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Re: Struggling with tuning clicks and birdie sounds
I have braided both the tuning and volume control wires with good results,
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plus it looks better. v/r Fred W4JLE -----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Allard PE1NWL Sent: Wednesday, June 7, 2017 07:39 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [BITX20] Struggling with tuning clicks and birdie sounds It seems there is a huge variability between various BITX40 radios, and there are various points where improvements may help. In my particular case, I achieved the greatest tuning click reduction just by using shielded wires to and from the volume potentiometer. 73 Allard PE1NWL |
Re: Quality speaker mic with minimal modding
philip yates
Thats the mic I use, have tried it with the supplied insert that come with the Bitx, no difference. Phil - G7BZD |
Re: Europe to States BitX QSO
Andy,
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Your antenna is apparently quite effective! ? Can you describe it? ? Dimensions? ? How high at the feed point? ? How many radials? ?Roughly how much gain over a dipole does a distant station see? ?Is this mostly due to straight antenna gain or a matter of launch angle?? Jerry, KE7ER On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 01:12 pm, Andy wrote:
My rig is BITX40, about 7w out + 2 phased verticals.? ? |
Re: Baofeng microphone mod for BITX
you have 6 connectors in total on the 2 stereo plugs but only 4 wires going into the Baofeng mic from those connectors. They all share one common ground on the 2.5mm plugs tip. so connections are: |
Re: Europe to States BitX QSO
Andy
Thanks Paul,
CW signal from W1LY was really good, real 579. I am sure that I can copy -10db signals in same conditions :) SSB was not so strong but readable, because my antennas are optimized for cw part of 40m band. Today morning on my Sunrise I had also good CW reports from USA east coast RBN's (reverse beacon network). During winter time will probably be much easier to make QRP/QRP contact NA ¨C EU. Again, thank you Willy for nice QSO's! My rig is BITX40, about 7w out + 2 phased verticals. If any other HAM station like to try CW qso we can arrange sked next days. 73 & GL with BITX Dx-ing, 9a3jh Andy |
Re: IRF510- Temporary replacement?
Exactly as per post 27762? ? ?That's my best shot, seems both T6 and the LPF want around 50 ohms. ?Or could perhaps use the spare winding on T6 somehow. ?Is there much danger of blowing the 2n2219a if the antenna does not present 50 ohms? ?Could be a useful trick to keep in mind, 200mw is still good enough for a few CW contacts.
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On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 11:41 am, Ashhar Farhan wrote: The driver gives out about 200 mw. you could directly use that.? ? |
Re: cw speed
Jack Purdum
That is the key. Sadly, I learned Morse the wrong way back in the Stone Age. I was taught the "count-the-dits-and-the-dahs-and-write-it-down" method. Wrong. Several (free) programs use the Farnsworth method where you fill in your target code speed. For me, I'm trying to get to 30wpm. The program then selects two letters and starts sending them to you at 30 wpm, but with a large space between letters. The idea is to associate a rhythm with a letter, not its dits and dahs. Slowly, more letters are introduced, but the intra-letter spacing remains large. As you progress, the spacing becomes shorter until you reach your target speed. It works. If I'm building something in the shack (i.e., not programming), I'll have the rig on with a CW station in the background. I am not consciously listening to the code, but my speed is creeping up and I think this helps.? Whatever, just make the time to practice. Jack, W8TEE From: Lawrence Galea <9h1avlaw@...> To: [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, June 7, 2017 2:38 PM Subject: Re: [BITX20] cw speed The trick is practice, practice, practice. The more you listen the more you will be able to copy. Then practice sending with a straight key. The more you practice the more you become proficient, meaning you can read what the other party is sending without having to write it down. Stay away from electronic keyers and bug keys until you cannot send faster with a hand key. If you then want to use electronic keyers or a bug key start practicing with an audio oscillator because at first all you will send will be a dashed load of dots. Once you reach a speed at which you can copy comfortably don't be afraid to increase your speed because as any other language, the more you practice the more you will learn and the more you become confident. Once you learn the language (also the Morse Cose) you will not forget it. If you don't practice for a long time you will reduce your speed and maybe forget a letter or some punctuation, but with a little practice you will go back to your usual speed. Hope this helps and encourages you and any other person wanting to learn the Morse code and increase their speed. Regards Lawrence On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 8:15 PM, Ashhar Farhan <farhanbox@...> wrote:
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Re: uBITX - A reboot of the old BITX
Hello Sarma. That's exactly why I encouraged them to try because the more you practice the more you learn. Granted that they will find it difficult at first but practice makes perfect apart from enjoying your hobby more and being proud that you built the equipment yourself. Perhaps they should get some scrapped equipment and try taking off components and soldering them back. I believe there were some offers on ebay offering scrap boards for this purpose. Also, they may try to build something easy as an addition to BITX or any other equipment before tackling more difficult jobs. If you don't get into the water you will never learn to swim. Again, don't be afraid to try. It is easier than you think. Hope this helps and encourages people to try. Regards? Lawrence. On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 1:18 PM, Jack Purdum via Groups.Io <econjack@...> wrote:
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Re: IRF510- Temporary replacement?
The driver gives out about 200 mw. you could directly use that.? - f On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 10:13 PM, Jerry Gaffke via Groups.Io <jgaffke@...> wrote: The IRF510 gets plenty hot, a BS170 will likely blow in this circuit.? Wear eye protection.? T7 converts the 50 ohms to 12.5 ohms at the IRF510, you might go without T7 is using a relatively wimpy FET, and maybe power the PA from 6v instead of 12v.? A BS170 requires less drive, so cut back on R136.? Other big TO220 enhancement mode NFET's might be a better choice, they likely won't blow, ?just not give much output due to the order of magnitude increase in gate capacitance.? I have my doubts, it's hard enough to get an RF amp to behave with thorough analysis.. ? |
Re: cw speed
The trick is practice, practice, practice. The more you listen the more you will be able to copy. Then practice sending with a straight key. The more you practice the more you become proficient, meaning you can read what the other party is sending without having to write it down. Stay away from electronic keyers and bug keys until you cannot send faster with a hand key. If you then want to use electronic keyers or a bug key start practicing with an audio oscillator because at first all you will send will be a dashed load of dots. Once you reach a speed at which you can copy comfortably don't be afraid to increase your speed because as any other language, the more you practice the more you will learn and the more you become confident. Once you learn the language (also the Morse Cose) you will not forget it. If you don't practice for a long time you will reduce your speed and maybe forget a letter or some punctuation, but with a little practice you will go back to your usual speed. Hope this helps and encourages you and any other person wanting to learn the Morse code and increase their speed. Regards Lawrence On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 8:15 PM, Ashhar Farhan <farhanbox@...> wrote:
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Re: cw speed
there is a cheat method. which is this : usually the other signal repeats her/his callsign a few times. you should be able to get it two or three passes. replay the callsign's morse sequence in your mind. and forget about the rest. you can probably make out the signal report from the rest of the fast and furious. over time, other stuff will start making sense too.? after 8 wpm, no one should bother to learn before you hit the key. if you can't follow the other side, it is their problem. harr! harr! harr! - f On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 11:11 PM, Daniel Isaza <hk4dei@...> wrote:
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Re: Tuning potentiometer too long to be fitted
Vince Vielhaber
For the volume control I didn't have a knob that fit, but I did have a
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knob for an even smaller shaft. So I took the set screws out and put it on the lathe and opened it up a few thou. Slid it back on with set screws installed, tightened it up and it works great. Vince. I used the little shaft on supplied Volume control by drilling out an Al --
Michigan VHF Corp. |
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