Ham College 9
Ham College episode 9 is now available for download.
In episode 9 we discuss the different types of resistors and potentiometers. Deciphering the resistor color code. More questions and answers from the Technical class question pool. Learn how you can win an Icom T-shirt and cap.
1:05:30
George Thomas, W5JDX, is co-host of AmateurLogic.TV, an original amateur radio video program hosted by George Thomas (W5JDX), Tommy Martin (N5ZNO), Peter Berrett (VK3PB), and Emile Diodene (KE5QKR). Contact him at [email protected].
Hamfest HAB Flight – Mission Debrief
The National Hamfest high altitude balloon flew on Saturday and Pinky Pig reached a maximum altitude of nearly 26km (25,927m / 96,873 feet) as pictured above.
The flight originally planned for Friday had to be postponed due to wind direction and restrictions but I had sort approval for both days and was able to fly on Saturday. The conditions were perfect on launch day, clear blue sky with little cloud and almost no wind. Flight prediction put it landing around 25km away.
Both payload trackers worked flawlessly, PINKY the high speed RTTY successfully sent SSDV as well as telemetry and the backup tracker PIGLET sent the slow speed RTTY telemetry. Trackers from all over the UK as well as France, Holland and Poland received data and uploaded data to the UKHAS website.
The received SSDV images can be seen at http://ssdv.habhub.org/PINKY
The flight path can be seen below
The flight can be seen visualised in Google Earth below and while the 26km altitude was impressive it was around 4km less than I'd planned.
The launch certainly created a great deal of interest at the Hamfest, on the Friday we setup the club tent for South Kesteven ARS with a tracking station and demonstrated the payloads to interested visitors. Stewart (M0SDM) used his Land Rover with a push up mast for a pair of collinear X-50s so we could receive and decode. The mast and the Land Rover generated just as much interest.
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| Picture by Dave M0TAZ |
Andrew Garratt, MØNRD, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from East Midlands, England. Contact him at [email protected].
Hamfest HAB Flight – Mission Debrief
The National Hamfest high altitude balloon flew on Saturday and Pinky Pig reached a maximum altitude of nearly 26km (25,927m / 96,873 feet) as pictured above.
The flight originally planned for Friday had to be postponed due to wind direction and restrictions but I had sort approval for both days and was able to fly on Saturday. The conditions were perfect on launch day, clear blue sky with little cloud and almost no wind. Flight prediction put it landing around 25km away.
Both payload trackers worked flawlessly, PINKY the high speed RTTY successfully sent SSDV as well as telemetry and the backup tracker PIGLET sent the slow speed RTTY telemetry. Trackers from all over the UK as well as France, Holland and Poland received data and uploaded data to the UKHAS website.
The received SSDV images can be seen at http://ssdv.habhub.org/PINKY
The flight path can be seen below
The flight can be seen visualised in Google Earth below and while the 26km altitude was impressive it was around 4km less than I'd planned.
The launch certainly created a great deal of interest at the Hamfest, on the Friday we setup the club tent for South Kesteven ARS with a tracking station and demonstrated the payloads to interested visitors. Stewart (M0SDM) used his Land Rover with a push up mast for a pair of collinear X-50s so we could receive and decode. The mast and the Land Rover generated just as much interest.
![]() |
| Picture by Dave M0TAZ |
Andrew Garratt, MØNRD, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from East Midlands, England. Contact him at [email protected].
SX-2000 HF (to 4m) QRP transceiver and SunSDR-MB1
This was news to me. I have never seen this before although the post on the website below was earlier this summer. It looks like a poor man’s IC7300 and covers the same range but at QRP power levels. It is an Italian transceiver. Personally I prefer the ICOM. I have no idea about price. It looks like a “back shed job” to me.
See http://www.cqdx.ru/ham/qro-qrp/qrp-hf-transceiver-with-touch-screen/ .
On the same website are details of the Sun SDR-MB1 assembled prototype, which is another rig I have never heard about! There is a video of this at https://youtu.be/SIfvVUw0774 . This rig looks more professional and the YouTube link quotes a price of $5500. This was 3 months ago.
Roger Lapthorn, G3XBM, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Cambridge, England.
You’ve Got Questions, We’ve Got Answers
K3NG has performed an important public service by tabulating the answers to the top ten amateur radio questions swirling about the interwebz. This will save thousands of hours for hams searching for this critical information.
