View Single Post
  #9   Report Post  
Old August 25th 07, 04:51 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.homebrew
Straydog Straydog is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2006
Posts: 76
Default My vacuum tube homebrew transmitter



On Fri, 24 Aug 2007, George McLeod wrote:

It is great to know that I am not the last dinosaur left on the planet.


Jeeze, what is it, you and me against the world? ;-)

Although my call goes back to the 1950's when I was very active with all
home brew equipment, there has been a period of inactivity with family and
other hobby interests (such as aviation) and I have kept amateur radio as my
real retirement activity.


Yeah, I go to the local QCWA monthly lunches and what does everyone talk
about? Not ham radio (but everyone has a ricebox), but their medical
problems. Lots of them.

With commercially manufactured equipment now mandated here for foundation
licence applicants my greatest fear is that we will lose our greatest
priviledge of being able to design and build our own transmitting equipment.


That is really sad. So, along with Microsoft as ultimate software
robber-barron, we all become slaves to "commercial" interests.

My first SSB transmitter was, of course, all valve. It started at 483Khz
with a phasing system followed by two half lattice crystal filter sections.
Output started as a 6146 and then grew to 4x811A's in parallel. One of the
real problems was getting the VFO really stable and the best I came up with
used the worm drive capacitor out of one of those TU6 tuning boxes with the
tuned circuits connected remotely via coax lines to the oscillator stage
which was on the main chassis.


Soon I will approach this problem. I may end up with a bank of crystals
with a small variable capacitor to "warp" the crystal frequency. Free
running oscillators are very hard to stabilize. The other option is to
just leave them turned on, 24/7, so they are always warmed up.

All a long time ago but I still believe that such experiments were a good
way to learn and am also of the opinion that the newcomers who simply
purchase a commercial rig are missing out on a lot of the basic fun that we
had when a piece of junk disposals equipment could be transformed into
something useful.


I agree 100%. I grew up in the 1950s and we had Popular Science, Popular
Mechanics, and Mechanics Illustrated magazines. All kinds of
do-it-yourself projects, diagrams, how-tos, everything. I loved it.

Today, its all "appliance operator" stuff in a throw away economy. It
makes no sense to me.

Good luck to you Art, hope you continue to enjoy the hobby


Thanks for all the good words.

One more thing: "Long live dinosaurs!"

W4PON
===== no change to below, included for reference and context =====
George
"Straydog" wrote in message
.com...

FYI, FWIW...

As I recently became retired my interests have evolved towards building
homebrew tube gear. Reasons: i) simplicity in circuitry, ii) comparatively
large tubes & sockets make soldering easier, iii) accidental slip of the
test prod might not kill a tube but might a transistor, iv) yeah, I like

to
see those filaments glow, too, v) can still get those tubes but some
transistors you can't find anywhere, v) throw-away technology (boards) is
bad ecology...give me discrete devices any day, and vi) with high power

heat
sinks, silicon compound for conduction of heat (if it gets on your
fingers, its hard to get it off) is needed and that damned metal can
getdamned hot.

I've been building a tube SSB transmitter for about 1-2 years now (parts

of
it can be seen at http://www.panix.com/~asd) and ends up with a pair of

813s
in grounded-grid, driven by a single 811a in G-G, lots of home brew

antenna
tuners, and Icom 707 for the moment SSB transciever.

The homebrew SSB exciter lineup is not yet pictured, but at its current
stage of construction is almost ready to go on the air. Generate DSB at 2
mHz with 6AL5 balanced modulator, upconvert by mixing with 7 mHz to 9 mHz
(6BE6), use McCoy 9 mHz crystal filter (somebody gave it to me 25 years
ago) to shave off the desired sideband, mix (6SA7) with 5 mHz local
oscilator (by doubled 2.5 mHz from old war surplus Collins 70H3 VFO [from
Fair Radio Sales when they had them, they ran out years ago]) to get 4 mHz
(75 meters, my favorite ragchew band) which the scope shows to be about

5-10
mv, and goes into two 6C4s (triodes, grounded cathode) and then into
a 6AG7 & 6146. I am at the point where I need to make a RF transformer
to take the output of the 6146 to drive two more 6146s in parallel to get
the ten watts I need to drive the G-G 811a. Yes, if I could optimize
everything better, I could use less tubes. But, I preferred to make
modules (lots of stages are built inside of old computer power supply
cabinets (they are about 6x6x4 or so, and nice to work with, cheap at
hamfests at $1 each or so). All the gear is full of those old D'arsonval
"Frankenstein"-type (real) meters (not this LED crap), so I can keep
monitoring practically all the voltages on anything. Its not very pretty

to
look at, but its a whole lot easier to work on than any of that new gear

out
that surely has thousands of transistors and hundreds of chips (?).

I chose the 813s and 811 and GG amps because both the 813 and 811 don't
really need cooling fans (I hate blower/fan noises) and grounded-grid amps
are notoriously stable (no neutralization headaches), and they are pretty
cheap. I have several 813s, some made in China; one of the Chinese 813s

had
a filament that opened up on me all by itself after very little use (don't
know if that is THEIR quality control or just a statistical fluke, but I
thought I'd pass that along to y'all). I also manage filament warmup and
cooldown on the 813s with a variac (up and down over abut 5-10 seconds),

but
not on the 811 amp. Been using the 813s + 811 for over a year (using the
Icom 707 as driver) and just love how nice and quiet it is without
fans/blower noise.

Almost all of my old rigs are also pictured on that URL, and a couple of
pictures of my "secret lab" out in the garage (heated with a space heater

in
the winter, cooled with a small airconditioner in the summer).

I started as a novice in 1959. Had a Knight kit T-50 and Knight R-100
receiver, later got a DX-40. Mostly liked to ragchew with locals on ten
meters AM at the time. Lots of find memories. Lots of SWLing.

I'd like to hear from other homebrewers, HFers, ragchewers and learn if

ther
are any 75 meter nets for homebrewers/tubers/etc. I look at all this new
gear coming out (for thousands of dollars) with hundreds of buttons,

knobs,
and "thangs" on them, and big thick manuals you have to read to figure out
how to push the buttons (once, press twice, press and hold?, press and

hold
one, then turn on the power switch? Etc? Secret "reboot" buttons hidden
somewhere. Built in DRM, DCMA, spyware? Too?). What happened to
old-fashioned skill? 50 years ago guys worked the world with a crystal and

a
single 6L6 and straight key. Now, they are all couch potatoes in front of

a
black box that looks like its from outer space. ;-)

I figure I'm within a week or two of getting the homebrew SSB exciter
actually on the air. I've been testing the outputs of various stages

either
using the Icom 707 as general coverage receiver, one or two oscilloscopes

to
check generated signals, etc. Still have a lot of tweaking to do. Its been

a
ton of work, debugging and rebuilding when something doesn't work, but its
also been an incomparable sense of accomplishment, too, when I get a stage
to work and make progress (four steps forward, three steps backwards). Its
also nice to have some test equipment (generators, meters, a good
oscilloscope [had a Tektronix 922 that gave up and I tossed, then a

heathkit
which had a dead vertical amp that I fixed, and a BK-1420? very nice but

now
the horizontal sweep died but vertical amp still good, so I can probe at
least for RF which gives me a vertical line [keeping the test equipment
going is also a problem], and all of that stuff is also 30+ years old).

After that, I plan to build a tube receiver and maybe even build a crystal
lattice filter, and try to build a stable VFO.

Art, W4PON
Member, QCWA
~99.9% of my time with soldering iron & screwdriver, 0.1% of my time in
ragchewing.