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Exploring Shortwave Radio Signals: A Peek into Non-Local Communications

3 July 2024 at 02:17
Curious about what you can hear on shortwave ham radio? This video is a brief survey of the diverse world of communications on the shortwave spectrum. Expand your radio horizons and enhance your emergency communication preparedness by tuning in to the world of shortwave ham radio. If you’ve started delving into radio communications beyond local […]

Go Back In Time – Vintage Film

29 June 2024 at 21:24
Turning back time to virtually witness a critical historic method of shortwave communication using the fundamental mode of continuous wave modulation. This is a film from 1944, teaching the basics of Morse code, for military comms. What is the proper (and most efficient) technique for creating Morse code by hand, using a manual Morse code […]

German Teletype (RTTY) Weather on HF (Shortwave) Radio

27 June 2024 at 19:59
This is a video of the German Weather Broadcast from DWD, Hamburg, on shortwave (HF), using teletype (RTTY). I demonstrate two decoding software options: JWcomm32 (older), and, FLdigi. Note the in FLdigi, the “Reverse” feather is selected to properly decode the signal (in either USB or LSB, you still need to select, “Reverse”). The radio […]

Modern Amateur Radio Hobby – An Introduction

27 June 2024 at 19:47
This video is an introduction to an international public-service and technology hobby known as ‘amateur radio’ (or ‘ham radio’). Amateur radio (also called ham radio) describes the use of radio frequency spectrum for purposes of non-commercial exchange of messages, wireless experimentation, self-training, private recreation, radiosport, contesting, and emergency communication. The term “amateur” is used to […]

1939 Film: Morse Code on HF in New Zealand (Historical)

27 June 2024 at 18:01
Before modern radio broadcasting, the trails were being blazed both in public broadcast, but also critical links out of the local area. Here’s a side-look back in time…. in this 1939 Film: New Zealand Shortwave Communications; Morse code (CW) The romance of the radiotelegraph service (in this video, the service in New Zealand) is a […]

New to Amateur Radio? What is a Repeater?

27 June 2024 at 17:53
If you have not yet explored ham radio repeaters, this might be interesting to you. What is an amateur radio repeater and how do they work? In this video, with a non-amateur-radio viewer in mind, I chat about the very basic concepts of a repeater. It is filmed in a relaxed, “ride along with me,” […]

German Teletype (RTTY) Weather on HF (Shortwave) Radio

27 June 2024 at 19:59
This is a video of the German Weather Broadcast from DWD, Hamburg, on shortwave (HF), using teletype (RTTY). I demonstrate two decoding software options: JWcomm32 (older), and, FLdigi. Note the in FLdigi, the “Reverse” feather is selected to properly decode the signal (in either USB or LSB, you still need to select, “Reverse”). The radio […]

Modern Amateur Radio Hobby – An Introduction

27 June 2024 at 19:47
This video is an introduction to an international public-service and technology hobby known as ‘amateur radio’ (or ‘ham radio’). Amateur radio (also called ham radio) describes the use of radio frequency spectrum for purposes of non-commercial exchange of messages, wireless experimentation, self-training, private recreation, radiosport, contesting, and emergency communication. The term “amateur” is used to […]

1939 Film: Morse Code on HF in New Zealand (Historical)

27 June 2024 at 18:01
Before modern radio broadcasting, the trails were being blazed both in public broadcast, but also critical links out of the local area. Here’s a side-look back in time…. in this 1939 Film: New Zealand Shortwave Communications; Morse code (CW) The romance of the radiotelegraph service (in this video, the service in New Zealand) is a […]

New to Amateur Radio? What is a Repeater?

27 June 2024 at 17:53
If you have not yet explored ham radio repeaters, this might be interesting to you. What is an amateur radio repeater and how do they work? In this video, with a non-amateur-radio viewer in mind, I chat about the very basic concepts of a repeater. It is filmed in a relaxed, “ride along with me,” […]

FFWN Most Interesting Op Location

1 June 2024 at 18:38

The FediFridayWinlinkNet question of the week on 5/31/24 was “What is the most interesting or unique place from which you have operated a ?” We had some really interesting answers! See the list below.