Unfortunately, he did not include the questions, so you will have to use your imagination on that. But its not difficult.
73, Bob K0NR
The post You’ve Got Questions, We’ve Got Answers appeared first on The KØNR Radio Site.
Bob Witte, KØNR, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Colorado, USA. Contact him at [email protected].
Amateur Radio Weekly – Issue 79
Chinese Ham sats now active
Six satellites (XW-2A to XW-2F) carry 435/145 MHz U/V linear transponders for SSB/CW communications.
AMSAT UK
Steal this Ham Radio (technology)
If you think hams just use Morse code and voice communications, you are thinking of your grandfather’s ham radio.
Hack A Day
APRS in your pocket
For a lightweight portable station, all you need is a handheld transceiver, a tiny packet TNC, and an Android smartphone.
VE6AB
Reverse engineer wireless traffic lights with SDR
It was very easy to see that this is AFSK1200 alternating between 1200Hz and 2400Hz.
Carriers Everywhere
All about the Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2015
ARRL dedicates single webpage to Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2015 concept and status.
ARRL
Is college football a ham radio killer?
I’m attributing the big dip in sales on Saturday, September 19, to college football.
KB6NU
High altitude balloon travels 6,800km
Our first superpressure HAB to use solar panels for recharging the battery.
Bristol SEDS
Working DL8DJM aeronautical mobile
Aeronautical Mobile contacts are pretty rare and the team in the gazebo fell silent as Johannes DL8DJM/AM told us that he was flying from Edinburgh to South Italy, about 100km from Amsterdam at 43,000ft.
Essex Ham
Fox telemetry decoder software available
Fox-1A is scheduled to be launched on October 8, 2015.
AMSAT UK
Video
Add APRS maps and an IGate to the Yaesu FTM-400DR
This video shows how to add APRS maps to the FTM-400DR using a cheap Windows tablet and the data cable that is included with the radio.
YouTube
New York Air Traffic Control on HF
New York air traffic control on the shortwave bands, which they use for longer distance communications than the VHF comms can handle.
The Radio Hobbyist
Theory of Simplex and Phantom Circuits: Balanced Conditions
US Army training film TF11-2062 (1944)
YouTube
Amateur Radio Weekly is curated by Cale Mooth K4HCK. Sign up free to receive ham radio's most relevant news, projects, technology and events by e-mail each week at http://www.hamweekly.com.
Arduino Morse Tutor – Update
Its quite humbling really. Ive had this blog now for a number of years. I’ve always had a bit of a love/hate relationship with it. I love the concept of sharing my experiences, failures and successes with who ever stumbles across the blog. But mostly only a couple of entries get found and commented on. Namely my MQ26SR antenna posts are the most popular entries on this blog and I get about 1 email a month asking very specific questions.
That all changed this week. With the addition of my latest Arduino project. All of a sudden and quite literally overnight – the traffic to this blog skyrocketed. My inbox was awash of emails asking questions, my twitter feed was stacked with retweets and favorites of this circuit. I seem to have struck a chord with many folks who, like me, were looking for a Morse Tutor, but don’t want to sit in front of a PC all day.
I’ve had some really wonderful feedback. I have been offered Crowd funding, beta testers and asked if I can supply more information. So I hope this entry can help with my plans for my Morse Tutor version 2, So here are some headlines for you all.
- I am making a kit. I have this in hand and a PCB design is on the screen right now.
- This will be launched as soon as I have figured out some minor gremlins.
- There will be added functionality. And some really cool features too – watch this space.
- The Sketch I have created so far is only a fraction of what is on offer. (plus also a lot of fixes have been included in the Version 2 build)
- Below are 2 drawings – 1 Schematic, 1 Breadboard. This will support Version 1.01 of the code.
Version 2 will include an Audio Amp, an SD card and proper switching logic (either a rotary encoder, or latch chip) four new modes of training and all ready as either a pre assembled kit or kit of parts for you to build & box yourself. And trust me on this, it wont be expensive either.
Dan Trudgian, MØTGN, is a regular contributor to AmateurRadio.com and writes from Wiltshire, England. He's a radio nut, IT guru, general good guy and an all round good egg. Contact him him here.


































