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General Category => General Radio Discussion => Topic started by: skeezix on December 22, 2013, 0023 UTC

Title: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: skeezix on December 22, 2013, 0023 UTC
http://www.arrl.org/news/experimenter-to-honor-early-wireless-pioneers-with-longwave-transmissions (http://www.arrl.org/news/experimenter-to-honor-early-wireless-pioneers-with-longwave-transmissions)

As he has over the past several years, Brian Justin, WA1ZMS/4 — an active participant in the ARRL’s WD2XSH 600 meter experimental project — will transmit voice and music on 486 kHz as WG2XFQ on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day and again on New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. Transmissions will begin at 0001 UTC and end at 2359 UTC.

Justin, who may be better known for his microwave exploits on ham radio, will use an AM audio loop modulating his vintage-style, homebrew transmitter to honor Reginald Fessenden’s Christmas Eve 1906 AM voice transmission.

“While his original transmissions used a set of carbon microphones in the antenna lead to modulate the signal,” Justin explained, “WG2XFQ will be utilizing true Heising modulation in honor of Raymond Heising, who developed this early form of amplitude modulation during World War I. Justin constructed his 5 W master oscillator power amplifier (MOPA) transmitter using 1920s vintage components. He said a modern 500 W FET linear amplifier allows him to meet his WG2XFQ ERP limit of 20 W.

An RF engineer, Justin collects pre-1920 wireless gear and has a World War I Heising-modulated aircraft transmitter he’s planning to restore.

A Word on Heising Modulation

Raymond Heising developed the first form of AM voice modulation during World War I. The goal was to find a way to take an existing aircraft CW transmitter, used to send air reconnaissance information to the ground with few as possible parts or tubes required.

Since the CW rigs of the day were a simple keyed power oscillator, Heising figured that, if one could control the plate current of the CW tube at an audio rate, amplitude modulation (AM) would result. The same crystal detectors used to receive spark transmissions could demodulate the AM without any modification.

His design was very simple. If you add a large iron choke to the output of the B+ supply, it will become a constant-current supply. You then only need to feed that B+ to both the CW power oscillator and to an identical power tube that is grid modulated. The two tubes compete for the constant current from the B+ supply, and if the audio tube is driven hard, less current flows in the CW tube and vise-versa. Thus, his design is sometimes referred to as constant current modulation from a technical perspective.

A limitation is the need for identical and perfect matching of the two tubes. One is running at RF, the other at AF. The typical result is only about 50 percent modulation. — Brian Justin, WA1ZMS
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: BDM on December 22, 2013, 0554 UTC
Interesting and thanks for the heads-up
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: Kilokat7 on December 25, 2013, 0315 UTC
This one is on the air right now at 0314 UTC.  Weak copy at my location, but it's there.
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: myteaquinn on December 25, 2013, 0401 UTC
0359z hearing the song O Holy Night. Very weak and fighting the local noise.
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: Zoidberg on December 25, 2013, 0404 UTC
Checked around 0350z, nary a peep here in Texas.
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: BDM on December 25, 2013, 0440 UTC
Damn forgot about this. Need to try again Christmas
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: Kilokat7 on December 25, 2013, 0444 UTC
Damn forgot about this. Need to try again Christmas

It's still on the air as I type this..
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: BDM on December 25, 2013, 0451 UTC
Damn forgot about this. Need to try again Christmas

It's still on the air as I type this..

I have a weak carrier, but that is about it. Thanks for the heads-up ;)
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: Kilokat7 on December 25, 2013, 0453 UTC
Damn forgot about this. Need to try again Christmas

It's still on the air as I type this..

I have a weak carrier, but that is about it. Thanks for the heads-up ;)

The fades tend to be longer at these frequencies.  I had to stick with it a bit until it faded up to the point of hearing some faint audio.
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: BDM on December 25, 2013, 0456 UTC
I think I may be hearing voice, but I just cannot tell. I have an issue currently with either a pole ground or insulator going bad. My radios (Perseus or Icom) NB is just barely able to deal with it, making things a little bit tougher :(
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: BDM on December 25, 2013, 0502 UTC
Stupido me.................. I spun the loop around and now have a fair to less than fair copy, obvious music. Sounds like Ave Maria playing?
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: Chanter on December 26, 2013, 0810 UTC
I tried for this twice over the holiday, no joy.  I was contending with a high noise level on the low frequencies.  There's some awful unidentified electrical interference at my parents' place.  I really need to take an EMF detector to the area.  Wish I could have caught this one.  I tried last year too, nothing.  Rats! 
Title: Re: Experimenter to Honor Early Wireless Pioneers with Longwave Transmissions
Post by: BDM on January 01, 2014, 0225 UTC
Just a reminder, hearing it now.