MIKROWAVE1
MIKROWAVE1
  • Видео 318
  • Просмотров 3 305 569
Code Practice Oscillator - Part 2
Let's see what we have now that it is in the case. I want to try some old and newer transistors. Finally we clean up the tone by converting it to a true Hartley Oscillator.
Просмотров: 1 343

Видео

Simple Code Practice Oscillator Project
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.21 час назад
Here is a one transistor weekend project that will help you master the code. It looks like a Hartley. It Smells Like Hartley. It has a Center Tapped Transformer like a Hartley. But its not.
D Day Communications - Part 2
Просмотров 4,3 тыс.День назад
In this second video I cover the 1942 Radio Tests carried out by the Signal Corps. pitting British and American sets against each other in a wooded and hilly continental environment. The Trans-Channel wideband communication link is installed. Will it be operational for D-Day? Advanced German wideband relay equipment is discovered in Sicily.
D-DAY COMMUNICATIONS - Part 1
Просмотров 5 тыс.14 дней назад
Learn about the wideband radio links setup to allow high reliability cross-channel teletype, facsimile and voice circuits. Telephony RF carrier and repeater and wideband FM Data equipment is covered, along with conventional radio gear.
Museum Ships On The Air!
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.21 день назад
I hope you were able to participate in the Museum Ships on the Air event last weekend! All kinds of vessels and ship memorial stations participated in this yearly extravaganza.
ARC5 GO-GO Modulator
Просмотров 2 тыс.Месяц назад
My old 75M AM/CW ARC-5 Mobile station setup drew some interest, and I wanted to explain the Solid State Modulator. I get around the safety issue of putting HV on a backwards 6.3V Filament transformer by using the Modified Heising system.
28V Military Power Supply
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.Месяц назад
Let's take a Junk Power Supply Foundation and make a 24-28V 10-15 A Linear Power Supply for under the bench.
Mystery CB Radio - Part 2
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.Месяц назад
Now that we know that it is real, can the home made CB from 1960 come back to life? Did Heathkit lift this Idea from Don Stoner's Article to create the famous Lunchbox series in 1961? Oh I love Supperregens!
Mystery Radio Revealed!
Просмотров 6 тыс.Месяц назад
What is this strange Homebrew Radio Device that I found at Nearfest 2 weeks ago?
ART-13 Mod Tranny Change
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.Месяц назад
The Collins ART-13 Transmitter is a classic WWII Aircraft Set that Amateurs have used for over 70 years. Mine is a main station transmitter. But I lost the modulation transformer last week! No AM!
Steampunk Regen - Part 6 Final
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.2 месяца назад
Steampunk Regen - Part 6 Final
Steampunk Regen Wiring - Part 5
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.2 месяца назад
Steampunk Regen Wiring - Part 5
Regen Broadcast Plug In Coil Questions
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.2 месяца назад
Regen Broadcast Plug In Coil Questions
Steampunk Regen - Part 4
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.2 месяца назад
Steampunk Regen - Part 4
Regen Secrets!
Просмотров 5 тыс.2 месяца назад
Regen Secrets!
The #1 SSB Operator
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.2 месяца назад
The #1 SSB Operator
DSB on the Mountain
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.3 месяца назад
DSB on the Mountain
Steampunk Regen - Part 3 - Bring Up
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.3 месяца назад
Steampunk Regen - Part 3 - Bring Up
Steampunk 1930's Ham Radio Regen! Part 2
Просмотров 3 тыс.3 месяца назад
Steampunk 1930's Ham Radio Regen! Part 2
Novice 10 M DSB Transceiver - Part 6 Integration
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.3 месяца назад
Novice 10 M DSB Transceiver - Part 6 Integration
Novice 10 DSB XCVR - Part 5 Receiver
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.4 месяца назад
Novice 10 DSB XCVR - Part 5 Receiver
Novice 10 DSB XCVR - Part 4 Transmitter
Просмотров 2 тыс.4 месяца назад
Novice 10 DSB XCVR - Part 4 Transmitter
Novice 10 DSB Transceiver - Part 3 PA
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.4 месяца назад
Novice 10 DSB Transceiver - Part 3 PA
Double Sideband Novice 10 - Part 2
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.4 месяца назад
Double Sideband Novice 10 - Part 2
NOVICE 10 DSB XCVR - PART 1
Просмотров 4 тыс.4 месяца назад
NOVICE 10 DSB XCVR - PART 1
Your First 1929 Transmitter - Part 4
Просмотров 3,9 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Your First 1929 Transmitter - Part 4
Your First 1929 Style Transmitter - Part 3
Просмотров 10 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Your First 1929 Style Transmitter - Part 3
Your First 1929 Style Transmitter - Part 2
Просмотров 4,1 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Your First 1929 Style Transmitter - Part 2
What's New for 24?
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.5 месяцев назад
What's New for 24?
Your First 1929 Style Transmitter!
Просмотров 5 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Your First 1929 Style Transmitter!

