Posts Tagged ‘ssb’
Mizuho QRP SSB rigs
I don’t think this company still exists.
At one time you could buy Mizuho single band SSB handhelds for many bands up to 2m including many HF bands. I owned the 2m 200mW pep version (MX2) and managed to work some decent SSB DX with mine mostly with a 1/2wave whip on the rig. The main issue was the poor battery life, so I tended to use an external 9.6V battery.
My rig was used in the main with a homebrew 2m-10m transverter and I worked all over the world on 10m with just the tiny Mizuho rig on the desk.
If I remember right I covered the CW and main SSB parts of 10m by having a couple of crystals in the transverter. Somewhere I still have the transverter, although it has not been used for years.
VK3YE homebrew 7MHz SSB transceiver
Steve G1KQH (font, or is it fount (?) of all knowledge) sent me this link of the homebrew 7MHz SSB transceiver by VK3YE:
New Homebrew 7MHz QRP rig from VK3YE
HF Mobile, A Different Kind of Radio Shack
Going Mobile, Rag Chews, Nets, CW, its all available and very doable when you are on the road!
Mobile HF radio adds yet another dimension to Ham Radio. This is my second go, at HF Mobile operation.
Years ago, when ‘real life’ happened to me, I had no home QTH to operate from so I bought a new (at that time) Icom 706 M II G radio. It was a great choice. A DC to daylight rig, and its still working 15 years later. This next episode of HF mobile is greatly improved over my previous one. A good antenna at the time, was made by High Sierra. It was a screwdriver type. (the original mobile antenna’s were nick named ‘screwdriver’ because they used an electric screwdriver for moving the coil)
High Sierra no longer makes mobile antennas, but the good news is there is a good company making them in Arizona, Scorpion antennas!
The Scorpion antenna is a heavyweight, at 18 pounds and it needs a very robust base to hold it. Breedlove Mounts
Its the Rolls Royce of Mobile screwdriver type antennas, and not just because I bought one, it is indeed, a very rugged and carefully crafted antenna.
I’m primarily a CW op so I incorporated a touch sensitive paddle to do CW on the move or sitting still in a local park like this one at Hagen’s Cove, on the Gulf of Mexico in the ‘big bend area of Florida!’
A motorized coil is moved up or down electrically! Listening for the greatest noise, depending on the band of choice, puts me in the ball park for checking the SWR. A 1:1 ratio is easily obtainable if care is taken during installation. Bonding straps are a must. All the parts of the truck body, door, tailgate, hood, fenders and truck bed, must be bonded together to from a good RF ground. Not a DC ground, mind you, but an RF ground plane. (The ‘other half’ of the antenna’)
Bonding is one of the things that separates a good installation from a poor one. I had fun with the first truck and radio set up back in 2001 but I learned a lot about mobile HF radio since then and did things differently this time.
Location, location, location! It sells real estate and its very important for HF Mobile Antennas!
What makes a good location on a vehicle?
I’ve seen many examples of HF radio antenna installations that work, but some work much better than others. Besides bonding, another good trick for a good installation is to use a very good location; the main mass of metal must be Directly under, not near, the base of the antenna. Will a bumper mounted antenna work? Yes, but one with a mass of metal directly beneath the antenna will work better.
Its simply a case of, more bang for the buck!
The Scorpion antenna movable coil still has the protective bubble wrap on it in this picture.
Clearance is important!
The bottom of the coil must have clearance from metal objects like the side wall of the truck.
Detailed installation instructions come with the scorpion antenna. This is very important. A good installation will insure good operation. Skimping on installation will only hurt you in the long run.
I installed an auxiliary battery in the back set compartment of the truck. Its a sealed lead acid 75 Ah battery made by Optima. I bought it trough Apex Battery.
Optima Blue Top from Apex Battery co.
I can use either the auxiliary battery or the truck battery or both at the same time, thanks to a marine dual battery manual switch.
See its picture below.
I used #4 wire to connect the truck battery in parallel with the auxiliary battery in the back seat area. This large gauge wire greatly reduces voltage drop between the batteries. For extended stays in one place, I can operate on the auxiliary battery, without running the engine. This insures that the separated truck battery will start the truck when I’m done operating.
I have not yet mounted this switch on a back board, but that is coming. I need both hands to operate the switch now and I want to be able to do it with only one hand!
The business half of the IC 7100 is mounted to the floor of the truck on the hump. The battery box can be seen with a power pole connection box on top.
The control box for the IC 7100 rides up front on the center console as does the touch sensitive paddle. The microphone hands on the cup holder.
I have a Warren Gregoire headset for SSB. It features a noise cancelling microphone. Warren Gregoire Headset (no relation to me)
(Special note here; its illegal to have both ears covered with a headset in Florida while you drive.)
Its a stupid law because you can legally drive in Florida even if you are stone deaf! So that kills the reasoning for ‘listening to sirens’ on emergency vehicles!
Okay, that rant is done! Back to the Mobile installation.
AA1IK, Using Warren Gregoire Headset 2
Join me on a new Yahoo Group for HF Mobile ops.
New HF Mobile Yahoo Group
Here I am using the Warren Gregoire headset. This headset has a noise cancelling mic so its a good fit for mobile HF radio. SSB is a new thing for me. I’ve been a CW op, for most of my ham life. I’m having a great time meeting new folks all around Florida on 40 Meter SSB. Ham radio has lots to offer and I’m glad I have not yet exhausted all the possibilities. I have not forsaken CW, but SSB is a fun mode, as I’m sure many of you already know.
