 above, I this has been remedied in the newest version of the Belka.

The audio quality from the Belka-DX is excellent when used with earbuds. The internal speaker doesn’t do it justice, though it is very useful when taking the receiver on outings. Power from the audio amplifier is adequate for most applications, though when plugging an external speaker in, it helps to use one that is sensitive. Some people use powered speakers. I have two external speakers on the bench, both unpowered, that I use with it. The main one is an MFJ-281 ClearTone™ speaker. It is sensitive, and produces good volume. The audio response from the mylar cone is restricted, and what I would characterize as communications quality. Audio is clear and intelligible. The speaker appears to have a natural resonance at around 650-700Hz, which is useful for CW. For those times when I need a little more fidelity, such as when listening to strong SWBC stations, or hams on AM, I use an old and compact hi-fi speaker manufactured by Cambridge Soundworks. It was discarded by one of my neighbors, and appears to be a mid-range unit. It is not as sensitive as the MFJ ClearTone™ speaker, but the Belka will still provide enough drive in a small, quiet room, which perfectly describes the conditions in my shack.

The small size and slim dimensions of the Belka-DX make it ideal for traveling. When using it at home with an external antenna connected, the ergonomics and ease of use are much improved when mounted on some kind of stand. There are a number of stands available, as well as files for those who wish to 3D-print their own. I remembered a clamp I once bought, that was designed to hold a cellphone for attaching it to a tripod, for making videos. The Belka is not quite as wide as a cellphone, so I used a couple of pieces of dense foam to pad it out, and screwed it to a small tabletop tripod. It works quite well, and improves the ease of use drastically when listening at home. When mounted like this, it feels like a serious and very usable SWL set-up. In the various SWL groups on FB that I frequent, I often see questions from folk asking about receivers that are good for SWL’ing. Portables such as the Tecsun PL-880, along with other similar receivers are often recommended. I think that this Belka makes an excellent receiver for all-round shortwave listening. It is not available in as many outlets as the more traditional shortwave portables, which is why I think that it isn’t as popular in the SWL community as it should be. If you are listening mainly to AM broadcasts on shortwave, then many of the portables will most likely work well. If you do a lot of SSB and CW listening though, the Belka is a solid and, to my mind, preferable option.

In the following picture, my Belka is mounted on a mini tripod (an Ultrapod) and connected to the MFJ ClearTone™ speaker. Behind and underneath the Belka, you can just see an Altoids tin which contains a high pass filter with a cut-off at about 2700 KHz. It was designed to prevent overload from strong local AM broadcast stations. More on that later in this post.

The Belka-DX is surprisingly sensitive when listening outdoors with the included telescopic whip. It does need a counterpoise, or the received signal strength suffers greatly. If you are holding the receiver, then your body acts as the counterpoise. If you are listening on earbuds or headphones, then the headphone cord acts as a counterpoise. If the receiver is sitting on a surface and using the internal speaker, then you’ll need to connect a counterpoise wire somehow. At home, it works really well when connected to my outdoor antena, which is a doublet at 47 feet, cut roughly for 40M, fed with 300 ohm twinlead, and matched to coax at the entrance to the shack, with a balun and Elecraft T1 tuner. I tune the T1 by squirting RF into it on the nearest amateur band. If you are using your outdoor antenna for listening only, then a simpler arrangement would suffice. This just happens to be the one antenna I also use for my ham exploits.

I live in a densely populated urban area, within a few miles of several medium power (5KW) AM broadcast stations. They often break through when I am using the external antenna with receivers that don’t have narrow filtering on the antenna input. My Belka-DX experiences strong AM breakthrough when used on the external antenna at all frequencies up to 4530 KHz. The moment I tune above 4530 – even by a single 10Hz step, the breakthrough stops instantly, suggesting that a different bandpass filter is switched in at the point. According to the manufacturer-supplied block diagram of the first version of Belka, known as the Belka-DSP, the input bandpass filters are from 3.5-7.5MHz, 7.5-15MHz, and 15-30MHz. The block diagram can be seen on this page by Fernando Duarte. I assume that for the Belka-DX, with it’s extended coverage down to 1.5 MHz, one of the bandpass filter crossover points is at 4530 KHz, the point above which all AM BC band breakthrough stops.

To solve this problem of breakthrough, I resorted to a little high pass filter that I have used successfully with other receiver projects. It’s a high pass filter that was designed by David WA7JHZ, details of which were given in K4SWL’s very wonderful and informative SWLing Post blog. You can see it here. David built his with molded chokes. I built versions with both molded chokes and toroids, and compared the response curves.

Trusty Altoids tins to the rescue. Here’s the version built with molded chokes, purchased from Tayda Electronics. The chokes are mounted vertically, and are a little hard to see in this image –

The small holes in the base of the tin were left over from a previous project that didn’t work out.

Then I built another high pass filter with toroids instead of molded chokes. I figured the toroids should have slightly higher Q and would present a better response curve. All 4 inductors were wound on T37-6 toroid cores with 26 AWG wire. The 2.7µH inductors had 30 turns and the 1µH ones 18 turns. The wires supported them about 4 or 5mm above the ground plane of the Altoid tin –

Dang, after all these years, Altoids tins still make very serviceable and cheap enclosures for small projects!

These filters were designed for input and output impedances of 50Ω. My one external HF antenna is a 40M doublet fed with 300Ω twinlead, and matched to 50Ω coax with a 1:1 balun and Elecraft T1 tuner. As mentioned previously, I briefly transmit a small amount of power on the nearest ham band to where I want to listen, to tune the T1. A manual tuner could be used here instead, and tuned for maximum noise. For listening, this is not too critical a procedure, and a single tune will cover the receiver for listening on a wide range of frequencies. The antenna input of the Belka is matched for the high impedance of the supplied short telescopic whip, and not for a 50Ω antenna. Nevertheless, I went ahead and plugged both versions of this HPF in between the antenna and the receiver, and they both served to completely eradicate every single trace of AM BC band breakthrough.

Using a NanoVNA, I measured the response curve of both filters from 1.5 MHz to 30MHz. Here’s the curve for the filter built with molded chokes –

FREQUENCY (MHz)INSERTION LOSS (dB)
300
200.1
150.25
100.5
3.71
33
1.7 (1700 KHz)41
1.5 (1500 KHz)49

The 3dB cutoff point of this filter was actually 3 MHz, and the insertion loss small, with a virtually flat response from the 80M band up to the top of the 10M band. Here’s a close-up of the response between 1.5 MHz and 4 MHz –

The insertion loss of the toroid filter in the passband was a little lower, For all practical purposes though, there would be no discernible difference between the two filters. If you hate winding toroids, then by all means, build this filter with molded chokes, and it will kill your AM BC band breakthrough just as effectively as if you’d built it with toroids. Here’s the response curve of the toroid version from 1500 KHz to 30 MHz –

And from 1500 KHz to 4 MHz, giving a closer look at the area around the the 3dB cutoff point –

FREQUENCY (MHz)INSERTION LOSS (dB)
300
200.04
150.12
100.25
3.70.82
2.83
1.7 (1700 KHz)40
1.5 (1500 KHz)48

There are quite a few internally generated birdies throughout the whole coverage range. However, the majority of them are only audible with no antenna connected, and are masked by band noise. The others, although audible over the band noise, are not troublesome. For a receiver this compact, and with this overall level of performance, it’s a small price to pay. I rarely noticed them during normal use. It would be nice for the end-user to have a way to update the firmware, though the extended coverage down to 100KHz that the new (V3) Belka enjoys required a hardware upgrade in the form of an extra bandpass filter.

For a more complete description of the improvements made with the newest Belka version, see 13dka’s guest post on Thomas K4SWl’s excellent SWLing Post blog. In short, the Belka is a fantastic general coverage shortwave receiver. It performs and handles like much larger tabletop communications receivers. It is so small that it can be carried anywhere with great ease, making the decision to do a little SWL’ing while on a hike, a walk, or any trip, a no-brainer. You can do a lot of serious shortwave listening with this receiver. Ordering direct from Alex in Belarus offers by far the lowest price and is, in my opinion, the way to go. When I think of my first communications receiver, an old, huge and very heavy British military R107 boat anchor, it is amazing to think that this light and svelte pocketable Belka-DX handily runs circles around it. An SWL can positively rule the shortwaves with this tiny and light miracle of wireless!

There are many other, far more comprehensive reviews on this receiver, but I have been wanting to sing the praises of the Belka (which is Russian for squirrel) for a long time now. I needed to get this out.

The Belka-DX and an AM BC Band High Pass Filter

By: AA7EE
9 August 2024 at 18:44

My, how time flies. This is a post I have been meaning to write for nearly 3 years now. Back in late 2018, after a search for a small portable SW receiver, I purchased a C Crane Skywave SSB. It had a lot of the things I wanted in a portable radio and, at the time, I felt that it offered a lot for a receiver of it’s diminutive size.

Then I became aware of an even smaller receiver called the Belka-DX. Designed and manufactured by Alex EU1ME in Belarus, this positively tiny radio used SDR technology and, judging by the reviews I was reading and videos I was watching on YouTube, there was no other receiver it’s size that felt and performed like a much larger communications receiver in the way that this one apparently did. It all seemed very encouraging, so I went ahead and ordered one directly from Alex in Belarus. The first time I tried to order direct from his site, my bank denied the payment. I got on the phone to advise them that it was a legitimate charge, and they gave me a one hour window in which to put the transaction through again. I returned to the site, ordered the Belka-DX, and the order was accepted.

