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On Fri, 25 Jul 2008, Tio Pedro wrote:
"Michael Black" wrote in message ample.org... On Thu, 24 Jul 2008, Tio Pedro wrote: That's the one that's sort of a clone of the S-38? Michael VE2BVW It is the clone of the HE-10, which looks like the S-38 ![]() I added a voltage regulator, which stopped the oscillator pulling problems when running the IF gain up and down (thirty volt swing!). I did a few other simple mods to get rid of residual hum in the headphones (ground loop on filament grounding and added one more filter stage in the PS.) But this drift has me stumped. I tried a few different osc. circuits, but the design is weird. It is basically a BS Hartley, except on the highest band which requires a feedback loop back to the plate to get it into osc. I suspect it is the nature of the beast. Pete I had a Hallicrafters S-120A, which was transistorized, the only shortwave receiver that I could afford in 1971, and it has to be the worst receiver ever sold. Not just the usual faults of bad dial, bad image rejection and bad stability, but it had the bonus of overloading really badly because they weren't designing good solid state receivers at the time. We lived with them because we couldn't afford anything better. I'd say the experience of having such a bad receiver often included attempts to improve them, even though they started out so bad that it was impossible to do much. The transistorized one, at least when I was 11, was too undecipherable to do anything to. I did really get a handle on SSB, since while the receiver had a BFO, it wasn't strong enough to demodulate SSB. I kept having the feeling that the receiver was overloaded, that's what the SSB sounded like, and I think without prompting (but I can't remember for sure) I got the idea that if I attenuated the incoming signals I could demodulate the SSB. So I took pot scrounged out of something and used it as an attenuator between the antenna and the receiver, and I really could demodulate SSB. The problem was that I had to attenuate the signals so much that only the strongest could be received. Of course, turning down the RF gain was basically what they told you to do to receive SSB on pre-SSB receivers, so either I discovered the idea by myself, or did read about it and put it to use, I can't remember which. I remember looking in the Handbook at the a filter to keep broadcast radio out of the receiver, and pricing the toroids placed the project out of my means. It might not have helped anyway, since the receiver wasn't really shielded, and it seemed to overload from all the broadcast signals, AM, FM and TV, while the filter was only a high pass filter if I remember properly for AM broadcast. I went from that to a Hammarlund SP-600, you can hardly make a bigger jump. Michael VE2BVW |
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