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VU BITXers
Rahul Srivastava
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Re: BITX VXOs
Wijaya, Julius
Hi miguel,
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i am doing an experiment on 12MHz xtal VXO, i could get 35kHz or more range to it, the only thing is i use ony 1 xtal, getting more range, means getting more drift. here's the details for my experiment, this 12MHz VXO when mixed with 10MHz LO could produce 2MHz signal. i tried with lower xtal, but it just didn't oscilate, will keep doing an experiment on that. rgds julius * REPLY SEPARATOR * On 4/20/2005 at 11:31 AM Miguel Angelo Bartie wrote:
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Re: First QSO with BITX17 !
Arv Evans
Ron
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Congratulations on your joining the "BITX-On-The-Air" group. Your web page looks quite interesting as well. I liked the morse sound effects between pages. Did you use the original H&P Circuit or the less complex version from the HuffPuffVFO group? The H&P design by Hans G0UPL is a bit easier to build and calibtrate than prior designs based on the original by Klaas. Arv _._ On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 13:45:53 -0600, Ron <pa2rf@...> wrote:
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R: First QSO with BITX17 !
I0SKK - Alessandro Santucci
Great Ron,
congrats! Well done! It's the good of home-brew and of QRP! 72 Alex I0SKK -----Messaggio originale----- Da: BITX20@... [mailto:BITX20@...]Per conto di Ron Inviato: venerd??? 22 aprile 2005 21.46 A: BITX20@... Oggetto: [BITX20] First QSO with BITX17 ! Dear BITX-homebrew-gents, This afternoon, I made my first QSO on 17m with the BITX17 ! I am really surprised. My qrp RTTY signal from the west of Holland reached Greece SV with RST 559. I used MixW2.1 on a Celeron 266 MHz PC to generate RTTY. In fact my goal has been achieved. 3 months ago I wanted to make a digimode QSO with the BITX on this (for me) un-explored 17m WARC band. I wrote a story about my BITX17 on my RF homebrew website: --> zenders (tx) ---> BITX17 It is still in Dutch, but the picts might give you an idea how things look like. Still a lot of challenges... psk31 / cw / ssb qso's and finally make a nice front for the rig which covers my ' ugly ' building method. After all, the BITX is a great rig. Spent only a few euro's on the X- tal filter and used a lot of ordinary BC945 transistors (euro 0,10 each). Lots of chapeaux to the designer of this rig!! ===================================== FIRST 17M QSO WITH HOMEBREW BITX17 22 APR 2005 17:11 UTC 18.106 MHz CQ CQ CQ DE SV2DGH SV2DGH SV2DGH CQ CQ CQ DE SV2DGH SV2DGH SV2DGH PSE K SV2DGH SV2DGH de PA2RF PA2RF PSE K PA2RF PA2RF DE SV2DGH GA, TNX 4 CALL, UR RST 559 559, NAME: CHRIS CHRIS QTH: THESSALONIKI, REGION: MAKEDONIA, NORTHERN GREECE LOC: KN10LM HW CPY ?? PA2RF DE SV2DGH BTU HPHJRHX =====SV2DGH SV2DGH de PA2RF PA2RF +++++++++++++++++++ Great isn't it with only 5 Watts from an MOSFET IRF510 .. All you guys have a fb weekend ! 73 de Ron Yahoo! Groups Links -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Anti-Virus. Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 21/04/05 -- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Anti-Virus. Version: 7.0.308 / Virus Database: 266.10.2 - Release Date: 21/04/05 |
First QSO with BITX17 !
Ron
Dear BITX-homebrew-gents,
This afternoon, I made my first QSO on 17m with the BITX17 ! I am really surprised. My qrp RTTY signal from the west of Holland reached Greece SV with RST 559. I used MixW2.1 on a Celeron 266 MHz PC to generate RTTY. In fact my goal has been achieved. 3 months ago I wanted to make a digimode QSO with the BITX on this (for me) un-explored 17m WARC band. I wrote a story about my BITX17 on my RF homebrew website: --> zenders (tx) ---> BITX17 It is still in Dutch, but the picts might give you an idea how things look like. Still a lot of challenges... psk31 / cw / ssb qso's and finally make a nice front for the rig which covers my ' ugly ' building method. After all, the BITX is a great rig. Spent only a few euro's on the X- tal filter and used a lot of ordinary BC945 transistors (euro 0,10 each). Lots of chapeaux to the designer of this rig!! ===================================== FIRST 17M QSO WITH HOMEBREW BITX17 22 APR 2005 17:11 UTC 18.106 MHz CQ CQ CQ DE SV2DGH SV2DGH SV2DGH CQ CQ CQ DE SV2DGH SV2DGH SV2DGH PSE K SV2DGH SV2DGH de PA2RF PA2RF PSE K PA2RF PA2RF DE SV2DGH GA, TNX 4 CALL, UR RST 559 559, NAME: CHRIS CHRIS QTH: THESSALONIKI, REGION: MAKEDONIA, NORTHERN GREECE LOC: KN10LM HW CPY ?? PA2RF DE SV2DGH BTU HPHJRHX =====SV2DGH SV2DGH de PA2RF PA2RF +++++++++++++++++++ Great isn't it with only 5 Watts from an MOSFET IRF510 .. All you guys have a fb weekend ! 73 de Ron |
Re: BITX VXOs
Rahul Srivastava
Dear Miguel,
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Hi!
