1 - Contents
1 - Contents
1 - Contents
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
THE FASCINATION OF RADIO
Chapter 2
HOMEBUILDING AMATEUR RADIO EQUIPMENT
Chapter 3A
SETTING UP AN ELECTRONICS WORKSHOP
Research and Development as Recreation
R&D as recreation
2.
How to build radios (or anything else) in your basement
Persistence, read books, keep a notebook and work in small increments
Tools needed for kit assembly & simple projects.
A bright light over the work area
Soldering iron and small tools
hand magnifier or jeweler's loupe
Tools needed for scratch-building ham receivers and transmitters
The ARRL Amateur Radio Handbook
Parts catalogs - (usually on-line these days)
Wood carving gouges for making PC boards
(or other means of making circuit boards)
Quality multimeter
>50 MHz Oscilloscope
(I can't work without one, but maybe you can.)
Frequency counter or precisely calibrated receiver
Calculator
Simulation "Spice" software for experimenters
Freeze spray
Lab notebook
Nice-to-have tools
A collection of electronic junk
Lab power supply
RF frequency generator
Capacitance meter
Test leads and socket boards
Chapter 3B
SETTING UP AN AMATEUR WORKSHOP
Techniques for building and trouble-shooting circuits
Chapter 4A
HERTZIAN WAVES IN THE BASEMENT
Chapter 4B
HERTZIAN WAVES IN THE BASEMENT
(Continued)
Chapter 5
GETTING ON THE AIR
- DECIDING WHAT TO DO FIRST
Chapter 6A
BUILDING A QRP HOMEBREW
Chapter 6B
BUILDING A QRP HOMEBREW (Continued)
Chapter 7A
BUILDING A Direct-conversion CODE PRACTICE RECEIVER
A simple, direct-conversion receiver
A great first project for a new ham
Excellent sensitivity and good stability
Poor selectivity
Adding 700 Hz audio filtering
High pass and low pass filters
Cascaded bandpass filters increase selectivity
Operational amplifiers
Building with integrated circuits
AM broadcast filter
Getting rid of the image
Chapter 7B
BUILDING A Regenerative CODE PRACTICE RECEIVER
A simple regenerative code practice receiver.
Receiving CW, SSB and AM on multiple bands.
Demonstrating AM reception on the broadcast band, 550 KHz to 1700 KHz.
Regen receivers that didn't work - cautionary examples.
6.
Chapter 7C
BUILDING A Superheterodyne CODE PRACTICE RECEIVER
A simplified superheterodyne code practice receiver.
Receiving CW, SSB and AM over the entire HF spectrum.
The superheterodyne principle
Preselector and RF amplifier
A wide range HF VFO
Mixers - MOSFET and JFET
IF amplifier for 6 MHz
Suppressing unwanted signals on the IF frequency
BFO for 6 MHz
AM detector
Audio amplifier
Discrete transistor worked better than LM386 chip
Power supplies
Muting the supply for use with a transmitter
Chapter 8
POWER SUPPLIES
Chapter 9
ACCESSORIES FOR THE TRANSMITTER
A straight key
An electronic bug
Building dummy loads
A QRP tuning indicator
A band-resonant antenna coupler
7.
“T” type antenna coupler
The "Fri-match" antenna tuner
A low pass filter
How to stay legal with a homebrew transmitter
Antenna and power relays
MOSFET power relay replacement
Homebrew QSL cards
Chapter 10
VARIABLE FREQUENCY OSCILLATORS
Chapter 11
Building a VFO for the higher bands (PMOs)
Old approaches that no longer work
Frequency multiplication
High frequency oscillators
Pre-Mix Oscillator method of frequency translation
A VFO-controlled QRP module
Crystal oscillators are stable, aren’t they?
Crystal oscillator circuits
Butler oscillators and big crystals - then measure the drift!
Precisely regulate the power supply
Mixers, bipolar transistor and dual-gate MOSFET
Optimum drive requirements
8.
Direction of tuning, drift error cancellation
Multistage filters and filter/amplifiers
The QRP final amplifier stages
Spot switches for PMO QRPs
Chapter 12
SIMPLIFIED QRO AMPLIFIER DESIGNS
Chapter 13A
BUILDING AN ALL-BAND HF RECEIVER
Constructing the 80 meter core receiver
Chapter 14
OLD-TECH VACUUM TUBE RADIO
How old can radio technology be and still be used on the air today?