  • From the San Andres Fault right between the Pacific & North American plates
  • From a boat in the middle of Oneida Lake in NY was the most interesting place I’ve operated
  • Cubi Point Naval Air Station in the Philippines back in 1991, did not have my license at that time, but was instead using another HAM’s license
  • Schwarzwald National Park
  • Piney Grove Campground on the Tombigbee waterway. I usually run Field Day from the camp but I also listen to the marine bands while barges pass by between the Tennessee River and the Gulf of Mexico
  • the dolly sods wilderness in WV — my favorite place!
  • APRS On the beach in Waikiki near the Hilton Hawaiian Village
  • KC4USV – McMurdo Station Antarctica
  • House Mount lookout in Idaho during the 1989 ARRL Field Day. Two photos of mine from that event were featured on two QST covers. November 89 and June 91
  • From the roof of a pink WW2 pillbox on the summit Pu’u’ohulu Kai, Oahu, HI
  • West Coast USA, with an EFHW at 2ft above the ground running along a wooden guard rail.. working Japanese stations on 20m QRP CW as the mist rolled in
  • sent APRS messages from ground via ISS
  • 2 Weeks ago on a boat in Ireland, QRV with my X6100
  • Copper Harbor, MI. Amazing place to operate
  • an Engineers Without Borders trip to rural El Salvador; made ~3 contacts with a G5RV and my 706
  • Lyndon Baines Johnson Memorial Grove on the Potomac National Memorial: POTA US-0784
  • Probably a coffee shop running packet on my TH-D74
  • As a DXpeditioner, I’ve operated from so many interesting places: ZD8 Ascension Island, JW Svalbard, VP2M Montserrat, FP St Pierre et Miquelon, ZC4 UK Sovereign Base Area on Cyprus
  • I would say I had very nice experiences doing ham radio in the classroom with equipment that my students had built themselves

FFWN Weekend Plans

4 May 2024 at 13:14

Here are the responses to the question from 05/03/2024: What are your weekend plans?

  • Eight to ten POTA activations on Friday between Cheyenne and Gillette, WY. Sat I will be roving for the 7QP contest covering 7 Wyoming counties.
  • HF & 6M digital
  • No radio plans, doing chores and getting ready for a trip to see Mom
  • Amateur radio satellites as usual.
  • Winlink Activities for multiple Nets
  • POTA activation if the weather allows
  • None, working this weekend
  • No plans yet
  • messing around with my linbpq setup for possibly getting on the air Friday evening as my spouse is out of town and I don’t usually get on the air at night when she’s around.
  • pota activations if weather allows, pota hunting if stuck inside
  • POTA activation
  • Deploy darkmode for our radio club website
  • Region 7 is hosting the annual 7QP and I am thinking of visiting one of the local club participants.
  • Probably some more 20m(day)/40m(night) JS8Call.
  • Installing VHF/UHF in the RV
  • Prepping for a wires-x talk. Anyone know anything about wires-x or have a presentation I can steal. I’m going from 0 to hero. I hope.
  • Not sure I have any!
  • Saturday, work on HF vertical. Sunday, Run For The Zoo communications volunteer
  • Busy with yard tasks, so probably just some VHF monitoring.
  • Get an antenna up on the ship in preparation for a sea voyage
  • Attending a swap meet and hoping to get a PK-88 TNC hooked up and working
  • Weather permitting, I’m hoping to stop by our first local hamfest of the season Sunday morning
  • Prepare 6m antenna and mast for the start of Sporadic E season, and finish my PCB layouts for a K3NG Rotator controller.Currently on 318 Grids for VUCC 50Mhz, would like to get up to 350 this year.
  • FT8 DX and local repeater monitoring

Back on the Net: dits and bits

By: richcasey
4 January 2024 at 05:24

It’s been quite a while since I updated this blog, so a great time to post an update on some projects and interesting items I’ve bumped into on the Internet.

