A Tri-Band "Hot Water" SSB Transceiver Back in the day when hams were more than appliance operators and delved into the circuitry of many of the radio models, they always were looking for an opportunity to upgrade their radios. Heathkit struck gold when they produced the Mono band SSB radios. The individual kits cost about $100. Often hams would want additional bands and thus Heathkit sold more product. But enter the ham entrepreneurs who found ways to modify a Heathkit mono band unit to add more bands. I do know there were commercial kits sold to do this on a limited run basis. The above photo shows a tri-band Hot Water. This is an eBay listing, and I am uncertain if this is one of the modifications kits or the radio was modified similar to the kit. I see the potential of ripping out the VFO and installing a ESP32 and Si5351. Maybe even the JF3HZB circular dial. Lots of possible improvements/modifications using the low-cost technology sold at Bozos. (BoJack + Bezos). The F...
When I first heard the term Ugly Weekender, I thought of the young ham guy who went out partying Friday night and through an unfortunate incident of beer goggling* awakes the next morning to see a YL like this next to him. That had the makings of a true Ugly Weekender. *Beer Goggling C'mon guys it's somebody's Grandma! We are not covering that kind of weekender but one that highlights that seminal W7ZOI project involving a CW transceiver. The Ugly Weekender was mentioned in yesterday's blog and the link has a you tube video. Ugly Weekender There is an elegance to the W7ZOI design in that it is a Direct Conversion Receiver with a tunable analog LO and that LO serves as the frequency source for the Transmitter. For those ashamed of being an Amateur Extra and don't own a soldering iron or have never built anything, this is a project for you. The reason I suggest that is that you can build the receiver first and listen to how good a DCR can sound and then you can add t...