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This all is very interesting. I feel some correction is in order for 80mts range mentioned. But what I am more interested is the 18mhz tuning you mention, it makes making a 20mtr radio with 4mhz IF and 18mhz LO a snap. 400khz range gives more than adequate 20mtrs coverage.
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Worth trying.
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Greetings and 73
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Rahul VU3WJM
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Miguel Angelo Bartie wrote:
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Re: BITX VXOs
Ron Brink
Ola Miguel,
I like to see some picts of your super VXO's Miguel. Great coverage with only 3 xtals. Is the output stable over the whole range? Do you use one or more (switchable) coils in series with the xtals to cover the range?
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I have shielded my BIT17 VFO (soldered some unetched PCB's around it) and now the VFO with Huff&Puff is also stable when I force it out-of-tune e.g. by placing the desk-lamp just above the vfo. Added one picture in the photobox.
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73
Ron
PA2RF
Miguel Angelo Bartie wrote:
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BITX VXOs
Hello
I build 3 VXOs called "hipervxos" for 40m, 20, and 10m to use with BITX, They use a classic Colpits oscilattor with 3 parallel xtals and a series inductor (special) and a series variable capacitor For 40m I use 3 x 3020 kHz xtals and the actual range is 2068 to 3010kHz For 20m I use a commercial 3 x 4194 kHz xtals covering 4190 to 3990 kHz For 10m I use a commercial 3 x 18432 kHz xtals covering 18400 to 18000kHz. The BITX 40m is running good, the 20m still in test (but is ok too), and the 10m version I built only the VXO. The exciter and the PA are the same I change the vfo, the band pass filter and the low pass filter. I will make some pictures and I will post here. 73 from PY2OHH Miguel |
Re: Good Job guys!
Hans Summers
Guys
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I am planning a Huff Puff VFO kit for my 2-chip minimalist VFO see . I am sure that this would be suitable for use with BITX transceivers. I have just posted a message to the Huff Puff forum about what possible features to include in the kit. Hoping to keep the cost as absolutely minimal as possible! 73 Hans G0UPL -----Original Message-----
From: Arv Evans [mailto:arvevans@...] Sent: 10 April 2005 18:52 To: BITX20@... Subject: Re: [BITX20] Re: Good Job guys! Troy H&P stabilisation would hold your frequency to within a Hz or two for the long term, thus minimizing even a slow drift after warm up. Hans has come up with several minimalist stabilizer designs (a "One-Chip", a "two-chip" and a minimalist version of the "Fast Stabilizer"). These circuits may be found on the <HUFFPUFFVFO.yahoogroups.com> forum. Hans' stabilizer circuits may be made to lock onto 16, 32, or 64 Hz tuning steps. The one and two chip designs use a 32.768 KHz watch crystal (salvage one from a cheap watch purchased at the local dollar store).driving a 74HC4060 binary counter for the timebase. I have looked before at that receiver and counter on the web page you suggested. Hans G0UPL's web page also has some minimalist counters that could be adapted to your L.O. output, as does Onno PA2OHH <www.qsl.net/pa2ohh/sfreq.htm> and Miguel PY2OHH <>. Arv _._ On Sun, 10 Apr 2005 16:53:53 -0000, kc8afu1965 <kc8afu1965@...> wrote:
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Re: Good Job guys!
Ron
Tnx for your reply dear Mike,
I did the measurement with a Philips low-budget "world" receiver (with BFO :-) ) connected to a Celeron 266 MHz PC using MixW2.10 and I suspect this radio causing most of the anomalies you indicated. And yes, I live in a pretty EM-noisy environment (GSM, wifi antennas and lot of building activities like cranes with 70cm devices in the vicinity). 73 Ron PA2RF --- In BITX20@..., "Mike W" <mike@c...> wrote: Impressive Ron, Not a criticism, but I note some products of theVFO some distance from the carrier in the unlocked pic which are not> stable but still inexpensive rig that is > capable of > > working K7HKLwith > > narrow filters for CW and PSK/MSK contacts. > > > > Arv
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Re: Good Job guys!
Mike W
Impressive Ron, Not a criticism, but I note some products of the VFO
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some distance from the carrier in the unlocked pic which are not noticable when the HuffPuff is operative due to the other noises. I guess you must live in a noisy enviroment. thanks for the pics though. atb Mike W, G8NXD -- On 11 Apr 2005 at 7:26, Ron wrote:
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Re: Good Job guys!