There are 3 ways I know of to purchase Belka receivers –

  1. Directly from Alex EU1ME, in Belarus. Alex supplies 2 versions, with and without a built-in speaker. In order to accommodate the built-in speaker, that particular version has a slightly smaller battery. The version with the built-in speaker currently costs 475BYN, which at the exchange rate at the time of writing, is about US$145. As of Aug 9th 2024, Alex’s site carries the message that international shipping is currently unavailable. I notice that in the Q&A, Alex noted in July that he hopes to resume shipping to the US in about a month. This was the message he posted, on July 18th 2024 – “We do ship to the USA but at the moment we need to to undergo technical expert appraisal so that our Belarusian customs could allow export abroad. We hope to restart shipping in a month. Shipping cost to the USA is 13 USD.”

  2. From Mobimax in Bulgaria. This is the same receiver, but with a larger speaker back that also has two small fold-out legs. This increases the depth of the Belka, but allows you to have a speaker as well as the larger 2500mAH battery. The markings for the input and output connections on the sides are etched into the metal. In addition, the LCD display is fitted with a screen protector into which are etched the words “HAM tactical RCVR”. Mobimax sell two different packages containing this receiver. The only difference is that the very slightly more expensive package includes a 3.5mm stereo to 3.5mm stereo cable, for plugging the IQ output of the Belka to your computer for use with SDR software. The version of the Belka that Mobimax supply is currently 227 Euros, which is about US$247. The package with the IQ cable is just a few Euros more.

  3. There is an eBay seller in Bulgaria who sells the same version that Mobimax does, but for the (in my opinion) rather high price of US$350. The main reason I can see that buyers might go for this seller is the convenience and comfort factor of being able to pay with Paypal on a site they are familiar with.

A few weeks after ordering, a small box arrived from Belarus. In it was the Belka-DX wrapped in bubble wrap, and a small telescopic whip antenna of about 28.5″ in length. No documentation was included in the box, though it is available online. I didn’t take any pictures of it then, so here are some of it now, 3 years later.

In the above image, the backlight is on. In the next one, it is off. The backlight can be customized to be on all the time, off all the time, or to stay on for 12 seconds after any button is pushed or the tuning knob is turned. In the next photo, to the left of the BNC is a micro-USB connector that is used for charging the receiver. Underneath it is a red LED that lights when charging. To the right of the BNC antenna connector is the 3.5mm earphone jack. It is important that a stereo TRS jack is used here. A mono jack will short out one of the channels and can damage the audio IC –

At 82mm x 50mm x 20mm, this receiver is small!

I’m not sure if this is still true of the version that comes with the internal speaker direct from Alex, but the speaker holes in mine were slightly imperfect. It was evident that they had been drilled by hand. Not a big deal, but I thought it worth noting –

On the right side is the tuning encoder. It rotates smoothly with no click stops, for that “big receiver” smooth tuning feel. Also on the right side is a 3.5mm jack for the IQ output –

This was the second iteration of this receiver. The first one, named the Belka-DSP, covered 3.5-31 MHz. The Belka-DX covers 1.5-31 MHz. There is now a newer version, known simply as “Belka”, that has impressively continuous coverage from 0.1 MHz – 31MHz. Yes – 100KHz to 31MHz!

There are, by now, a number of quite detailed reviews of this series of receivers online. One such review, which gives a good overview of the capabilities of this pint-sized communications receiver, was written by Dave N9EWO. Since purchasing my Belka-DX almost 3 years ago, I have used it regularly. There are several features that I find very compelling, which distinguish it from many other shortwave portables –

  1. There is no chuffing or soft-muting in between frequency steps. As a result, when on the smallest frequency step of 10Hz, the effect is of smooth, continuous tuning.

  2. Unlike the CC Skywave SSB and, I believe, many other portables of it’s type, it is absolutely solid on SSB and CW receive. The carrier injection on my C Crane receiver was unsteady on strong signals, leading to chirping on CW, and similar frequency instability on SSB. For a short while, I owned a CountyComm GP-5 SSB, which was even more unsteady. The Belka-DX handles like a proper communications receiver in this regard, being rock steady on strong and weak signals alike.

  3. The frequency display is accurate. As far as I can tell, it is accurate to better than 10-20Hz across the frequency range. Because of this, I can easily tune it to a frequency, and know that it is there. The Belka-DX employs a 0.5ppm TXCO and as a result, has a high level of frequency stability. My Skywave SSB only tunes in 1 KHz steps. To interpolate between those steps, you have to push a button to engage the fine tuning, but are not able to read the frequency accurately in between those 1 KHz points. For many users, this might not be an issue, but for those who listen out for weak beacons and other signals that are not on 1 KHz “channels”, the continuous tuning and accurate frequency readout on the Belka makes such monitoring much easier. A couple of years ago, I went on a 4 /12 month long campervan trip around 6 Western states. At the time, one of my interests was listening out for low-powered unlicensed HF beacons. Standing in the vast expanses of the desert with the little Belka-DX in my hand, hearing a weak low-powered CW beacon from hundreds of miles away was magical. These beacons are home-made affairs, and usually running somewhere between 30mW and a watt. Being able to dial in the precise frequency on a handheld receiver that is even sensitive with the set-top whip is a boon with such pursuits.

  4. You can tailor the passband for each mode. With my C Crane Skywave, and I believe many other similar receivers, the adjustable filtering (if available) is audio filtering, and doesn’t occur in the RF stages. The Belka is an SDR, and the custom adjustable filtering is the equivalent of filtering in the RF or IF stages of a conventional superhet.

Two things that I wasn’t too keen on, and which have been amended in the 0.1-31MHz version –

  1. In CW mode, the frequency display doesn’t indicate the operating frequency. For example, with a 700Hz sidetone pitch selected, if you want to receive a CW signal on 7030 KHz, you have to tune the receiver 700 Hz below that frequency i.e. to 7029.3 KHz. You do get used to it, but it would be nice to have it display the actual operating frequency in CW mode. In the newest version, the 0.1-31MHz version, I have read that the receiver displays the actual operating frequency in CW. If you’re concerned with being able to read out the exact frequency (if searching for weak beacons on non-standard frequencies, for example) you’ll still need to ensure that you tune to the correct sidetone frequency in order for the frequency readout to be accurate. Personally, I’d love a sidetone feature for this, but I doubt that too many others would consider it to be an essential feature in a receiver (as opposed to a transceiver).

  2. When stepping through the memory channels, you cannot hear those channels as you cycle through them. In order to hear the selected channel, you have to press the appropriate button to select and load it. Thus, you cannot easily scan through a number of preset memory channels to listen for activity. As with 1 above, I this has been remedied in the newest version of the Belka.

The audio quality from the Belka-DX is excellent when used with earbuds. The internal speaker doesn’t do it justice, though it is very useful when taking the receiver on outings. Power from the audio amplifier is adequate for most applications, though when plugging an external speaker in, it helps to use one that is sensitive. Some people use powered speakers. I have two external speakers on the bench, both unpowered, that I use with it. The main one is an MFJ-281 ClearTone™ speaker. It is sensitive, and produces good volume. The audio response from the mylar cone is restricted, and what I would characterize as communications quality. Audio is clear and intelligible. The speaker appears to have a natural resonance at around 650-700Hz, which is useful for CW. For those times when I need a little more fidelity, such as when listening to strong SWBC stations, or hams on AM, I use an old and compact hi-fi speaker manufactured by Cambridge Soundworks. It was discarded by one of my neighbors, and appears to be a mid-range unit. It is not as sensitive as the MFJ ClearTone™ speaker, but the Belka will still provide enough drive in a small, quiet room, which perfectly describes the conditions in my shack.

The small size and slim dimensions of the Belka-DX make it ideal for traveling. When using it at home with an external antenna connected, the ergonomics and ease of use are much improved when mounted on some kind of stand. There are a number of stands available, as well as files for those who wish to 3D-print their own. I remembered a clamp I once bought, that was designed to hold a cellphone for attaching it to a tripod, for making videos. The Belka is not quite as wide as a cellphone, so I used a couple of pieces of dense foam to pad it out, and screwed it to a small tabletop tripod. It works quite well, and improves the ease of use drastically when listening at home. When mounted like this, it feels like a serious and very usable SWL set-up. In the various SWL groups on FB that I frequent, I often see questions from folk asking about receivers that are good for SWL’ing. Portables such as the Tecsun PL-880, along with other similar receivers are often recommended. I think that this Belka makes an excellent receiver for all-round shortwave listening. It is not available in as many outlets as the more traditional shortwave portables, which is why I think that it isn’t as popular in the SWL community as it should be. If you are listening mainly to AM broadcasts on shortwave, then many of the portables will most likely work well. If you do a lot of SSB and CW listening though, the Belka is a solid and, to my mind, preferable option.

In the following picture, my Belka is mounted on a mini tripod (an Ultrapod) and connected to the MFJ ClearTone™ speaker. Behind and underneath the Belka, you can just see an Altoids tin which contains a high pass filter with a cut-off at about 2700 KHz. It was designed to prevent overload from strong local AM broadcast stations. More on that later in this post.

The Belka-DX is surprisingly sensitive when listening outdoors with the included telescopic whip. It does need a counterpoise, or the received signal strength suffers greatly. If you are holding the receiver, then your body acts as the counterpoise. If you are listening on earbuds or headphones, then the headphone cord acts as a counterpoise. If the receiver is sitting on a surface and using the internal speaker, then you’ll need to connect a counterpoise wire somehow. At home, it works really well when connected to my outdoor antena, which is a doublet at 47 feet, cut roughly for 40M, fed with 300 ohm twinlead, and matched to coax at the entrance to the shack, with a balun and Elecraft T1 tuner. I tune the T1 by squirting RF into it on the nearest amateur band. If you are using your outdoor antenna for listening only, then a simpler arrangement would suffice. This just happens to be the one antenna I also use for my ham exploits.