First, an update on a concept called White Rock Hams that we started over three years ago with a mention on this blog. It’s since turned into a real club with many activities and a pretty good following with over 30 members. We’re using groups.io for all of our messages and files, and hamclubonline.com for official club stuff. Both of these tools have been extremely useful in keeping members informed and active. You can follow all of our exploits at wa5wrl.org which is the vanity call sign we were able to snag from the FCC.

In Internet news, I am just about ready to pull the plug on Twitter. I was a very early adopter personally and helped get my Fortune 500 employer back then on board. Since Musk has taken it over, it’s become quite a dumpster fire and I’m not sure how much longer I can stand it.

I’m spending more of my time now on Mastodon. I like that it’s federated and non-centralized. Sort of feels more like the way the Internet was supposed to be in the first place. It’s not owned and run by a tight group of billionaires. If you’d like to join us, take a look at joinmastodon.org. Scroll though the servers and pick an interesting one, or just use mastodon.social like many folks do. You’ll find a lot to like, including authors you’ve probably seen previously on Twitter. And, if you’re a ham, choose mastodon.radio! Don’t sweat about the server choice, though, since they all connect together. Once you’re on, you can find me at @n5csu.

I’m getting a kick out of my hamclock running on a little inovato computer. This device has become a must-have for active hams that use the high frequency bands.

I’d like to give a shout out to the website blogs.radio, a great place to find updated blogs by ham radio operators.

That’s about it for now. I’m composing this using Word on my iPad via microphone for the first time, then pasting into WordPress. It’s so much better than my two finger typing.

73

WELCOME

7 January 2033 at 00:01
Welcome to my amateur radio BLOG. Here at N1CLC.com (aka HamNinja.com), I hope to cover my exploration of ham radio, summits on the air (SOTA) and general RF geek stuff.  My other BLOGS focus on technology (cloudrant.com), photography (cameraninja.com/blog), and life (thethroboflife.com). QSL via QRZ, LOTW, cards.

* Reference Links Page    * SOTA Specific Links  
* My Equipment Loadout    * DMR Tips    * My Youtube Channel


I monitor 146.520 and DMR SOTA (973)
track me on the trail HERE.  Donate HEREMastodon

Check out the latest videos by the Ham Ninja


Live in San Diego close to the top of a hill so I have the luxury of access to just about any repeater in the county.

I find that I enjoy SOTA operations more than playing with my 7300.  I use a FT-817ND for SOTA opperations, but there are days I wish I had more power given the conditions and people don't want to wait so I use a FT891 (see my full loadout here).   While doing SOTA, you'll find me scanning 146.520 and DMR SOTA (973) and I normally turn on my Inreach tracking so you can watch here for better arrival times.  At my QTH AO, you can find me on DMR San Diego Hangout (310014), or SoCal Talk Group (31066).

My first successful SOTA opp was off a small mountain by my house and I was able to conduct a QSO with a dude in Japan via SSB phone at 5 watts.  That was a kick.  I'm still struggling at this hobby, trying to figure out what antenna works the best.  At home, I'm happy to keep my max at 100 watts, but my end-fed antenna has me a tadd baffled.  I do like to keeping it stealth, so having it on a pole that I can extend up and then put away is awesome.


-- N1CLC, Christian Claborne
(aka chris claborne)

AGC for a Termination Insensitive Amplifier

4 August 2021 at 13:47

For AGC controlled IF stages in receivers I have often chosen a 2 or 3 stage dual gate MOSFET strip, or a cascode arrangement with a bipolar and JFET pair.  These work well, have more than enough overall gain, and provide good AGC-controlled gain range.    I’ve also built a BiTX style transceiver (Andy G6LBQ’s design) with two Termination Insensitive Amplifier blocks. TIAs exhibit stable input and output impedance regardless of load, and work symmetrically (for receive and transmit) but are fixed gain. My BiTx receiver worked acceptably on 40m but was underpowered on 20m. Increasing the gain to make it more lively on 20m would have made it over-powered on 40m. You don’t have this problem when you have an AGC controlled IF.

