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Messages - QRP

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91
HF Beacons / 1229 km with 1 mW on 500 kHz
« on: January 25, 2010, 1835 UTC »
Roger G3XBM has been trying to break the 1000 km barrier with his 1 milliwatt 500 kHz station.
http://www.southgatearc.org/news/january2010/1229km_with_1mw.htm

Operating on the 500kHz (600m) band
http://sites.google.com/site/g3xbmqrp/Home/500k

Roger G3XBM Blog
http://g3xbm-qrp.blogspot.com/

Roger's QRP Website
http://www.g3xbm.co.uk/

//QRP

92
HF Beacons / Re: PROJECT PEANUT launched today at 1800Utc
« on: January 21, 2010, 1500 UTC »
Let us have a picture of your Peanut Baby!
//QRP

94
HF Beacons / Re: What has happened to ...
« on: January 05, 2010, 1612 UTC »
Yep, and this means that this link (http://highfrequencybeaconsociety.com/) should not work?

//QRP

95
HF Beacons / What has happened to ...
« on: January 05, 2010, 1358 UTC »
... this home page: http://highfrequencybeaconsociety.com/

Is there is any other similar?

//QRP

96
HF Beacons / Re: Beacon kit ...
« on: December 25, 2009, 2001 UTC »

98
HF Beacons / Re: Beacon kit ...
« on: December 22, 2009, 1039 UTC »
That was a very constructive response and now it's time for you to present your proposal to the beacon drawing. What equipment do you use?
//QRP



99
HF Beacons / Re: Beacon kit ...
« on: December 21, 2009, 1844 UTC »
The funny thing is that "4096 kHz in the Mojave Desert" using exactly my suggestion.
See the drawing at the bottom of this link: http://www.auroralchorus.com/4096khz.htm



//QRP

100
HF Beacons / Re: Beacon kit ...
« on: December 21, 2009, 1501 UTC »
OK guys, now I have heard much criticism of the options I have presented.
Now it's time for you to present the ultimate beacon drawing.

//QRP

102
HF Beacons / Re: Beacon kit ...
« on: December 20, 2009, 1851 UTC »
Is this OK? Only 200mw ...



This experimental 1/2 watt CW transmitter uses a 74HC240 high-speed CMOS octal buffer, one section which serves as a crystal oscillator, four sections of which amplify this signal, and three sections of which are unused. Because the 74HC240 dissipates 1/2 watt on 20M and 0.9 watts on 10M, it must be heat-sunk. Epoxying the IC to the ground plane in dead-bug of ugly construction provides adequate cooling. L1, a low-inductance coil, is sensitive to lead length, so if you build this transmitter with plug-in filters (Lew Smith uses phono plugs and jacks for this purpose), you may need to remove one or two turns from L1 to compensate for the extra lead length involved in wiring the coil plugs and socket. The newer 74HC240's available today show little power drop-off on 10M, while older ones exhibited a 20% power drop-off. The older 74HC240's can handle power up to 10V, the newer ones latch up at 9V. It is therefore important to operate the rig at a supply voltage of 7.8 to 8 volts, which is a compromise between maximum power and safety. The logic chips have built-in input and output buffers. The extra gain provided by the extra stage make it harder to get rid of key clicks. The rig's key-click filter therefore uses an unusually large time constant (33 ms.) The output stages in 74HCxxx devices are designed to have equal pull-up and pull-down transistors. This minimizes even-order harmonics, simplifying the rig's output filtering. The 74HC240 can directly drive a power MOSFET amplifier.

//QRP



103
HF Beacons / Beacon kit ...
« on: December 20, 2009, 1739 UTC »
What do you think about this kit? http://www.wa0itp.com/ns40.html
With some modification, it should be possible to use as a beacon.
There are only 14 electronic components, and no toroid or coils of any kind to wind.
Any comments about it?

//QRP

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