I live in a densely populated urban area, within a few miles of several medium power (5KW) AM broadcast stations. They often break through when I am using the external antenna with receivers that don’t have narrow filtering on the antenna input. My Belka-DX experiences strong AM breakthrough when used on the external antenna at all frequencies up to 4530 KHz. The moment I tune above 4530 – even by a single 10Hz step, the breakthrough stops instantly, suggesting that a different bandpass filter is switched in at the point. According to the manufacturer-supplied block diagram of the first version of Belka, known as the Belka-DSP, the input bandpass filters are from 3.5-7.5MHz, 7.5-15MHz, and 15-30MHz. The block diagram can be seen on this page by Fernando Duarte. I assume that for the Belka-DX, with it’s extended coverage down to 1.5 MHz, one of the bandpass filter crossover points is at 4530 KHz, the point above which all AM BC band breakthrough stops.

To solve this problem of breakthrough, I resorted to a little high pass filter that I have used successfully with other receiver projects. It’s a high pass filter that was designed by David WA7JHZ, details of which were given in K4SWL’s very wonderful and informative SWLing Post blog. You can see it here. David built his with molded chokes. I built versions with both molded chokes and toroids, and compared the response curves.

Trusty Altoids tins to the rescue. Here’s the version built with molded chokes, purchased from Tayda Electronics. The chokes are mounted vertically, and are a little hard to see in this image –

The small holes in the base of the tin were left over from a previous project that didn’t work out.

Then I built another high pass filter with toroids instead of molded chokes. I figured the toroids should have slightly higher Q and would present a better response curve. All 4 inductors were wound on T37-6 toroid cores with 26 AWG wire. The 2.7µH inductors had 30 turns and the 1µH ones 18 turns. The wires supported them about 4 or 5mm above the ground plane of the Altoid tin –

Dang, after all these years, Altoids tins still make very serviceable and cheap enclosures for small projects!

These filters were designed for input and output impedances of 50Ω. My one external HF antenna is a 40M doublet fed with 300Ω twinlead, and matched to 50Ω coax with a 1:1 balun and Elecraft T1 tuner. As mentioned previously, I briefly transmit a small amount of power on the nearest ham band to where I want to listen, to tune the T1. A manual tuner could be used here instead, and tuned for maximum noise. For listening, this is not too critical a procedure, and a single tune will cover the receiver for listening on a wide range of frequencies. The antenna input of the Belka is matched for the high impedance of the supplied short telescopic whip, and not for a 50Ω antenna. Nevertheless, I went ahead and plugged both versions of this HPF in between the antenna and the receiver, and they both served to completely eradicate every single trace of AM BC band breakthrough.

Using a NanoVNA, I measured the response curve of both filters from 1.5 MHz to 30MHz. Here’s the curve for the filter built with molded chokes –

FREQUENCY (MHz)INSERTION LOSS (dB)
300
200.1
150.25
100.5
3.71
33
1.7 (1700 KHz)41
1.5 (1500 KHz)49

The 3dB cutoff point of this filter was actually 3 MHz, and the insertion loss small, with a virtually flat response from the 80M band up to the top of the 10M band. Here’s a close-up of the response between 1.5 MHz and 4 MHz –

The insertion loss of the toroid filter in the passband was a little lower, For all practical purposes though, there would be no discernible difference between the two filters. If you hate winding toroids, then by all means, build this filter with molded chokes, and it will kill your AM BC band breakthrough just as effectively as if you’d built it with toroids. Here’s the response curve of the toroid version from 1500 KHz to 30 MHz –

And from 1500 KHz to 4 MHz, giving a closer look at the area around the the 3dB cutoff point –

FREQUENCY (MHz)INSERTION LOSS (dB)
300
200.04
150.12
100.25
3.70.82
2.83
1.7 (1700 KHz)40
1.5 (1500 KHz)48

There are quite a few internally generated birdies throughout the whole coverage range. However, the majority of them are only audible with no antenna connected, and are masked by band noise. The others, although audible over the band noise, are not troublesome. For a receiver this compact, and with this overall level of performance, it’s a small price to pay. I rarely noticed them during normal use. It would be nice for the end-user to have a way to update the firmware, though the extended coverage down to 100KHz that the new (V3) Belka enjoys required a hardware upgrade in the form of an extra bandpass filter.

For a more complete description of the improvements made with the newest Belka version, see 13dka’s guest post on Thomas K4SWl’s excellent SWLing Post blog. In short, the Belka is a fantastic general coverage shortwave receiver. It performs and handles like much larger tabletop communications receivers. It is so small that it can be carried anywhere with great ease, making the decision to do a little SWL’ing while on a hike, a walk, or any trip, a no-brainer. You can do a lot of serious shortwave listening with this receiver. Ordering direct from Alex in Belarus offers by far the lowest price and is, in my opinion, the way to go. When I think of my first communications receiver, an old, huge and very heavy British military R107 boat anchor, it is amazing to think that this light and svelte pocketable Belka-DX handily runs circles around it. An SWL can positively rule the shortwaves with this tiny and light miracle of wireless!

There are many other, far more comprehensive reviews on this receiver, but I have been wanting to sing the praises of the Belka (which is Russian for squirrel) for a long time now. I needed to get this out.

The Sproutie 10 Years On, and W3BBO Builds Another Sproutie!

By: AA7EE
22 July 2024 at 00:22

Next month (August) will mark 10 years since I built my little Sproutie HF Regen Receiver. I recently received an email from Bob W3BBO. A few years ago, he built a Sproutie, and he has just built another one – more on that later. Bob’s first Sproutie is shown in this post, along with a few of his other projects. Take a look – there’s some good ones there. His email got me thinking about my Sproutie. I looked up my post on it, and realized that it has now been in the world for 10 years. This seemed like a good time to haul it down from the shelf and see how it has fared. From time to time, I see comments on Manhattan construction, questioning what the copper-clad boards look like after a few years. What a good time to find out! To be fair, I drag The Sproutie out every few months and give it a whirl, so I knew what to expect. It looks essentially the same as it did when built, with the exception of some Dymo labeling that I recently added, and some light dust. I live in an old house, built in 1908, that is very dusty. Comparing the National N dial to how it looked 10 years ago, there does appear to be some light corrosion breaking through the plating, but nothing serious –

All is looking good on the outside, but what about those boards? Well, it turns out they’re looking pretty good too –

These boards were sprayed with clear lacquer before use, and it has protected them from oxidation quite well. In a few of my projects, I didn’t lacquer the boards at all, and they went dark with oxidation after a while. They are still perfectly functional; just not quite as attractive. Over the course of a few years and a few different projects, I learned that how the lacquer is applied makes a difference as well. Very light coats result in a somewhat stippled appearance and, if you don’t apply enough coats, can result in light oxidation with the passage of time. Applying the lacquer more heavily creates a smoother finish, but care is required here – too heavily, and the lacquer pools. If I remember correctly, it will also wrinkle as it sets if multiple thick layers are applied. Both the distance between the spray can and the board makes a difference, as does the length of time you spend spraying. Experimentation is key.

My WBR receiver was built in a case made out of double-sided copper-clad. After 13 years, the circuit board inside still looks good. The outside of the case hasn’t fared as well though. The lacquer was applied quite lightly. In the areas where the receiver was handled a lot, the lacquer must have worn thin, as the board has oxidized in those areas. From the outside, it doesn’t look as bright and shiny as it did when it was built in 2011. This is one of the reasons why, with subsequent projects that I built a case for out of copper-clad, I used single-sided board, and kept the copper side on the inside.

Anyway, The Sproutie still looks presentable, and it sounds just as good as it did when built. Occasionally, the AF and RF gain, and LPF bandwidth pots are a little scratchy, but rotating them a few times cures that. It is still a fun receiver to travel around the HF bands on, though I wish there were more SW AM BC stations to listen to. This receiver would have been a real hoot in the 70’s and 80’s. If I could have built and used this when I was 16, I would have felt as if I’d died and gone to heaven!

The coil box was made from an old cigar case, and some basswood for the compartment divisions. I made this coil box 10 years ago and these, like the Sproutie pictures in this post, are current photos –

Building things is fun, and it’s even better when the project you’ve built remains very usable year after year. If I was building any iteration of The Sproutie again, I’d leave out the fine tune control, as I found it unnecessary. Not sure how I’d make the front panel look balanced without that knob on the right side though. That would have to be given some thought.

As I mentioned at the beginning of this post, Bob W3BBO just finished building his second Sproutie. He didn’t have an AD820AN on hand for the variable bandwidth audio LPF, so he used half of an NE5532 op-amp as a preamp with 6dB of gain and a cut-off at 20KHz, which is essentially just an audio amp with a little gain. See the post on my Sproutie MK II for details on those active filters. With the coil he had, shortly after switching it on, he was able to hear the CHU time signals at 7850 KHz –

These are the two boards that Bob mounted underneath the chassis, and which comprise most of the circuitry for his Sproutie regen –

Congratulations Bob, on bringing another HF regen receiver into the world, and thank you for sharing details of your FB project!

The Sproutie 10 Years On, and W3BBO Builds Another Sproutie!