So when I saw a mod by George VK4AMG to increase a friend’s uBiTx receiver gain on 28MHz I was very interested.

The two IF gain blocks in the uBiTx transceiver (red), and the emitter resistors (blue).

The uBitx transceiver uses Termination Insensitive Amplifiers in the high and low intermediate frequencies. The Termination Insensitive Amplifier is a design element of great pedigree. It originated with some Plessey radio transceiver designs in the 60s and was popularized for amateur use by Wes Hayward W7ZOI and Bob Kopski K3NHI.

On the uBitx page, designer Ashar Farhan VU2ESE writes … “We used the excellent termination insensitive amplifiers (TIA) developed by Wes Hayward and Bob Kopski (read about them on www.w7zoi.net). These amplifiers work without transformers and they provide excellent termination on both sides. This is a key requirement for bidirectional transceivers like the µBITX . We use four blocks of these amplifiers in this transceiver. The amplifier block has a gain of 16 db and OIP3 of about +20 dbm as measured inside the µBITX .”

So I prototyped the uBitx TIA with George’s mod, a 2N3904 in place of the 10 ohm emitter resistor.  I first drew it in kicad. It’s easy to see how the additional transistor replaces the usual low value resistor in the emitter degeration.

uBiTx TIA gain block with dynamic gain control (credit VK4AMG).
Prototyping the gain stage.

Built on a scrap of etched PCB using surface mount parts. 

The prototyped gain stage using MMBT3904s and surface mount parts.

I measured 14dB of total gain this block, not the 25 to 30dB I expected, with 14dB AGC action.  Here are some measurements:

image.png

The amp stage is flat to about 15MHz, that’s good.  And at 8V of AGC the block delivers 19dB of gain which is about spot on for a typical receiver, assuming you will use two or three such blocks. I dropped the 3k3  resistor in series with   the controlling 2n3904 base to 1k and measured nearly 20dB of gain.

Prototype 4MHz IF strip

Next, I built two of these gain controlled TIA blocks in an IF strip for a CW superhet receiver.  A narrow crystal filter provides the intended CW receiver bandwidth, adding 3 to 5 dB attenuation in its passband. The bench test is shown in the video — 50dB of total gain with 30dB of AGC range, not as much as can be achieved with MOSFETs, or as much as George measured, but still a useful range.

Discussion with Bill and Pete

Next, I shared a knock-up video with Bill and Pete from Soldersmoke, as they have both been strong promoters of the TIA in their projects and through the podcast and blog. Bill wondered what other side effects of varying Rd might be, and that sent me back to Wes and Bob’s 2009 paper. Another likely consequence is that dynamically changing Rd is likely to change the input impedance away from the desired 50 ohms. So the AGC controlled TIA is not really a TIA anymore.

Conclusion

Is this a useful TIA hack? Certainly the gain swing is useful. The impact of having the TIA gain block’s input impedance swinging around in sympathy with signal strength does not sound ideal, but probably depends on what each block is interfacing with. In my prototype receiver, the second TIA block interfaces to the output side of the 4MHz crystal filter via a matching transformer. An impedance mismatch here will result in some power loss. The first TIA interfaces with the output of a ‘strong’ 2N5179 post-mixer IF amplifier stage, which is via a 50 ohm pi-attenuator.

I you find this TIA ‘hack’ interesting and maybe give it a try. Please let me know what you think of it in a video comment.

Thanks to George VK4AMG for sharing it on VK Homebrew on Facebook and for subsequent email correspondence.

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