No, i did not go to bed, i built (with happiness) a converter for 475
kHz until 4 AM local time! This is not an appliance operator syndrome
:-)
Now we're all playing our role again, isn't that fine?! :-) Like in the
good old days ;-)
73, Stefan
Am 12.10.2012 20:03, schrieb mal hamilton:
Yes Stefan
You go to bed and leave a machine churning
out Beacon callsign es Locator. That is not amateur radio but Appliance
Operator black box syndrome.
You do not need to be a Radio Amateur for
such operations just a plug and play Robot
I suppose this approach avoids perfecting a
Receiver that works, just rely on the Internet for some sort of
response.
de G3KEV
-----
Original Message -----
Sent:
Friday, October 12, 2012 4:03 PM
Subject:
LF: WSPR on the 630m band
MF!
Last night i built a transmit converter which allows me to transmit WSPR
on 630m now.
Yes yes yes yes yes Mal, CW is preferred! But many OMs go to bed quite
early i find. Not so their PCs, they run over night, and so my
transmitter will do this weekend if all goes right. :-) I'm not present
in the shack anyway, so no chance for CW...
I'm using normal WSPR, not the slow versions.
Right now the first tests are running and i check if the system becomes
to warm.
The design of this mixer is quite chaotic but i like it :-) It is a
modular system...: First, a tone of 14700 Hz is generated by the WSPR
program. Is is decoupled from anything by an audio isolating
transformer. This signal is applied to a SA612 mixer. The LO (461 kHz)
in this test setup comes fom my DDS VFO which is used in the first VLF
experiments. The output looks very well as expected on the scope.
Filtering of mixing products is done in my MF meachanical filter which
is use in front of the receiver normally! I've published the nearly
perfect filter curve some weeks ago. Of course the sine wave coming out
from the filter looks very well! This sine wave is applied to an OP AMP
which is switched as a comparator. I've added a small hysteresis (10
MOhm / 47k) to prevent an oscillating output when there is no input
signal. Works well! The output of the OP AMP is fed to a ICL7667 (FET
driver) which makes a low impedant output. In series with 1 Ohm and 1
uF this rectanfgular waveform is applied to a small ferrite toroid with
a trifilar winding. So this output is again galvanically decoupled from
the circuit and provides an opposite phase rectangular signal at 475.7
kHz.
Since my PA was/is designed to have a 4f input (1900 kHz -> 475 kHz
out) i had to make a tap behind the divider, so i have to take care to
maintain the 50 % duty cycle in the new circuit. The new external drive
signal from the converter is applied by a simple headphone jack/plug! I
actually found a 3.5mm stereo-jack with dimensions 10mm x 5mm and also
found a few holes to add this on the board. So the PA is now able to
run as before and additionally with this new converter......
The AF signal levels and the LO signal level is critical. Choosing
wrong values will change the 50% duty cycle which will quickly kill the
FETs in this PA design. So i'm using an old modified PC power supply
that will shut down quickly if the current exceeds a certain limit...
After writing this email the PA became hand warm so it looks all fine.
I will go down to 50% TX duty cycle now and even receive during the
breaks in WSPR. However the MF filter is now used for the TX so the RX
performance may be slightly lowered...
Reports about my transmissions on 475.700 kHz are very welcomed.
I'm also receiving and uploading to the WSPR database...
Maybe i will run the test until monday :-)
Best 73, Stefan/DK7FC
PS: https://dl.dropbox.com/u/19882028/MF/stuff.JPG
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