By: AA7EE
22 July 2024 at 00:22

Next month (August) will mark 10 years since I built my little Sproutie HF Regen Receiver. I recently received an email from Bob W3BBO. A few years ago, he built a Sproutie, and he has just built another one – more on that later. Bob’s first Sproutie is shown in this post, along with a few of his other projects. Take a look – there’s some good ones there. His email got me thinking about my Sproutie. I looked up my post on it, and realized that it has now been in the world for 10 years. This seemed like a good time to haul it down from the shelf and see how it has fared. From time to time, I see comments on Manhattan construction, questioning what the copper-clad boards look like after a few years. What a good time to find out! To be fair, I drag The Sproutie out every few months and give it a whirl, so I knew what to expect. It looks essentially the same as it did when built, with the exception of some Dymo labeling that I recently added, and some light dust. I live in an old house, built in 1908, that is very dusty. Comparing the National N dial to how it looked 10 years ago, there does appear to be some light corrosion breaking through the plating, but nothing serious –

All is looking good on the outside, but what about those boards? Well, it turns out they’re looking pretty good too –

These boards were sprayed with clear lacquer before use, and it has protected them from oxidation quite well. In a few of my projects, I didn’t lacquer the boards at all, and they went dark with oxidation after a while. They are still perfectly functional; just not quite as attractive. Over the course of a few years and a few different projects, I learned that how the lacquer is applied makes a difference as well. Very light coats result in a somewhat stippled appearance and, if you don’t apply enough coats, can result in light oxidation with the passage of time. Applying the lacquer more heavily creates a smoother finish, but care is required here – too heavily, and the lacquer pools. If I remember correctly, it will also wrinkle as it sets if multiple thick layers are applied. Both the distance between the spray can and the board makes a difference, as does the length of time you spend spraying. Experimentation is key.

My WBR receiver was built in a case made out of double-sided copper-clad. After 13 years, the circuit board inside still looks good. The outside of the case hasn’t fared as well though. The lacquer was applied quite lightly. In the areas where the receiver was handled a lot, the lacquer must have worn thin, as the board has oxidized in those areas. From the outside, it doesn’t look as bright and shiny as it did when it was built in 2011. This is one of the reasons why, with subsequent projects that I built a case for out of copper-clad, I used single-sided board, and kept the copper side on the inside.

Anyway, The Sproutie still looks presentable, and it sounds just as good as it did when built. Occasionally, the AF and RF gain, and LPF bandwidth pots are a little scratchy, but rotating them a few times cures that. It is still a fun receiver to travel around the HF bands on, though I wish there were more SW AM BC stations to listen to. This receiver would have been a real hoot in the 70’s and 80’s. If I could have built and used this when I was 16, I would have felt as if I’d died and gone to heaven!

The coil box was made from an old cigar case, and some basswood for the compartment divisions. I made this coil box 10 years ago and these, like the Sproutie pictures in this post, are current photos –

Building things is fun, and it’s even better when the project you’ve built remains very usable year after year. If I was building any iteration of The Sproutie again, I’d leave out the fine tune control, as I found it unnecessary. Not sure how I’d make the front panel look balanced without that knob on the right side though. That would have to be given some thought.

As I mentioned at the beginning of this post, Bob W3BBO just finished building his second Sproutie. He didn’t have an AD820AN on hand for the variable bandwidth audio LPF, so he used half of an NE5532 op-amp as a preamp with 6dB of gain and a cut-off at 20KHz, which is essentially just an audio amp with a little gain. See the post on my Sproutie MK II for details on those active filters. With the coil he had, shortly after switching it on, he was able to hear the CHU time signals at 7850 KHz –

These are the two boards that Bob mounted underneath the chassis, and which comprise most of the circuitry for his Sproutie regen –

Congratulations Bob, on bringing another HF regen receiver into the world, and thank you for sharing details of your FB project!

A Passive Tunable HF Preselector

By: AA7EE
23 March 2021 at 16:35

When I built the VE7BPO DC Receiver Mainframe recently, it wasn’t intended to end up as a final finished project. The intention was more to have it as part of an experimental platform. The little box that contains the DBM, diplexer, and AF amplifier that make up the mainframe will most likely stay largely the same, now that they are built and boxed up. However, the outboard functions of local oscillator and antenna filtering can swapped around and changed at will. The mainframe includes a spot for an onboard plug-in bandpass filter. It was constructed so that the bandpass filters from QRP Labs could be plugged in, but this circuit section could be constructed from scratch, if desired. The first BPF I constructed was for 40M, and it did a fine job of removing many of the spurious responses I was experiencing with no antenna filtering in circuit. I purchased a 10-pack of these filter kits from QRP Labs, intending to, at some point, assemble most of them for listening to the amateur bands on this little receiver. That may happen, but I also wanted to listen in between the amateur bands. AM reception is not great on a direct conversion receiver, but there are quite a few non-ham SSB and CW signals to listen to outside the ham bands, and it would be good to be able to do that on this receiver. A tunable passive HF preselector seemed like a good way to get this particular show on the road.

The circuit is a very straightforward and standard double-tuned bandpass filter. Although my preferred variable capacitor of choice would have been an air-spaced component, I wanted to fit this into the same LMB Heeger 143 enclosure that I used for the other two receiver modules, the DC receiver mainframe, and the Si5351 “VFO”. I think it would be possible to find a suitable air-spaced part that would fit into this space but, for the sake of timeliness, I plumped for a polyvaricon.

GQRP Club member sales can supply the polyvaricons (to members) with a mounting kit that consists of 2 different lengths of mounting screw, to allow for different thicknesses of front panel. They come with a bolt and plastic spindle, for attaching a knob. Also supplied, are the inductors with adjustable ferrite cores. The inductors are Spectrum 5u3L types. The nominal inductance is 5.3µH, though it is adjustable over a fairly wide range. The L denotes that the secondary is a low impedance winding, suitable for matching to 50 ohm systems. If you are not a GQRP Club member, these coils are available from Spectrum Communications in the UK, who also sell on eBay. Some of the coils in this series are direct replacements for the Toko KANK series, which were popular with UK homebrewers in the past. It is possible to wind a similar coil on a toroid. I wanted these coils though, for the ability to easily adjust the inductance.

The 1pF capacitor that couples the two tuned circuits might seem rather low. In fact, it surprised me too. I began with higher values, of 47pF and then 39pF, but found that the coupling was too tight, and I ended up with 2 distinct peaks in the response, spaced far apart, with a large dip in between them. The final value of 1pF was far lower than I had expected. The only reason I can think of for this, is that the separate gangs in the polyvaricon are not as well isolated as they would be in a larger air-spaced part. I’m thinking that some coupling is happening inside the polyvaricon perhaps? A value of 1pF gave an acceptable response curve above about 8MHz. For the lower frequencies, an extra 10pF capacitor is switched in. Without it, the insertion loss at the peak of the response is a whopping 32dB. Switching in the extra 10pF reduced the insertion loss to 10.5dB which, although still a little high, is a lot better. The switch needs to be flipped to the high position over about 7 or 8MHz, otherwise the response is far too broad. With the switch in the “Lo” position on my preselector, at the maximum frequency setting (lowest capacitance), the peaks were spaced 5MHz apart, and the difference between the dip and the two peaks was 14dB – far too much. With the switch in the “Hi” position, at the highest frequency setting, which is 15.6MHz in my unit, the insertion loss at the peak is 4dB, the passband ripple 1.75dB, and the bandwidth at the -3dB points is 1.66MHz. At 3.5MHz, in the “Lo” position, the insertion loss at the peak is 10.27dB, the passband ripple a mere 0.83dB, and the bandwidth at the -3dB points 180KHz. Your first thought might be that 180KHz is not enough to cover the 80/75M band, but remember that this preselctor is tunable, so you can put the peak wherever you want it.

Some photos of this simple accessory –

The stack of modules that make up the complete receiver. From top to bottom, the preselector, the mainframe and, at the bottom, the VFO –

The stack as seen from the rear, showing the interconnections. It was starting to rain, and you can see some raindrops –

I recently acquired a NanoVNA, which was very useful for adjusting the trimmer capacitors and the inductors on this preselector, as well as for adjusting the fixed bandpass filters. Adjusting the trimcaps and inductors on the preselector is an exercIse in compromise, so it is very helpful to be able to see the effects of your adjustments almost in real time, as you make them. If you don’t have a NanoVNA, I imagine you have heard all about them. If not, there is a lot of information out there about them. Alan Wolke W2AEW has a fantastic YouTube channel, with several instructional videos on how to use a NanoVNA. A search of his channel for “NanoVNA” will yield many helpful videos. I have not yet watched it, but just found his introductory presentation to Fairlawn ARC on the subject of NanoVNA’s. Without going into too much detail, a NanoVNA can be used as a small and very portable antenna analyzer, and network analyzer. It can display the SWR curve for an antenna, over any frequency range you desire. Need to look at complex impedances? The NanoVNA has a Smith chart display too. It can also plot, in graphical form, the response curve of a filter. It is so useful to be able to build a lowpass or bandpass filter, and see the response curve, making adjustments easy. The majority of us regular hobbyists who couldn’t justify the purchase of a more advanced, and much more expensive network analyzer can now purchase a NanoVNA for somewhere between $50 and $150, depending what features you want. The original version has a 2.8″ screen, and is around $50-$60. The newer versions have a 4″ screen, which is much easier to read. Mine, the NanoVNA H-4 (the 4 denoting the screen size) was $93 on Amazon, delivered the next day. There is a more expensive version still, which has a metal case. I am doing fine with the plastic case so far. The very original version didn’t even have a fully enclosed case. I am happy to pay $30 or $40 more for a bigger screen and fully enclosed case. It’s much smaller and lighter than my old MFJ-259B, and does far more. Does anyone want my 259?