Комментарии

  • @cheesedoodlefeeder
    @cheesedoodlefeeder 11 часов назад

    It's nice to have a bit of chirp going on, it gives it a bit of character that a pure sine wave just can't even come close to. Maybe less regulation in the power supply would be worth a try.

  • @cornbread-KO5RN
    @cornbread-KO5RN 13 часов назад

    FOR WHAT YOUR DOING ON THIS VIDEO IS WHY I LIKE THE AMATEUR RADIO HOBBY, NOW I AM PASSING THE KNOWLEDGE AND HOBBY TO MY SON , it’s another link in life . Thanks for your time to teach you are a true AMATEUR RADIO OPERATOR 👋👍

  • @bigguyprepper
    @bigguyprepper 15 часов назад

    When you show the schematic for the Hartley "conversion", you drew it in green, are you also meaning to use that green line to put the whole value of the potentiometer from the ckt to ground?

  • @radioguy19510
    @radioguy19510 17 часов назад

    I have been watching your videos (and Mr. Carlson's Lab) for years now and I am always anxious to see the next one. Kind of like waiting for the next issue of 73 magazine! Thanks!

  • @michaelmiller641
    @michaelmiller641 19 часов назад

    Great video! Thanks!

  • @ampwerx.canada
    @ampwerx.canada 21 час назад

    Thanks Mike. Great video with lots of theory. When I was 7 or 8 my parents bought me the Transistor Radio & Broadcast System you show in the outro. Remco brand. That set probably more than anything else got me hooked on electronics.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 16 часов назад

      Remco! Ha I had the Crystal Radio kit they made.

  • @AdamosDad
    @AdamosDad 22 часа назад

    Thanks Mike. 73's🎙KD9OAM🎧📻📡 🚧

  • @W1RMD
    @W1RMD 23 часа назад

    Great video! Thanks for making this interesting and entertaining. I enjoyed seeing the 1960-70's pictures.

  • @cindys1819
    @cindys1819 23 часа назад

    Well, if you're covering the greatest receivers of that time, the "Big 3" of the 50's and early 60's were the R-390/392, The National HRO-50/60 and the Hammerlund Super Pro 600. Nothing ever came close. and...there WERE repairable surplus examples for (somewhat) affordable prices....I'm glad you mentioned the HRO 500 and Hammerlund 180. I had both and with the right antenna top sides they were Suprr World Class.....I had the TMC's sort of a mil spec off brand which had a sort of cult around it. A lot of guys endlessly modified their receivers for at times far better performance. It was a wonderful time of learning experiences......

  • @JCWise-sf9ww
    @JCWise-sf9ww День назад

    When I was some where around 9-12 years, I seen this same "Transistor Radio & Broadcast System Kit". I remember it look identical to the Radio Shack 60-2276, pictured at end of this pt2 video, but it was in a Wards Airline catalog. I want one, but my parents didn't have the money.

  • @snarfusmaximus
    @snarfusmaximus День назад

    This is great! Do you plan on doing a valve version?

  • @RetroOnSpeedDial
    @RetroOnSpeedDial День назад

    Man I would kill for a good 70's transceiver. I wish more radios stopped using LCD's and actually went back to basics.

