17 Nov 2011

Google Sites website design

My wife sings in a local choir called the Cambridgeshire Choral Society. They have had a website for some years but it had not been regularly maintained, so I was asked to create this new one. This I have just done using Google Sites. Although I'm no website expert, Google Sites allows quite a credible website to be created without knowledge of HTML coding. I am quite pleased with the result and hope it encourages a few more people to attend the concerts and join the choir.

Their next major concert is in Ely Cathedral in March 2012 when they will be singing Elgar's famous "Dream of Gerontius" which is a wonderful choral work. They are also singing Britten's "St Nicolas" in late January 2012.

In the next few months I hope to tidy up my QRP website and give it a refreshed look.

IC703 Sold

For around 6-7 years I've owned and used an IC703 10W QRP radio as part of my station. Although I have worked all over the planet with it on SSB and CW, it had not been used anything like as much as the FT817, so I decided to "de-clutter"and sell it.  It was bought by a local friend who hasn't got any HF SSB/CW gear apart from a homebrew rig for 20m.  I had thought of trading it in, so offered him the rig at the trade-in value. If he doesn't get hours of fun and enjoyment from it, especially on 10m at the moment, I'd be very surprised. You see very few of these transceivers available on the second hand market, I guess because owners hang on to them.

UKNanowaves Group

G0EHV's lightbeam kit (from the UKNanowaves group photos)
Today I joined the UKNanowaves Group which is dedicated to optical communications.  There is a lot of useful information on this group in the postings and in the files and photos sections. Reading the membership list I noticed several local amateurs interested in optical comms, so when I get my equipment for 481THz working credibly I will have a good chance of some QSOs locally.

Today some of my optical comms electronics parts arrived so I hope to start experimenting with these on the bench shortly. Most gear built for 481THz is simple and homebrew. Apart from designs using transverters to HF or VHF, all kit is in the 0-40kHz frequency range, so easily engineered with simple test equipment. Perhaps, like VLF and LF, this is partly why it appeals to me.

16 Nov 2011

137.5kHz transverter desense - fixed

This afternoon I fixed the problem with RX desense by adding a relay to switch the RF input and to turn off the PA supply when not on TX. It has fixed the RX sensitivity issue and added about 10-15dB to RX sensitivity using the transverter. PA0A was about 30dB S/N on QRSS and DK7FC about 20dB S/N on QRSS. M0PPP is now a better signal with me too on WSPR. The TX is still running at 500uW ERP and GW0EZY is copying me in mid-Wales OK (251km) this evening on 137.5kHz WSPR.

15 Nov 2011

137kHz Transverter RX Desense

When testing my transverter on the bench today I noticed the receiver was being desensitised by the undriven TX strip. I don't switch the TX part off when on RX, I just don't apply 10MHz drive into it. There must be some source of low level noise from these stages when on RX as the desense is around 10-20dB. Despite this I am still able to copy M0PPP at 182km pretty consistently these days on 137.5kHz WSPR. I need to fix this problem before this project is boxed and "finished". When the TX strip is powered down the sensitivity is very good indeed.

The 481THz Band

My tests on 137kHz WSPR are now all but completed and I do not intend to take this work any further now I've "got the measure" of what is possible. I shall put the transverter in a box after a tidy up and use it periodically over the winter.

Now I am about to start something new: 481THz band communications! This is 623nm red light for the uninitiated. This evening I've made a start by ordering some suitable components to allow benchwork to start next week. My initial tests will be low powered beaconing with a portable receiver walking down the road. Assuming this is promising, I'll then refine the kit and organise optics to give some "antenna gain" to allow much greater range.

There are a lot of resources on the internet about light beam communication, especially using high power LEDs and there was an excellent series of inspiring articles about this in the March-May RadCom this year.

14 Nov 2011

10m Chirpy Measurements

Last week G6ALB made a copy of my Chirpy 14 component transceiver for 28MHz CW. Andrew had access to some better calibrated test equipment and carried out some RF power and sensitivity measurements both on his version and on my second original unit - the first was just a rat's nest on the bench.

Both on my version and G6ALB's version the measured RF power out was in excess of 200mW, which is around 2-3dB more than I had crudely measured. The RX sensitivity on both was such that below -100dBm (around 2uV) was audible in our earpieces in a quiet room. Backwave carrier on TX was rather too high at around -10dBm. Second harmonic was also only around -6dB, so a low pass filter is really a necessity apart from casual short tests.

It does seem that the simple design is reproducible and its performance not at all bad for something this simple. The only major shortcoming is the chirp.

12 Nov 2011

Ten WSPR reports now on 137.5kHz

This evening G3WCB (101km) reported my 137.5kHz WSPR signal for the first time bringing my total number of reports on this more difficult band up to 10. My ERP is currently around 500-600uW, although I hope to run the transverter PA from around 20V tomorrow which should increase the ERP by around 3dB.

These are the reporters so far:

G6ALB
G3WCD
M0FMT
G3XIZ (46km)
G3XVL (69km)
M0BMU (69km)
G3WCB (101km)
G3YXM (148km)
M0PPP (182km)
GW0EZY (251km)

10 Nov 2011

137kHz WSPR - big SUCCESS at last!

After yesterday's disappointments today has been a whole lot better on 137.5kHz with my best WSPR DX report ever and a report from my second DXCC country on the band.  First several reports from GW0EZY in mid-Wales (251km) and then one from M0PPP in the north of England (off the side of my TX loop too - 182km) who I heard last night for the first time.  I've copied him several times tonight as well as PA3EGO. The transverter now puts out about 20W, but the ERP is still only around 200uW based on the loop current and enclosed area. I'm tempted to put it in a box at last as I now know this system is capable of decent range on a good night like tonight.

9 Nov 2011

Struggling on 137kHz - time to move on?

Today I did some changes to my 137kHz transverter and put it on the air this evening for about 4 hours sending and receiving 137.5kHz WSPR. Power from the PA is now around 20W and the ERP must be around 200uW.  I was really quite hopeful that, with enough stations active on WSPR tonight, I might get a few reports.  The band was indeed quite busy with a few stations like G0KTN and G3WCB who have regularly copied my 500kHz WSPR on the band and looking.  What a disappointment! Not only did I get not a single report, but I was unable to copy any of the active TX stations like F5WK or M0PPP. The latter was visible as a trace but not strong enough to decode.

Without increasing the power another 6dB at least to around 80W and improving the antenna considerably I am now of the opinion that, QRSS30 apart, 137kHz is not going to be a success. My feeling is I need at least 20-30dB better system performance (TX power and antenna efficiency that is) to even start to approach the level of reports I manage on 500kHz. So, do I try just that bit more or do I throw in the QRP towel on this band? I don't want to run lots of power and I don't want to erect a monster antenna: I was hoping my unobtrusive loop would have done me as well as it did on 500kHz, but clearly not.

I am beginning to think that this really IS a band where you need lots of power to make a success of things.


UPDATE: Just as I finished writing this I manage to decode M0PPP twice at 182km.
2252 -27 -0.5   0.137562  1 M0PPP IO93 17