This NanoVNA will be fantastic for tuning up antennas in the field. Here it is, connected to a little test rig I built up, for testing the QRP Labs BPF’s. I didn’t switch it on, as the display often doesn’t show too well in the daylight –

The unit can be configured to display up to 4 traces simultaneously, each one showing different characteristics of the circuit under test. Here it is, with two traces activated. One is showing the response curve of the 80M BPF. The other, which was left on accidentally, shows the SWR, which isn’t of interest here. The unit was set to sweep from 1.7MHz, the top of the AM broadcast band, up to 10MHz –

Just for fun, here’s a closer view of that BPF –

While on the subject of this BPF, I used different values of capacitance from the ones Hans Summers supplied, for the coupling capacitor. His filters for the lower HF bands are not designed to cover the entire band. The intended usage is for receivers for digital modes, for which a narrower bandwidth is perfectly acceptable. I used a higher value of coupling capacitor to get the bandwidth I wanted. The bandwidth of this filter, with a 113pF coupling capacitance (47p + 56p), is about 885KHz. It’s a little wider than I wanted, so the next step may be to try a slightly smaller value of coupling capacitance. Insertion loss at the peak of the response curve is 5dB. By contrast, the insertion loss of the 40M BPF is only 1.12dB at the peak of the response curve – a very acceptable figure. In the assembly instructions for the QRP Labs BPF’s, Hans quotes an insertion loss of just 1.27dB for a b/w of 465KHz with his filter. The figure of 5dB for my BPF seems a bit high. The insertion loss of 10.27dB for the preselector when tuned to 80M, seems way too big.

When using the receiver with the preselector, I jumper across the socket for BPF that is inside the receiver mainframe enclosure. Breadboard jumper leads work well for this. Interestingly, reception on 80M is much better using the preselector than the BPF. Although the insertion loss is greater, and I have to turn up the volume to compensate, the SNR is much better, making reception of stations when the band is noisy, much easier. With the internal BPF plugged in, the SNR is higher. It is the same when listening to 80M at night with no filter inline at all – a higher SNR. Reception on 40M is about the same with the BPF as it is with the preselector.

I have not yet used this little direct conversion receiver very extensively for general HF listening, but a few observations, based on my experience so far –

  • The unfiltered output from the simple Si5351 is not perfect (surprise, surprise) and contains some spurious components, as well as the expected harmonics. The 40M band is largely clear. There is one fairly prominent one that is audible in the very bottom 300Hz of the band. There are a few others, at much lower levels, at a few points throughout the band, but they are masked by band noise when an antenna is connected. Outside the amateur bands, there are other spurii dotted throughout the HF spectrum. Annoyingly, there is a rather loud one at 10MHz, which makes reception of WWV troublesome. Future experiments could focus on reducing and/or eliminating these spurii, or looking at a different method of generating an LO signal.
  • The preselector (or fixed bandpass filters, if used) is very effective at eliminating unwanted modulation products from AM BC band stations, as well as from spurii caused by harmonics of the LO mixing with RF signals from the antenna
  • I’m happy with the mainframe circuitry. It is a good module for future DC receiver experiments. As it isn’t a single signal receiver, there is an automatic 3dB SNR disadvantage compared to a superhet or SDR. This is par for the course, however, and expected.

The C Crane Skywave SSB Portable Radio

By: AA7EE
19 December 2018 at 16:20

This will be a very brief post, and in no way constitutes a review. It’s barely even an “initial impressions” type of post. It’s just that I’ve been wanting a C Crane Skywave SSB for a while now, recently purchased one, and wanted to tell you! I’m sure many readers will identify with the search to find the perfect tool/gadget/product. We are, of course, not looking for genuine perfection, but for a tool that comes as close to fitting our personal needs as we think we are going to get. I went through this process a few years ago with cameras, after becoming a bit tired of lugging my DSLR and associated accessories around with me, every time I thought there was a possibility I might want to take a photo. At that time, my Holy Grail – the product that would cause me to ditch the DSLR and acquire a smaller camera, was a mirrorless, single fixed lens compact, with an APS-C size sensor. I didn’t just want any one, of course – I wanted one with the features that suited my style of shooting, and with a price point that would persuade me to take the leap. The Fuji X100 series was very tempting, but the Ricoh GR and GR II were smaller, half the price – and had a feature that is very useful for candid and street shooting (a genre I enjoy). That feature is called “snap focus”. If you press the shutter button halfway down, the camera, like a lot of cameras, autofocusses. Then you continue to fully depress the shutter to take the photo, or “capture the image” as I believe we say in the digital age. This process works well most of the time. However, in candid and street photography, in order to act near-instantly and capture fleeting moments, it is useful to be able to bypass that process. The Ricoh GR and GRII will, if you push the shutter button straight down, automatically set the camera focus to a preset distance and take the photo. For instance, if the snap focus distance is set to 1.5M (~5 feet) then, at f/11 everything from about 0.75 meter (2.5 feet) to infinity will be acceptably sharp. At f/8, the depth of field extends from approximately 1 meter (3.3 feet) to about 37 meters.  This is all explained in this article.  Snap focus is a fantastic feature in a camera for shooters like me. The fact that the Ricoh GR series has it, and no other similar cameras did, combined with the appealing price point, all combined to make it the perfect camera for me.

My little Ricoh GR II compact camera. Like the CC Skywave SSB, it offers a lot in a small, very portable package.

Anyway, enough of photography. What I’m leading to is that, for some years now, I’ve been rather aware of the fact that I don’t have a general coverage shortwave receiver with a relatively accurate digital frequency display. My Elecraft K2 has an accurate frequency display, but it doesn’t offer continuous coverage. It was never going to happen, but if ever Elecraft had offered a kit like the K2, but for a general coverage shortwave receiver, I would have been all over it like a cheap suit. My 2 Sproutie regen receivers can cover the entire HF spectrum, with the proper plug-in coils, but the analog frequency dials are not exactly the most accurate. I just wanted a portable shortwave receiver that could be reliably tuned to anywhere in the HF bands with relative ease. Then all the extra requirements, as I created my own feature “wish list” for my ideal receiver, started coming. A fairly good AM broadcast band capability would be useful for walking around the neighborhood and checking the range of my little Part 15 station. Different AF and RF/IF bandwidths would be helpful. Then there was the big one – SSB capability. I have a little solar-powered CW Part 15 beacon on the 13.553 – 13.567MHz ISM band. Currently, it operates with a very compromised antenna, so can only be received in the immediate neighborhood. Any portable SW receiver I bought would need to have SSB/CW capability in order to receive my little Part 15 beacons, as well as to listen to the ham bands, and utility signals that employ SSB and CW. Just like my camera, I wanted a little box that did as much as possible, in as small a space as possible – and with long battery life! That’s what we often want with our technology purchases isn’t it?

The C Crane Skywave receiver stood out to me in a way that my compact Ricoh GR II camera did before I purchased it. It looked to be a receiver that, although very small, had excellent performance for the size. It also operates for many hours on 2 of that most ubiquitous of batteries, the AA. There are so many information sources online, that I forget how I first heard about the CC Skywave, but The SWL Post did much to cement my desire for this receiver. Here is the initial review, and there were many other subsequent mentions on Thomas’ site.

The C Crane Skywave portable receiver was very appealing, but it didn’t have SSB/CW, and that was a deal-breaker for me. Good things come to those who wait, as they say, and I am very good at waiting – a little too good, at times! In this case, however, the waiting paid off when Thomas published a review of the new CC Skywave SSB in the Jan 2018 issue of The Spectrum Monitor. That review later appeared here, in the SWL Post. I was so keen to purchase this little receiver – and would have done, were it not for the performance quirks that Thomas discovered in multiple copies of this, the first production run. There was an internally generated whine, which was very noticeable in some sections of the HF spectrum. I don’t expect a very small receiver, with so many features, and such wide coverage, to be anywhere near close to perfect, but the non-SSB version of the Skywave didn’t have these issues, so I felt it was reasonable to expect the SSB version not to have them either.

So I waited again – and it paid off, In October of this year, Thomas reported that the issues had been fixed with the second production run. Yes! That was all I needed to hear, to place an order with C Crane, for a radio I had been wanting for quite a long time –

The CC Skywave SSB comes in a compact cardboard box, with minimal yet effective internal card packaging. It’s certainly more appealing than the plastic pack that the CC Skywave came (still comes?) in. Also included is an instruction manual, a pair of original CC earbuds, and a portable shortwave reel antenna. The quarter and 6″ steel rule are included in the above photo to help with gauging the size. I can almost guarantee that you will be pleasantly surprised by it’s diminutive form. It is a very compact receiver –

A couple of years ago, I purchased a CountyComm GP-5 SSB, but ended up returning it. The reasons were that I found the lack of a tuning knob disconcerting, and it’s performance on CW was not quite what I was hoping for. The BFO was a bit unstable, and the CW note wobbled when the receiver was moved, or the antenna was touched. It was also unstable in the presence of a fairly strong CW signal. All this, plus the lack of any adjustable filtering, led me to return it. Many users really like their GP-5 SSB’s. It is half the price of a Skywave SSB – a factor which should be taken into account. There are ways around the lack of a tuning knob and, for listeners who don’t care too much to listen to CW, it is worth considering. The Skywave SSB is not perfectly stable on CW either. It also suffers from a slight frequency instability of the BFO in the presence of a strong signal, and a very slight instability when the antenna is touched, but these effects are much less noticeable than in the GP5 SSB.