Why bother with vacuum tubes?
– Glowing filaments, colored plasmas and Jules Verne glass envelopes
Power supplies for tubes
High voltage power supply safety
The old-tech QRP transmitter
Vacuum tube amplifiers
The three roles of the triode filament
RF sinewave oscillator
Quartz crystals
Triode and pentode oscillators
Old-tech voltage regulation – big, crude and expensive - but beautiful!
The travails of triode tubes
The oscillator and buffer
10.
The final amplifier – triodes chirp
The transmitter power supply
An inadequate supply from a 1935 radio
A good power supply made from cheap, modern, boring parts
How to check out junk power transformers
A complex but adequate supply made from ancient parts
It works! It’s a success on today’s 40 meter band and no one suspects it’s old.
An old-tech receiver
A super regenerative receiver made from ancient tubes
The power supply
Super-regen on the modern hambands
Lots of fun, but not up to modern QRM & QRPs - back to the drawing board!
Chapter 15
THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR SIDEBAND
Chapter 16A
HOMEBUILDING VHF HAM RADIOS
VHF amplifiers & frequency generation
11.
Introduction
VHF lessons learned by trial and error
Available 2 meter homebrew designs
A 2 meter FM modulated signal generator
An FM modulator
Raising the 18 MHz signal up to 2 meters
The great VHF amplifier mystery
How do commercial handhelds generate 5 watts?
VHF driver designs
A regenerative VHF amplifier
The "200 mV phenomenon"
How the professionals do it - with ICs
A one watt to 3 watt 2 meter bipolar amplifier
Experimenting with various VHF bipolar transistors
How to test a transistor
Lesson from FM radios
Success using extra forward bias
Success using an emitter follower to match impedance
Desperation - a VHF vacuum tube amplifier
One watt output? Not so hard after all
How to measure VHF power and voltage
Commercial VHF power meters
Getting serious about VHF amplifier design - impedance matching
Available transistors with VHF power parameter specs
Matching dummy loads is easy
Calculating L and C values
Chapter 16B
BUILDING VHF 2 METER TRANSMITTERS
A repeater-activating code generator
Sometimes VHF milliwatts are enough
An microphone amplifier for the FM transmitter
60 Hz hum is hard to eliminate with FM
How to test a phone transmitter on the air when there's no one to listen
A one watt transmitter design
Antenna coupler
Rotary crystal switch
Power supply for the transmitter
Reducing 60 Hz hum
Static-like noise when releasing PTT button
Volume meter design
Optical couplers
Harsh noise on the modulation
A dream come true
One watt to 5 watt 2 meter MOSFET amplifiers
12.
2SK3075 MOSFET
MRF137 MOSFET
MRF148A MOSFET
MRF136 MOSFET
Coax balun transformers
60 Hz hum - again
Push To Talk implementation
Antenna switching
Status of the VHF project
Chapter 16C
BUILDING VHF 2 AND 6 METER RECEIVERS
An overview of VHF receiver designs
Building a 2 meter to 15 meter receiver/converter
Receiving 2 meter hams on an ordinary commercial FM radio
Building a 6 meter to 15 meter receiver/converter
Building a 6 meter Direct Coupled receiver
A proposed 6 meter ssb transceiver
A Foster-Seeley wideband FM detector
60 Hz hum filter in a receiver
A ratio detector for FM
The simplest wideband FM detector
An FM "crystal set"
Chapter 16D
BUILDING VHF 6 METER TRANSMITTERS
R&D - Developing a 6 meter CW QRP driver
A 6 meter AM transmitter driver
A 5 watt 6 meter CW and SSB QRP final
Building and testing a 6 meter SSB QRP driver
An improved VFO with 1.2 MHz range
A 6 meter QRP linear amplifier for CW, AM and SSB
A 6 meter QRP driver for SSB
A 6 meter SSB QRP transceiver
Chapter 17A
ANCIENT MODULATION & RELATED TOPICS
Chapter 17B
MISCELLANEOUS RADIO PROJECTS
Chapter 17C
MISCELLANEOUS ELECTRONIC PROJECTS & TOPICS
In conclusion,
Homebrew ham radio is never complete. When it works perfectly and has all the latest
innovations, the hobby is over. Not likely. Long live homebuilding!