  • @K1OIK
    @K1OIK День назад

    Why did you name the capacitor after you? (one mike). Instead of a transistor why not use a 4CX5000 tube?? It would be louder. Instead of a J-38 key you could have used an old house key?

  • @Chiavaccio
    @Chiavaccio День назад

    Awesome!!!👏👏👏👏

  • @thrillscience
    @thrillscience 2 дня назад

    Why 60 kHz? I get that it's well over 3x the highest audio frequency we're likely to see, but most other PWM transmitters I've seen use frequencies like 175 kHz for the sawtooth....my guess was to make it eaiser to filter out any noise from it on the output (you mentioned earlier if you don't filter it out you get spurious sidebands...)

  • @thrillscience
    @thrillscience 2 дня назад

    Thanks! I just came across this. I want to build a low-power transmitter for the AM broadcast band to provide "content" for my collection of AM radios, and I think one of these PDM/PWM designs based on the TL494 would be perfect.

  • @karlschwab6437
    @karlschwab6437 2 дня назад

    To complicated! The one that I built years ago was extremely simple, used a single 555 IC, and was featured in the first few pages of an ARRL handbook, maybe about 1969. It featured volume and tone controls and required a single 9-volt battery. All of the components used would still be available today for purchase. Just wished I had that schematic.

  • @najroe
    @najroe 2 дня назад

    my favourite crystal radio is a shortwave set, back in the 1980s I got loads of Soviet propaganda on it, Thankfully not much of that now.

  • @zeothorn
    @zeothorn 3 дня назад

    My first radio was much simple, you just need a radio antenna a germanium diode EFD 108,a speaker(2000 ohm impedance) from a old phone with carousel dial, a ground connection and you can listen AM local radio station no battery needed.

  • @adzbasslines268
    @adzbasslines268 3 дня назад

    Hi Mike, on the subject of simple projects, I'm building a whole bunch of Paraset portable 12v PSU's. A little birdy says you might need one?

  • @DAVIDGREGORYKERR
    @DAVIDGREGORYKERR 3 дня назад

    what about using two SSB modulators and a limiter you know you use one SSB as the modulator driving a limiter then back into the second SSB modulator operating as a demodulator should sort any muck and get some clean modulation.

  • @neutralobservation9418
    @neutralobservation9418 4 дня назад

    "Enjoy your day, and let nobody steal your joy.". Sage Advise.

  • @neutralobservation9418
    @neutralobservation9418 4 дня назад

    If this is a kit, I will buy one.

  • @AdamosDad
    @AdamosDad 4 дня назад

    I built a single transistor code practice oscillator in 1969 while in Vietnam working on a Novice license. I got to 5 wpm, but gave up when sent to another command, thanks for this one Mike. 73's🎙KD9OAM🎧📻

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 4 дня назад

      I got an old Eico CPO from an upgraded novice when I was a kid. It was almost identical to this circuit!

  • @MIKROWAVE1
    @MIKROWAVE1 5 дней назад

    Charlie W.

  • @leiferickson3183
    @leiferickson3183 5 дней назад

    Super cool video!

    • @K1OIK
      @K1OIK 4 дня назад

      why?

  • @K1OIK
    @K1OIK 5 дней назад

    , Who invented Morse code?

  • @MirlitronOne
    @MirlitronOne 5 дней назад

    Viewer suggestion: go to all those rallies and buy all the old TRANSISTOR circuit books you can find. ICs come and go. Most transistor circuits, even 60 years old, can still be made to work without much effort.

  • @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE
    @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE 5 дней назад

    This was fascinating and so well explained. Thanks Mike. Have you ever used the later Si 4732 and Si47xx series of chips?

  • @MirlitronOne
    @MirlitronOne 5 дней назад

    "But Mike! Where do we buy the kit of parts?"

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 4 дня назад

      Radio Shack? Lafayette? B&A? Waters and Stanton?