I’m not going to make a list of all the features the Skywave SSB has, and compare them to other receivers. There are other blogs and websites that have already done that. I’ll simply say that the Skywave SSB covers a lot of spectrum, and has a lot of features, in a very small and compact package. You shouldn’t expect the performance of a modern communications receiver but then, you can easily take it traveling with you, to mountaintops, and RF noise-free listening locations. In photography, there is a saying that the best camera is the one you have with you, and the same quote could apply to shortwave receivers. Certainly, your NRD-515 will hear better than the Skywave SSB, but would you take it to the top of a mountain in a day-pack? The ability to take this receiver to a variety of different listening locations more than makes up for the difference in performance between it, and a larger, heavier, and higher-performing receiver.

Thomas, as well as a number of other posters and bloggers, were touting a little case from Hermit Shell that fits the Skywave and Skywave SSB perfectly. There is room for the receiver, as well as a pair of earbuds, spare pair of batteries (which you may well not need), and a roll of thin wire for an external antenna. Note that the C Crane Shortwave Reel Antenna which is included with the receiver, does not fit in this case. This little case from Hermit Shell provides plenty of padding and protection, and gave me a lot of confidence about taking it out in the field –

This is a cracking little radio. It has coverage of the AM and FM broadcast bands, SW from the top of the AM BC band all the way to 30MHz, the weather band, and air band. It does AM, SSB, and CW (as well as FM on the FM broadcast band), and has some useful filtering options (all the way down to 500Hz when on CW). The audio from the speaker is a bit tinny, which will not be a problem for communications-type listening. It might leave you wanting better audio when listening to the AM or FM bands but, for that, you can plug in a pair of quality earbuds, and the audio quality is there. There is only so much you can expect from such a small speaker. In my opinion, this receiver’s size and versatility more than make up for the thin audio.

Oh – and the internally generated whines that Thomas reported in multiple units from the first production run? Not there! Thank you Thomas and SWL Post, for cluing me in to this excellent little radio receiver.

 

Guest Post – N6JJA’s WBR-Oscar Regen Receiver

By: AA7EE
13 December 2018 at 03:23

Back in May of this year, Sheldon N6JJA began sending me information and details of his version of N1BYT’s WBR regenerative receiver. It went through several iterations, before ending up at the final version as shown here. Even this version is still a work in progress – as all good products of experimentation are. Sheldon took the original WBR circuit, as described by N1BYT, and made a few changes. Firstly, he added a preselector. Regens are well-known for having poor strong signal performance. A pre-selector can’t help with very strong signals close to the received frequency, but it may well help to protect the fragile front end of a regen from very strong signals away from the frequency the regen is tuned to. Secondly, a tunable preselector is a very handy tool for anyone who is experimenting with simple receivers, whether direct conversion, regenerative, or simple superhets. It could be well worth building this as a separate unit, for future use and experimentation. Of great interest also, are the changes that Sheldon made to the classic WBR circuit. He describes them in some detail in this article. It makes for a good read, and may encourage you to try building it for yourself. If you do, please let me know how it goes, as I haven’t built this version of the circuit yet.

Sheldon, amazingly, found enough time away from his very busy silicon valley job, and responsible position as a first-rate cat dad, to write up this project as a complete article. Rather than attempt to interpret his words and re-write them in my own style, I’d rather that you get all this great information straight from the cat-dad’s mouth so, without further ado –

(Oh, one more thing – check out the way he draws his schematics. Accurate and beautiful!)

 

How it started (by Sheldon N6JJA)

In 1957 I was in second grade in a small town in rural Illinois. Our “library” was a bookmobile that came through once every two months. But even that long ago I was completely in love with all things radio and electronic, so when Alfred P. Morgan’s book The Boy’s First Book of Radio and Electronics appeared I checked it out and devoured it over the next two months. For me, the centerpiece of the book was a design for a simple, one-tube regenerative receiver. My desire to build such a thing knew no bounds, but a lack of money and parts made it a non-starter at that time. I became a ham in 1965 and my attention turned to more modern equipment and kits to build things, but I never got over that old regen. Fast forward eight more years and I’d gotten my hands on my first “boat anchor,” an SP-600-JX7. Alas, I was once again in love, but the radio wasn’t mine to keep, and I again resolved, “Someday…”

Oddly enough, that’s all part of how and why the WBR-Oscar came to be. Over the past few years I’ve been buying and restoring a variety of “boat anchors,” and now have a lot more than I can keep. And that radio-crazy second-grader wound up with a Ph.D. in electrical engineering and a huge junk box and some decent test equipment. So, somewhat naturally, my first major project last year was to build something to help those old radios perform with a little more pizazz. It started as a wide-range antenna coupler, then added a preamplifier that became also a preselector, then added an audio amplifier, then a DSP filter…well, you get the idea. One of our cats, Oscar, helped me with all of this, making sure that now parts got included that hadn’t been checked for obedience to the laws of physics, particularly gravity. As you can see in Figure 1 below, Oscar became the name of that “helper” unit. Oscar sits proudly atop his namesake.

Figure 1. Oscar loves to climb, too, and sit atop his namesake. I think he’s contemplating our next project. (Photo credit – N6JJA.) Note from AA7EE – I am absolutely thrilled to learn that I am not the only homebrewing ham who names projects after his kitty pals!

 

I considered, for my next project, that one-tube regenerative receiver. But then, along the way, I came across an article from QST from August 2001 for a regen that I’d started to build but never finished. (Life gets in the way sometimes.) The article was by Dan Wissell, N1BYT, and titled “The WBR Receiver.” (Citation at the end of the article.) Rummaging through my collection of parts I decided that this was the right project at the right time. Mr. Morgan’s radio would wait a bit longer, but my desire to build a regen was finally going to be fulfilled.

Over the years a lot of these receivers have been built, and the results have been mostly good, it seems, even spawning a lot of designs based on the WBR detectors but without the WBR tank circuit. Lately, thanks to the ongoing blog of Dave Richards, AA7EE, interest in this design has been renewed and some of the design’s deficiencies noted and, to a certain extent, addressed by experimenters. Now, however, buoyed up by the information in Dave Richards’ blog and some other QEX articles, I decided that it was time to put my own spin on things and see how far I could push the design. The result is the WBR-O receiver, and it now covers, fairly easily, 6 to 15.6 MHz with a single tank circuit, making it now a true “40-30-20” meter amateur and SWL radio. As an additional feature, the “O” (for Oscar) part refers to a preselector/preamplifier that both isolates the input of the WBR circuit and adds front-end selectivity and some amplification. The preselector/preamplifier actually tunes from 80 to 10 meters (in two bands), includes widely adjustable gain, and can easily be built as a stand-alone for folks who only want that part. The photo in Figure 2 shows the pair as built.

Figure 2. The latest version of the WBR-Oscar, ready for its housing. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

The design you see in the photo is actually the culmination of months of work and numerous revisions and tweaks. Some things helped, some didn’t, but I learned a great deal along the way. I also, on purpose, used several “lousy” construction techniques to convince myself that, simply, “If I can build this, anyone can build this.”

Closer view of the most recent version of the WBR-Oscar, before installing in an enclosure. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

This article is broken into two parts. First comes the “Oscar” preselector/preamplifier. As I said, I intended it to be either part of the overall receiver or used as a standalone where desired. The second part deals with the WBR upgrades. Both designs were built using the same techniques and I’ve tested both and found that—especially in concert—they do about as well as some of my boat anchors! So if your soldering iron is ready, I’ll start by describing “Oscar.”

Part 1: Oscar’s Preselector/Preamplifier

Figure 3. The Oscar Preselector/Preamplifier on my bench during testing. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

Figure 3 (above) shows the circuit during testing on my bench. To the left I placed the coils, clustered around a small relay (Panasonic TQ2-12V). To the right is the amplifier portion of this circuit.

Figure 4 (below) shows the schematic.

Figure 4. The Oscar Preselector/Preamplifier schematic. Coil winding data is in Table 1. All fixed resistors are ¼ watt, 5%. Capacitors are ceramic (X7R preferred), 50 volts or greater. Electrolytics are typically 16 volt aluminum types. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

Now before you say to yourself that it looks pretty complicated, let me point out how simple it really is. Each “band” has its own bandpass filter that it tuned by one or more Toshiba 1SV149 varicap diodes. The 1SV149 is a little gem that was developed for AM radios but is now obsolete. In spite of this, that diode is plentiful and inexpensive on the internet (I got mine from eBay, about 50 for $10, but Amazon sells them, too, as does Minikits.com.au.) An important item to note here is the value of the series isolation capacitors for the diodes, C1 and C3 in Fig. 4. I use 0.1 μF, 50V ceramics with an X7R stability rating. The large capacitance is actually a must; as the value goes down, the interaction between those caps and the rest of the circuit becomes a problem. The relay is something that I had in a drawer, and made the layout a bit easier. I’ve also built “Oscars” using rotary or toggle switches to switch bands, by the way, so while the relay is nice to have, it isn’t required. One thing to note, however, is that, with the relay, the overall design lends itself quite nicely to a remotely-tuned preselector that can be mounted right at your antenna. So far, nearly everything I’ve built along these lines has worked. The amplifier in Fig. 4 is based on a low-noise MMIC pair in a push-pull arrangement that keeps distortion and unwanted harmonics down a bit. The MMICs are Mini-Circuit Labs MAR-6SM+ devices. At a maximum of 16 mA per device they offer gain of about 20 dB and noise figure around 2 dB. Quite impressive for so simple a device. The 1:1 transformers are also from Mini-Circuits, their T1-1+. All of these components offer good technology for a relatively low price. The relay (from Digi-Key, for example) is $3.88 in small quantities. The MAR-6SM+ is $1.40 each, but the minimum is 20, so either consider a lifetime buy for $28 or split the batch with a friend. The T1-1+ is $3.25 in small quantities. If you’re up to it, go ahead and wind your own transformers on small type 43 ferrite toroids. A simple bifilar winding should work, and there are usually design guidelines in articles on baluns and transformers to help you decide on a target inductance. Actually, I found that building my first “Oscar” made me make sure I had enough parts—including transformers—to build more of them. The circuit has become somewhat my “go-to” front end for things. I should add that I’ve also built the amplifier section with a single MMIC and without the push-pull transformers, and it still works okay, if you want to minimize or simplify things. The circuit then looks more like the C5-U1-C6-R6 cluster in Fig. 4.