The IC 7100 is a two part radio. You saw the ‘business end’ in a previous photo. This photo shows the control head and the touch sensitive paddles Touch Sensitive Paddles They are held in place with a bungee cord. The black plate that you see here is a small plastic clipboard with the clip removed. It is glued in place to the light brown plate, and that is also a clipboard with the clip removed. Both clipboards are held in place with bungee cords. This allows me to remove the control head and the paddles for security reasons.
The remote switch for moving the antenna up and down to tune in each band is show in the little cubby hole. The SWR/PWR meter is stuffed into a hole where the ‘never has been used-ashtray’ was. The speaker is mounted just above the cup holder.
This photo shows the remote switch. It is hand held, and easily put away after the antenna is tuned.
So! That is pretty much the end of a walk through in my new mobile ham radio shack. So far, I’ve listened to CW on the road but have not called CQ or talked to anyone while driving. I became interested in CW Mobile early in my ham radio career.
The first requirement for operating CW Mobile, according to an article that I read on the subject, said to ‘become a dynamite CW operator! Its been almost 25 years since then and I’m still working on that first requirement.
I’ll keep trying!
De AA1IK
Ernest Gregoire
CQ World Wide WPX SSB – QRP Style
Nick KE0ATH Spinnin’ the dial! |
It has been way to long since I have posted here on the blog, and really I have done very little operating!
This past weekend was the CQ World Wide WPX SSB contest. My son Nick, KE0ATH has been trying off and on to make some contacts on 10 meters since he is a Tech. I thought this contest would be great for him, so we carved out about 45 minutes on Sunday to get on the air.
Tuning around 10 meters we heard some stations calling CQ without many takers, it was late in the contest. Some of the stations we worked had like 3,000 contacts, and were handing out #001! 🙂
We ended up working exclusively into South America. Nick would give them a call, and when he was successful I would give them a call. Great fun!
We have the KX3 set at 12 watts into my 66″ dipole fed with ladder line. Tunes up great.
If you look at the picture of the rig, you can see the stand that Nick 3D printed for me to hold the KX3. He designed it in Autodesk Inventor and printed it – it also has my call sign inlayed into it in the lower right hand corner. It works perfectly!
We worked everyone that we called as well.
We worked just 6 stations, but it was fun. Here is who we worked:
PY3KN Brazil
NR6O California USA
PJ2T Cuaraco
CE3CT Chile
HK3C Columbia
8P5A Barbados
It was great fun, and Nick had a blast working his first HF contacts! Plus I picked up several new DXCC entities for myself!
CQ World Wide WPX SSB – QRP Style
Nick KE0ATH Spinnin’ the dial! |
It has been way to long since I have posted here on the blog, and really I have done very little operating!
This past weekend was the CQ World Wide WPX SSB contest. My son Nick, KE0ATH has been trying off and on to make some contacts on 10 meters since he is a Tech. I thought this contest would be great for him, so we carved out about 45 minutes on Sunday to get on the air.
Tuning around 10 meters we heard some stations calling CQ without many takers, it was late in the contest. Some of the stations we worked had like 3,000 contacts, and were handing out #001! 🙂
We ended up working exclusively into South America. Nick would give them a call, and when he was successful I would give them a call. Great fun!
We have the KX3 set at 12 watts into my 66″ dipole fed with ladder line. Tunes up great.
If you look at the picture of the rig, you can see the stand that Nick 3D printed for me to hold the KX3. He designed it in Autodesk Inventor and printed it – it also has my call sign inlayed into it in the lower right hand corner. It works perfectly!
We worked everyone that we called as well.
We worked just 6 stations, but it was fun. Here is who we worked:
PY3KN Brazil
NR6O California USA
PJ2T Cuaraco
CE3CT Chile
HK3C Columbia
8P5A Barbados
It was great fun, and Nick had a blast working his first HF contacts! Plus I picked up several new DXCC entities for myself!
SSB and AM on CB legal from June 27th in UK
The excellent Southgate News page reports that SSB and AM is now legal on UK CB from June 27th 2014.
I have only briefly operated on CB many years ago and was very disappointed. I suppose 12W pep of SSB will greatly increase the DX potential on CB. AM is also legal.
We need to watch out for more reports of TVI and hi-fi breakthrough as FM, especially at 4W legal limit, is rarely a problem whereas SSB and AM make such issues more probable. Of course, some CBers like to use (illegal) add-on amplifiers making matters worse.
I don’t think this move will encourage me onto CB any time soon, but it may result in lower cost 10m rigs.
UPDATE 2015z: Nevada are now selling the President Lincoln 2 (3rd improved version of this model) covering 10m only (as sold – but expandable illegally to cover CB bands) with a £10 discount.
10 Meter Sparodic E?
Way back in my Novice days during the late 1980’s I used to have a ton of fun working 10 meters SSB during the summer evenings with sporadic E band openings.
With a new TECH in the family, I thought this would be a good way to get him excited about HF and upgrading to General.
I have not even listened to 10 meters in the evenings.
Have there been any of these openings this summer? I will start looking and let you know when I find them!