  • @johnwest7993
    @johnwest7993 5 дней назад

    Unfortunately, I have a bad habit of looking at all the old transistor radios I find and instead of snatching useful parts from them I think, "I bet I can fix this thing. It's probably just a bad connector or a shorted cap. And even if it's a transistor, I have bins full of them. Sure the tuning cap would be good in a QRP antenna tuner, but this cool old radio is already all here and just needs to be fixed. Besides, I already have a QRP antenna tuner, 2 of them in fact. A little super glue will fix this case just fine and I can stick in a little step-up inverter module, shield it with aluminum foil since this is an AM radio, add a few filter caps and an inductor to quiet it down, and a lithium battery pack to drive it all instead of those 4 old C cells. Probably run for days, especially if I put a small solar panel on top. And I think I have a longer-throw speaker this size somewhere, too. This thing could sound great by the time I'm done with it! And I could listen to it when I'm working out in the shed instead of listening to the 4 channel 400 Watt SONY Dolby system I have in there already."

  • @user-eg3yv3xr7s
    @user-eg3yv3xr7s 5 дней назад

    Could you gives us some close ups of those cool old books you showed briefly in the intro ?

  • @W1RMD
    @W1RMD 5 дней назад

    Robert Moog would be proud! So happens that I went though my junk box the other day and found a metal can germanium transistor with a whopping hfe of 42! I've heard that germanium (not geranium) components are heat sensitive to soldering the leads too close. I enjoy ALL of your projects, even when they're way too complicated for me. As it stands, I need to build your noise antenna because I haven't been on the air much since April when we had a power outage and the neighbor's house 500 ft down the road switch mode power supply decided to be an incredible S9 noise maker after we had a power surge when the power came back after we had 30 inches of snow around Easter. Terrible TOROIDS are in my future, but I have found some pretty cheap. Thanks for all you do! You always have excellent content well put together on this channel. 73-W1RMD.

  • @drbachler
    @drbachler 5 дней назад

    I really don't condone scrapping an old relic of the past like that. Repair that old transistor radio and get the parts somewhere else instead. But that's just me. To each their own I guess. Good video anyway. Thanks and keep up the good work.

    • @m0kov
      @m0kov 5 дней назад

      Repairing Japanese Transistor radios was my first unpaid job. My father often used to take me along on a Saturday morning to the service department of a group of retail electrical shops where he was the service manager. Rather than me sitting around idle, he put my keen youthful eyes and soldering skills to use, (I must have been about 12) soldering back the thin wires of the long and medium wave coils on in-guarantee tranny radios. Unpaid? Maybe I got paid in solder. 73 Steve M0KOV

    • @m0kov
      @m0kov 5 дней назад

      Repairing Japanese Transistor radios was my first unpaid job. My father often used to take me along on a Saturday morning to the service department of a group of retail electrical shops where he was the service manager. Rather than me sitting around idle, he put my keen youthful eyes and soldering skills to use, (I must have been about 12) soldering back the thin wires of the long and medium wave coils on in-guarantee radios. Unpaid? Maybe I got paid in solder. 73 Steve M0KOV

    • @jack-sv3lb
      @jack-sv3lb 5 дней назад

      The millions of awful old japanese plastic pocket radios are worthless. It's not like he's scrapping an Atwater Kent

    • @gretalaube91
      @gretalaube91 5 дней назад

      I remember having a big box full of crappy AM radios when I was a kid. I would pull out the ferrite antenna and speaker. I once made a speaker "wall" out of transistor radio speakers. It sounded surprisingly good! 73's W3IHM

  • @davidcampbell6527
    @davidcampbell6527 5 дней назад

    Right then. That's my girlfriends evening planned out then.

  • @YEMinThant-gv1my
    @YEMinThant-gv1my 6 дней назад

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @MrSabram07
    @MrSabram07 8 дней назад

    This is a good video. Keep them coming

  • @danaseidl6359
    @danaseidl6359 8 дней назад

    This was an absolutely wonderful presentation and answered questions about D-Day communications that I didn't even know I had. My Dad went ashore on D-Day plus three and I'm sure that this equipment kept him and other GIs so much safer in their advance on Normandy.

  • @bussi7859
    @bussi7859 9 дней назад

    I did this kind of crap 60 years ago, what’s the point of do this today? Get a life.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 8 дней назад

      Some of the guys want to try something again that did not quite work when they were jonny novices. Others are curious about how grandpa did it. And I already had a life and have left a trail actually, so its for the kids.