Figure 5. Details of how I wired this unit. I use 28 or 30 AWG wire-wrapping wire (often just stripped) to make connections. Tweezers help. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

 

Figure 6. Underside of the Preselector/Preamplifier board. Note the MMICs near the top of this picture. They are mounted in holes made in the PC board material that allow their leads to contact either the ground plane (here, tinned copper foil tape) or adjacent plated through holes. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

Table 1 (below) gives my winding data for the toroids, including those for the WBR receiver part. I like the website toroids.info to help me design the coils, then I use another best friend—a Peak LCR45 meter to verify results. I find that, even knowing that each time wire passes through a toroid counts as a “turn,” I wind up removing a turn or so once I measure things. Frankly, this whole project would be a lot more difficult without the LCR meter, and once you use something like this I suspect you’ll be hooked as well. The bandpass filters don’t do nearly as well if the coils aren’t either the correct values or reasonably well matched.

Good thing to remember: the MMICs and diodes are sensitive to ESD. Not horribly sensitive, but you will want to be careful, since it will save you headaches later on. Sometimes working on some aluminum foil or an inexpensive ESD mat is plenty, also making sure you touch the foil or mat before handling a part. Overall, in my own experience I’ve found these parts to be pretty robust.

Depending on the available PCB space you have, you might want to experiment with the general layout on perforated PCB material and then make a sketch or photo of your final design to guide you in construction. Part of the fun of this project is that we all tend to do things differently and put our own “fingerprint” in the final result. Remember, although I’ve done a lot of up-front work to guide you, what you build will be your own to be proud of.

My own usual RF build technique is to use 0.10” center perforated PCB material with plated through holes and cover one side with copper foil tape to make a ground plane. The boards I used in this build are 7 cm x 9 cm, and as you can see, I have plenty of room. (I should also add that the last revision of the WBR was done on a board about half the area.) Then I use an Exacto knife (or something like that) to carefully cut away portions of the ground plane where necessary. Figures 5 and 6 show this in more detail. Then I use tweezers and solid wire-wrap wire (28 or 30 gauge, stripped first as needed) for the interconnections. I solder components to the PCB and leave about ¼” of lead projecting on the underside of the board to provide for the interconnections. These are made using the tweezers (and maybe a magnifier) to wrap wire on one lead, anchor it with solder, and next do the same at the other end. (I call this “Compact Wiring.”) This keeps the wiring neat and compact and still provides an excellent RF ground. However, to be honest I’ve also used “dead bug” and even less glorious methods of construction (even using longer wires), and just about everything works as long as you’re careful.

Mounting the MMICs is the only thing where I needed to think hard about “how to do it.” In Fig. 6 you can see the MMICs, mounted on the ground-plane side (the “underside”) of the board, but mounted “upside down” with respect to the photo. I drilled a hole in the board for each MMIC, just large enough for it to rest in the hole, allowing the protruding pins to just touch the adjacent plated through holes and allow me to make good electrical connections.

Turning back to the schematic, you’ll notice that I use small voltage regulators to keep things stable and quiet. The LM317LZ is an inexpensive part (about 40 cents apiece from Digi-Key) that can handle up to 100 mA of load. U3 is used to provide the tuning voltage required, and U4 controls the gain of the MMIC amplifier by varying the voltage presented to the current-limiting resistors feeding the MMICs. I’ve taken to using these ICs in virtually every project. They simplify the design work and are very flexible and stable. Add to that, they offer some low-pass filtering effects that can reduce the hash from cheap power supplies. No miracles, but good engineering.

I recommend coaxial cable input and output for this circuit. I bought a bunch of PCB-mounted SMA connectors a while back, and you see them in Fig. 3. But there are so many different ways of making these connections—especially if you choose to do the switching via a panel-mounted switch—that no builder should be intimidated by the technology.

I used a 10-turn pot for the tuning and a single-turn pot for the gain. Both are linear in design and do not need to have a wattage rating over 1/4W. But a word about choosing potentiometers. I’ve used cheap ones from the Pacific Rim and higher quality ones from US suppliers. In my experience, especially in the tuning pots you tend to get what you pay for, although the cheaper ones can be used if you are careful how hot they get during soldering. It seems that the inner workings of the less expensive ones are more susceptible to heat and can “quit tuning” if you do a lot of “cut-and-try.” If you do buy the cheaper ones, buy several.

Results

Figure 7 shows my measured results, using a Rigol DSA815-TG spectrum analyzer and subtracting the tracking generator output level. That means that the circuitry was tested with a good, solid 50 ohms input and output, but the circuit still works well in my shack with antennas not very well matched. The bandpass curves were taken with a “gain” setting of about 10 dB. As you can see, the curves are sharper on the low end of each band, but there’s also more attenuation there, about 4 dB less on the low band, and about 5 dB on the high band. The sidebar on “Designing your own Oscar bandpass filters” talks a bit about this, but once you start designing for Q values above about 10 these effects are normal. But a preselector that maintains Q over 10 over this range should produce a workable unit that provides some selectivity without having to constantly readjust things every time you change frequency by a couple of kHz.

 

Figure 7A. -3 dB width = 170 kHz, -10 dB width = 470 kHz, Effective Q = 16.8 (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

 

Figure 7B. -3 dB width = 1.18 MHz, -10 dB width = 3.51 MHz, Effective Q = 9. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

 

Figure 7C. -3 dB width = 640 kHz, -10 dB width = 1.85 MHz, Effective Q = 15.6 (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

 

Figure 7D. -3 dB width = 2.87 MHz, -10 dB width = 8.53 MHz, Effective Q = 10.3 (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

 

Figure 7E. Minimum Gain = -10.3 dB, Maximum Gain = +15.2 dB (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

 

At the bottom of Fig. 7 is the gain range curve at 14 MHz. With the design as I’ve built it, I can bias the MMICs to be “just barely there” and provide some signal reduction or to blast things with an additional 15 dB or more.

Now I chose to do this in 2 bands, but you may decide on 1 or 3 or anything else. The MMICs don’t care, as long as they think they’re seeing roughly 50 ohms at input and output. But be aware that the MMICs also will amplify anything from DC to 6 GHz! Using them without some form of bandpass in front will suck the amplification headroom from where you want it to someplace you don’t. And if you decide to make things simpler, using a single MMIC is a straight-through configuration works very well also. I’ve tried a lot of different configurations, so these are just my guidelines based on experience.

About all that remains is to hook this circuit up to a receiver and see what happens. Don’t be afraid to experiment. The fun of building something like this is that there’s a lot of room for changes, improvements, and growth. For instance, the gain section in the Oscar design is custom-made for a homebrew AGC circuit, and maybe someday I’ll give that whirl. (If you don’t beat me to it!) The next part of this article will expand on what I’ve written here to build the companion WBR receiver, but I’ll also refer back to this design to cover some of the construction guidelines I’ve mentioned here.

Part 2: The Upgraded WBR Receiver Design

As I mentioned in the beginning of this article, both the Oscar preselector/preamplifier and the upgraded WBR receiver are designed to work together or be built as stand-alone units. Figure 2 shows both units assembled with standoffs between them right before integration into a chassis that has been the final home for all the previous design iterations.

So what’s changed? Well, if you look at the schematic for the RF deck in Figure 8, it might seem that not much has evolved since N1BYT’s article back in 2001i. However, a lot of tests and calculations led to some significant changes. But rather than just list the changes, let me take you on a brief excursion as to why they were made.

Figure 8. The updated WBR-O receiver RF Deck schematic. This is built on the same PC board as the audio and tuning sections shown in Figure 9. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

Online blogs and chat lines have talked about different variations on the WBR theme for a while. Often there are a few things that everyone seems to agree on, like the fact that AM sensitivity is very low and that the near-zero input impedance is needed to block strong signals, and that it’s difficult to get more bandwidth out of the design, even if mechanical tuning capacitors are used. Sometimes it seems to be nitpicking, but I decided to dive in and see how much pizzazz I could give the basic design.

First, about the sensitivity. The WBR isn’t a “normal” regenerative detector design, and this gets overlooked sometimes. It’s actually a regenerative Q-multiplier with an infinite impedance detector (IID). When the Q-multiplier is oscillating, the available signals to the IID are quite a bit stronger than when the Q-multiplier is set just below oscillation threshold, as in for AM reception. But look at the IID part of the circuit. It’s actually a source-follower and thus offers little chance for any amplification. IIDs have been around in tube circuits for years, favored by AM aficionados for their excellent low-distortion detection characteristics. So when you’re trying to listen to AM signals, you’re going to need a fairly good audio preamplifier. That’s Q3 in Fig. 8. I’ve looked at a bunch of WBR-like circuits online, and there are several good (and not-so-good) preamplifiers to consider. In the end, I designed my own. It has pretty good gain (about 120-150) and doesn’t use parts that aren’t easily available. I should mention that the value of C12 is important, though not critical. I use a rather large capacitor there, 100 μF, and that really helps keep the gain up over a nice audio range. Probably anything over, say, 47 μF should work.

