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Ken Scharf wrote in message ...
N2EY wrote: Ken Scharf wrote in message ... I have several ARC-5 rx three gang variable caps, these have a real nice vernier drive on them. Just attach a larger dial, or a drive pulley for a slide rule dial and you have something as nice as the Eddystone. Yep! Note, however, that except for the 6-9.1 MHz version they have plate shapes that won't yield a linear dial on the ham bands. The 6-9.1 MHz version is almost pure straight line capacitance, and is only 62 pf per section or so. I would think you want a 'stright line frequency' where the capacitance changes as the square of the rotation. IE: at half open position the capacitance is down to 1/4 of the value available at full mesh. That only works with a tuning range of about 2:1. The type of ham band rx being described has a much more limited tuning range, and needs an almost-linear capacitance curve to get a linear dial. For the ultimate, though, use the capacitor from an ARC-5 tx, BC-221 or LM freq meter. Nice gear drives and an even bigger dial than the rx versions. Only one section though, but good for "unit oscillator" construction of the HFO. (Only needs to cover the range 5.2-5.7 MHz) I have a few of those ARC-5 tx caps in my junk box, and at least one with the dial drive. It binds just a bit though as if the drive shaft is slightly bent. Just enough to be noticed while turning it with a good sized knob attached. Somebody hammered on the shaft to get the knob off, or it was dropped. Ruined unless you machine a new shaft. *sigh* With such a design, it would be a good idea to use a Pullen mixer and no RF stage in the 80/40 bandimage section (at least). There's also the problem of secondary images - you need a lot of selectivity in the front end and 1.7 MHz IF section to avoid signals 170 kHz from the desired one seeping into the second IF. The 2B used a 455 kHz first-fixed-IF for this reason. IM performance is compromised by the fact that the selectivity is so far from the antenna. With a good 'roofing' filter ahead of the final mixer you should be able to knock down the images from the 1.7mhz if before reaching the 85khz one. Exactly! I have three 1.7mhz double tuned cans available, with all three in series top coupled with gimick caps I should be able to achieve enough selectivity to avoid secondary image problems. The use of a 455khz IF is also a good idea, and I have a few Collins mech. filters that could be used there as well (a 2.0khz bw out of an R390, a 2.7khz that looks like an S line filter, and a large unit of 1.8khz bw that came out of an if adaptor for an HRO-50 or 60). NICE! With proper layout and shielding I don't see a problem using the 6AR11 in the two stage IF. Hell, they were designed for use at 47mhz in a dual stage TV if where cross coupling would be even more of a problem! Not really. The TV applications were broadband and low gain compared to what you're trying to do at HF. And the manufacturers could do a whole bunch of not-obvious tricks and PC board prototypes to get what they wanted. The 6AR11 is an excellent semi-remote cutoff amplifier with good overload and cross mod specs equal to the pentodes used in the HBR. I agree 100% - it's just that cascading them at 85 kHz may prove troublesome. OTOH, in a 455 kHz design where the selectivity comes from the xtal filters, you may be OK. Some alternatives to consider: 1) Get some xtals in the 1700 kHz range and build a filter or filters so that the 85 kHz IF is not needed. Perhaps a variable-bandwidth filter using a multigang variable capacitor could made, using 4 crystals and a three-gang capacitor. This approach solves the secondary image problem, too. 2) Have a single tuning range of 3.5 - 4.1 MHz and the fixed IF at 455 kHz or thereabouts. Would require dual conversion on 40 but would also allow use of standard 455 kHz IF filters. Or make your own from FT-241A crystals (which is what I did way back when). 3) Use the filters and heterodyne xtals from a junked transceiver as the basis of a homebrew rx. Hangar-queen/basket case HW-100s, -101s, and SB-line units show up on ePay and at 'fests for quite low prices - far below what the filters and xtals would cost separately. Other types of transceiver can also be good parts sources (Tempo One comes to mind - nice VFO mechanism in them, and the IF is 9 MHz IIRC). KJ4KV turned an early-version FT-101 into a pretty interesting receiver this way. As for a new design with todays parts, well I have several ideas here begging to be tried. I have quite a few 'Samples' from Analog Devices including many DDS chips. The 400mhz DDS parts would make a great HFO for a single conversion receiver with an IF at 9mhz (again more junkbox filters, including about 1/2 dozen 9mhz 3.2khz 8 pole units out of Gonset Sidewinder rigs purchased at Dayton years ago). The big question with DDS is the spectral purity of the output. Even weak artifacts can cause all kinds of birdies and other troubles in today's RF environment. This is one reason so many folks find the old designs so appealing - they are "clean" except for the obvious things like images. Thought I'd use three IF stages with a filter between EACH stage and a final one before the detector. Very good idea. The best filter goes first, then "cleanup" filters. Probably use MC1350's or ancient CA3028's as the IF amps. The front end would use a quad DFET (Siliconix) switching mixer that was in the handbook for several years driven at twice the required HFO frequency (to get push-pull drive using a D Flipflop). Bowing to the junkbox, the front end would be a double or triple tuned filter using toriods bandswitched using a standard coil tuner chassis as the switch. (The toriods fit nicely in the tuner strips). An 8051 series micro drives the DDS, frequency display on 7 segment LEDs (I have enough of these to choke an alligator) and a rotary encoder drives the micro to select frequency. And the LEDs glow! Maybe I'm crazy, but I still wonder about puting in a second conversion down to 85khz to use those ARC5 IF cans! Anything wrong with a hybrid radio using the latest IC's and microprocessors along with 60's compactrons! (Just what kind of bandwidth will a properly aligned 85khz if strip using arc5 cans give?) The original design gave a decent SSB passband if the rods were pulled up. But the shape factor isn't the best and the selectivity winds up so far from the antenna.... The above radio would probably end up being a transceiver (cause the extra circuity isn't much) but the finals would end up being 1 or 2 1625 bottles 'cause I have at least a dozen of 'em in the junk box. Great bottles but the sockets are a pain. Unless you hack up an ARC-5 tx. The biggest headache I've encountered in transceiver design is finding a heterodyne combination that works in both directions and uses available components. All of the classic ones are compromises in one way or another, either on rx or tx. 73 de Jim, N2EY |