Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Looking thru a friend's Feb 2009 QST, saw an article on the W6TC "HBR"
double conversion homebrew radio. Which my father may have built a copy of. I no longer have that radio, but looking at the pictures of teh sets in the QST article, it looks very similar to what my father built. I do remember that he used a 1.8MHz crystal for what might have been the 1st IF to 2nd IF conversion mixer. I also remember, in the mid 60's (I was in grammar school) getting this crystal for my father as an Xmas gift (well, I gave him money that he used to order the crystal, I would not have been old enough to know how to mail order stuff myself yet). Anyway, did the HBR use a crystal of a frequency like this as a conversion local osc mixer? Or maybe the crystal wasn't in an oscillator circuit, but maybe as a bandpass filter? |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Homebrew Double conversion tube receiver Not HBR | Homebrew | |||
Direct Conversion Receiver with NPN transistors | Homebrew | |||
Direct conversion + DSP receiver for S-measurements? | Homebrew | |||
double double (bi)quad - feed impedance? | Antenna | |||
Least expensive, Small, Digital, double reduction receiver | Shortwave |