Next, the “front end,” or lack of it. There are 2 points to make here. First, that’s why the Oscar preselector/preamplifier became part of my own design. Second, that 1” piece of wire in the original design by N1BYT helped “balance the Wheatstone Bridge,” but many builders have fiddled with that, adding a little inductance at that point. I tried that too, but finally got an idea that worked better. It’s a simple single-turn link immediately adjacent to the L1 center tap (which is connected to that 1 to 1.5 inch wire to ground). Feeding the 50-ohm sourced signal in through that tap turned out to be about a thousand times better than the “old” way. (See the addendum for technical details.)

I spent a lot of time working to get the design to work reliably over the roughly 10 MHz span that it finally achieved. The capacitance range of the Toshiba 1SV149 varicap diodes really did shine there, but early attempts to tune below about 8 MHz weren’t successful. In the end, though, what’s in the final design will probably tune below 5 MHz if I spent more time on it (and maybe even cover 80 to 30 meters or something like that). That’s where a lot of changes found their way into the design, but let me talk about them individually.

First, I was initially using garden variety (i.e., “flea market”) 2N3904 transistors for the Q-multiplier. Frustrated at the limited tuning range, I first increased the “gain” of the oscillator by increasing bias voltages from 5 volts to 12 volts. That helped, but not enough. In the end I found that the hFE for that transistor (i.e., its DC gain) is vitally important. My weak oscillator used a 2N3904 with hFE of about 85-90. I found a first-quality one with gain closer to 180. Aha! Much better performance. I got down to about 6.5 MHz at the low end.

But, to make a long story much shorter, I found an excellent, and even better, alternative. It’s the BC546CT from On Semiconductors. At about 10 cents apiece (about the same as the 2N3904) it offers the same basic qualities of the venerable 2N3904, but with an average (sample of 40) hFE of 553! A batch of first-quality 2N3904s had an average hFE of only 189. The pinout is the opposite of the 2N3904, but otherwise it was just a drop-in and now there’s no trouble with making a Q-multiplier that will oscillate easily just about anywhere, and I don’t have to measure hFE endlessly to find a winner.

One experiment that also helped was to try different values of C2 and C3. You see, the feedback network in this oscillator (that’s the basis for the Q-multiplier) works fine for some values of C2 and C3, but as the frequency goes down, the losses in the feedback loop go up and can prevent oscillation. Dropping C2 and C3 to about a quarter (to 100 pF) of what I used initially (330 to 390 pF) did the trick. I’d recommend using small ceramic caps with an NPO or COG stability rating. Pushing this oscillator down further in frequency might entail re-tweaking those capacitor values, but that’s just part of the fun. One additional benefit from using the small capacitance is that the amount of regeneration bias required over the whole frequency span stays much more constant that when using the “older” values. Oh, and one last thing: in the original design the base of Q1 was biased using a more classic resistor pair, one carrying regeneration voltage, the other to ground. I removed the one connected to ground. What you see here works much better.

Now for my secret weapon. The little trimmer capacitor, C4, is unusually important. After staring at the original schematics for hours it occurred to me that the “balance” sought is almost impossible with the components used, no matter how carefully one measures things to force it to happen. Once I get a circuit oscillating, I tune to the low end of the frequency band and find where regeneration quits (you can hear it in headphones), even with maximum regeneration bias. Then I slowly tune C4 and make sure I have the headphone volume way down. Maximizing the oscillator strength with C4 is a set-once-and-forget adjustment, but it overcomes the last hurdles to giving this design its performance. Any trimmer that is small enough to fit and covers the 50-80 pF range should work. It just has to be near twice the value of C7 to be effective.

All That Bandwidth Presents a Problem

One thing became clear when operating this receiver. Even a 10-turn tuning pot made things dicey. I even found some Bourns “Digidial” counters on eBay and they helped, but not enough for this much bandwidth. I also played with several “bandspread” ideas using two tuning pots before deciding that instead of a bandspread control I could split the tuning range into, say, 6 pieces (I had a DP6T switch). This feature is included in Figure 9 along with the audio section built along with the RF deck. Again, I rely on the LM317LZ regulator, here in a paired arrangement, to set the ranges over which you can tune. Now signals are easier to separate, even with the smallish knobs on 10-turn counting dials. But taking this feature one step further (I encourage you to consider this), a builder might want to skip the “shortwave radio” aspect of the design and adjust the tuning ranges to cover only the 40, 30, and 20 meter bands, a very easy thing to do.

Figure 9. Audio and tuning sections of the WBR-O receiver. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

Table 2 lists the resistor choices I arrived at, both for the “shortwave” and “amateur-only” versions. I’d caution you to be prepared to build first and add resistors later. Your circuit might want resistance a little different from mine (and yes, small trimpots would make this a breeze).

 

Building It and Operating It

As you can see from the photos, the WBR section uses the same build technique (“Compact Wiring”) that the Oscar unit does. I encourage any builder to feel free to experiment with how the layout comes together and how the wiring gets done. What I’ve shown here is just my own way of doing things. Keeping the RF wiring reasonably short is a good goal, as is providing a good ground plane. Apart from that, all the versions I’ve built work (as long as I don’t forget a connection!), so there’s plenty of room for personal variations.

Figure 10 shows everything in my “WBR-O” box. You might note how the box has extra holes and knobs that are leftovers from all the previous versions. I included the ubiquitous 1k pot at the antenna input, but in hindsight, it isn’t needed when I use both circuits. I also decided to use a small 12 volt supply that fits in the underside of the chassis. It’s a good quality and lacks the persistent hash that some cheaper supplies produce. Right now I’m using a Delta PMT-12V35W1AA from Digi-Key. Small, quiet, safe, and at about $15 for a universal AC input it’s a bargain, really.

Figure 10. The “latest” version of the WBR-O sits in my shack. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

Figure 10A. The WBR-O in a little more detail. (Photo credit – N6JJA.)

I’d recommend a 10-turn pot for the regeneration control. Regeneration at low frequencies is higher, dropping somewhat as you increase frequency. You’ll have to develop a feel for this adjustment. With the new biasing I’ve included, it might be possible to use a single-turn pot, but that’s just one more experiment for the future. The key thing when getting started with a regen is that you want as little regeneration as possible. I still have the bad habit of leaving it too high then wondering why things don’t sound right. Overbiasing the Q-multiplier just adds distortion, and even harmonics. Regeneration also varies the frequency a bit, so tuning in on a single CW station, for instance, will require a little practice, but in the end it becomes second nature.

Table 3 lists a few of the more critical parts and their Digi-Key part numbers. Although I use Digi-Key as a supplier in a lot of the electronic work I do for a living, they are also quite amenable to serving the needs of individuals as well. The same can be said for Mini-Circuits and Amidon. Prices are reasonable and you get to choose the quality you can afford.

All that being said, the final product was gratifying to use. Just about anything one of my other older high-quality radios can hear can be heard by this little gem. Of course, selectable selectivity, a noise blanker, and good AVC would help, but…that’ll come later, I think.

With all the changes I’ve made the one ingredient I hope I have added most of all is flexibility. The real possibilities of what this basic design can do have only been barely touched. I think it would be excellent, for instance, to see how small one can make the entire unit, so it fits into camping gear or such. Also, why not 2 oscillators (sharing the same tuning voltage) instead of one, and use the second to drive a small transmitter? Or a second oscillator to drive a frequency counter so you can actually see where you’re tuning? Or using what I’ve explored here on other designs, like AA7EE’s “Sproutie” regenerative? Or add some good audio filters? Or, as I said before, adding AVC via the gain control voltage on the Oscar circuit? Or…well, you get the point. This is definitely not a software defined radio, but an imagination defined radio, and, as Oscar would note, perched high above me on my equipment, the sky’s the limit.

—–

Sheldon Hutchison, N6JJA, has been a licensed amateur on and off since 1965 and currently holds an Extra ticket, a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering (University of Illinois) and is an ordained Episcopal priest. He and his wife Eileen, KI6UZJ, live and work in the Silicon Valley with their cats, including Oscar and several other “helpers.” Dr. Hutchison works in the laser industry (while also a retired but active priest) and Eileen is employed in the Valley’s aerospace industry. An avid experimenter, Dr. Hutchison also enjoys restoring old “boat anchor” receivers, and currently—according to Oscar—needs to find homes for a few of them to give his helper more room to play.

 

i Wissell, Dan (N1BYT), The WBR Receiver, QST, August 2001.

 

ADDENDUM

File this under “Can’t leave well enough alone.”

There’s something in electromagnetics called “reciprocity.” Basically, it means that if signals get into an antenna or circuit efficiently, they get out just about as efficiently. Taking long walks at noon helped me find ways to use this phenomenon. For my “Oscar” receiver I found one. I’ve long used my spectrum analyzer, clipped to the low-impedance tap on L1, to indicate the health of the regenerative Q-multiplier by making it oscillate and observing the relative strength of the signal. Well, in the schematic below I experimented with adding a link right next to the low-impedance center tap of L1 as a way of improving coupling to the Q-multiplier from a 50-ohm source. Compared to the previous way of coupling to the center tap the signal measured on the spectrum analyzer shot up by 30 dB! Adding 2 turns is too much. Moving the link too far away from the tap makes oscillation much more difficult. And after adding the link, you’ll want to go back and re-tweak C4. The photo also shows the red wire link as I installed it.

Now Oscar’s even happier.

Addendum to WBR-O – schematic

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