Ron
Dear Troy,
Would like to inform you that I included the Huff&Puff circuit into my BITX17 (converted BITX20 for 18.068...18.168 MHz). In my Photobox (PA2RF) you can see 2 pictures of the VFO performance made with MixW.2.10. (witout and with Huff&Puff). The results were (and still are) amazing! I can easily decode PSK31, RTTY and other digimodes now. Bye from Holland Ron PA2RF --- In BITX20@..., "kc8afu1965" <kc8afu1965@y...> wrote: CW rcvr is the popcorn rcvr from the qrp homebuilder homepage. It hasI think I remember about 2Hz per minute after warm-up but it's been aby the H&P. Lately I have been finishing up a presettable frequencyam on the band. It can be found at: |
Re: re. TR Switching for the BITX
I have tried this method and it works well with my non-BITX 5w CW
transmitter. My receiver has an RF preamp and a post mixer amplifier. I found that if I grounded both transistor bases during transmit with a transistor switch, the transmit signal would be attenuated enough to be used as sidetone (no audio section mute.) I think this would work for SSB with lower audio output. Troy KC8AFU --- In BITX20@..., "Arv Evans" <arvevans@e...> wrote: might want toThis should |
re. TR Switching for the BITX
Arv Evans
Those BITX builders who want to have QSK operation without relays might want to
look at the web site of Miguel PY2OHH <> He shows and explains his simple diode based TR switching method. This should be adaptable to the BITX design. Arv _._ -- Expore all the Ideas...Exploit the good ones! |
Re: Good Job guys!
Arv Evans
Troy
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H&P stabilisation would hold your frequency to within a Hz or two for the long term, thus minimizing even a slow drift after warm up. Hans has come up with several minimalist stabilizer designs (a "One-Chip", a "two-chip" and a minimalist version of the "Fast Stabilizer"). These circuits may be found on the <HUFFPUFFVFO.yahoogroups.com> forum. Hans' stabilizer circuits may be made to lock onto 16, 32, or 64 Hz tuning steps. The one and two chip designs use a 32.768 KHz watch crystal (salvage one from a cheap watch purchased at the local dollar store).driving a 74HC4060 binary counter for the timebase. I have looked before at that receiver and counter on the web page you suggested. Hans G0UPL's web page also has some minimalist counters that could be adapted to your L.O. output, as does Onno PA2OHH <www.qsl.net/pa2ohh/sfreq.htm> and Miguel PY2OHH <>. Arv _._ On Sun, 10 Apr 2005 16:53:53 -0000, kc8afu1965 <kc8afu1965@...> wrote:
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Re: Good Job guys!
Thanks Arv,
I've had the AFU callsign for about ten years and you're the first person to comment on it. I thought it was funny when it was first assigned to me but nobody seemed to share my sense of humor. Thanks for noticing! Thanks for the huff&puff invite. I've also been looknig at Hans Summers website and I'm thinking about trying it out. My current CW rcvr is the popcorn rcvr from the qrp homebuilder homepage. It has an LO freq of approx 2.5 MHz (4.433 MHz IF)and is pretty stable ( I think I remember about 2Hz per minute after warm-up but it's been a while since I measured it so I could be wrong) but I am intrigued by the H&P. Lately I have been finishing up a presettable frequency counter that I can run directly off of my VFO. Now I know where I am on the band. It can be found at: It's at the bottom of the homepage. Thanks for the invite and I will start checking out the H&P group. 73's & HPE CUL. Troy KC8AFU --- In BITX20@..., "Arv Evans" <arvevans@e...> wrote: Troya center-of-the-filtertook the simple way andthough! group so I will goforum is a logicalyour BITX oscillatorcapable of working with |
Re: Good Job guys!
Now you have the benefit to read for example every day ten (for you
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new) postings! Often it is better to follow also what happened before, preventing that the same questions are asked more often. Hear you on the band ;-) Chris, PA3CRX My only regret is that I |
Re: Good Job guys!
Arv Evans
Troy
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The BITX has also been used for CW. Several builders have added a center-of-the-filter BFO oscillator that serves both send and receive CW functions. I took the simple way and just added a keyed AF oscillator that plugs into the mike jack. Love the callsign. I'll bet you get a few comments about it though! I did not see your name in the members list for the Huff and Puff group so I will go over there and send you an invite. The Huff & Puff VFO group forum is a logical extension to the BITX because using an H & P circuit to stabilize your BITX oscillator makes it into a very stable but still inexpensive rig that is capable of working with narrow filters for CW and PSK/MSK contacts. Arv K7HKL On Fri, 08 Apr 2005 17:23:14 -0000, kc8afu1965 <kc8afu1965@...> wrote:
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Good Job guys!
Hello all,
I just wanted to say what a fine group I think this is. I have not built a BITX (I do mostly CW homebrew projects) but most of the topics here have been pertinet to my homebrewing. My only regret is that I didn't join when the group was started (I've only been tuning in for the last two months). This group gets my approval as the best homebrewing group on the web. Keep up the good work guys! Troy Hunt KC8AFU. |