  • @JCWise-sf9ww
    @JCWise-sf9ww 10 дней назад

    Thank you for the history. So FM radio played a big part in WWII.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 8 дней назад

      FM had a cheerleader that engineers around the world trusted - Armstrong.

    • @JCWise-sf9ww
      @JCWise-sf9ww 7 дней назад

      @@MIKROWAVE1You are absolutely right, Major Edwin Howard Armstrong, without his inventions where would Radio receivers be today, TRF sets, God forbid!

  • @thomasvandevelde8157
    @thomasvandevelde8157 10 дней назад

    The Jones 1936 Radio Handbook has a RFC-decoupled Headset and B+ line. I'll get you the page-number if you"re interested;

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 8 дней назад

      The technique does block RF so it adds to the decoupling possibly improving the RF bypassing (throttle capacitor) thus possibly helping stabilize the feedback.

  • @SteveSorgatz
    @SteveSorgatz 10 дней назад

    Thanks I literally haven't fooled around with radio for 60+ years (high school class of 1961). I built a crystal set and a one tube super-regenerative

    • @SteveSorgatz
      @SteveSorgatz 10 дней назад

      receiver from kits. Owned a 1930's Hallicrafters S20R shortwave set. This takes me back. Since I can't find the old radios, I'll just make a new crystal set. Thanks .

  • @timsmith428
    @timsmith428 11 дней назад

    I had a Viking2 that had an ART13 modulation transformer in it...

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 8 дней назад

      You do find them in strange places, and they work at embarrassingly high power levels!

  • @StuartM0TTQAmateurRadio
    @StuartM0TTQAmateurRadio 11 дней назад

    Brilliant again Mike, thank you. I have often been up St Catherine's HIll but only once to do radio. I never reaslied it was such an important site in the context of D-day. Ventnor is the more famous location on the south coast of the Isle of Wight because of the Chain Home station there.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 8 дней назад

      I wonder if anyone knows where the British and US siting were on the beaches? Caen took a while, so it could not have been that far initially,

  • @ajfogertyfan8245
    @ajfogertyfan8245 11 дней назад

    Excellent presentation Mike! Very well scripted and produced. Great writing and verbal presentation skills are rare amongst engineers, believe me I suffered through many awful ones both as a listener and a reviewer/commenter during their preparation. These DDay videos are A+++! Chris AJ1G Stonington CT

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 8 дней назад

      Not saying never, but I was seldom employed as a real pure engineer type like you are talking about. I was more customer facing and applications oriented, so it was sink or swim beyond design - setting to work and training customers on what we designed and supplied. Not that they were not nervous! They even sent me to Dale Carnegie!

  • @K1OIK
    @K1OIK 11 дней назад

    The Nazis used FM (foreign modulation) we used AM (American modulation). Why no use of satellites?

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 10 дней назад

      Technically Hungary was a satellite.

  • @mackfisher4487
    @mackfisher4487 11 дней назад

    Well scripted excellent presentation (Can you confirm) I remember reading an article stating that the British cut the German to American submersible cable at the start of the war. I also read that a transatlantic cable was brought ashore in France after the D-Day landing for wireline telegraphy (teletype) with the states

  • @Tom-W7TMD
    @Tom-W7TMD 11 дней назад

    Great Job! Thanks for the great info!

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 8 дней назад

      Thanks for watching. I think I have enough information for a third video on what conventional coms systems landed D Day and the first few days after.

  • @cuban9splat
    @cuban9splat 11 дней назад

    Excellent video and very good information. One question... Ft Monmouth, PA? In 1967, I attended a US Army Electronics school in Ft Monmouth, NJ. Thank you for sharing this with us. 73 de K7RMJ.

    • @MIKROWAVE1
      @MIKROWAVE1 10 дней назад

      Yes Ft. Monmouth in NJ. The testing was done there and in the mountains west in PA.

  • @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE
    @acestudioscouk-Ace-G0ACE 11 дней назад

    I loved this follow up to part 1. Thanks for taking the time to make these videos.