Yet another amazing creation as found in the storage boxes. N6QW Operating his homebrew CW rig circa 2026. (I bet our 45-minute Extra Class YL couldn't build this rig) More QRP Radios from N6QW The small size of this radio was achieved through the use of MMIC SMD devices and a bit of circuit steering. The typical 9 MHz filter and the IRF510 final topology. The Black and White OLED keeps the size of the display to a minimum. The smart phone camera is fast enough to pick up the refresh of the display. To the naked eye the display does not flicker nor show missing information. There was no sign of the dreaded OLED noise in the receiver. BTW the CW transmitter in the N6QW shack photo (dimly lit garage) actually looks like this. This is a 2 tube CW transmitter with a 6AG7 Crystal Oscillator followed by a 6L6GT Final. With about 450VDC on the Plate of the 6L6GT, I see over 20 watts to the antenna on 40M. The output is a Pi Network using an Iron Powered Core (T-68-2) for the tank circui...
A VEC in Idaho, contacted me following yesterday's posting and it seems a YL there passed the Tech, General and Extra, all in the span of 45 minutes. So that sounds like the record. Hopefully today she is the Chief Designer at a US Manufacturer of SDR Ham Gear. Congratulations for the accomplishment. More radios I found stashed away and our feature for today has an interesting pedigree and history. About 10 years ago myself and KK6FUT, now AI6YR, created a multipart project and several articles for QRP Quarterly. The project was called LBS... Let's Build Something. The project started as a 40M DCR and evolved into a complete 40M SSB transceiver. Subsequently I built a stand-alone version for 20M that extensively used SMD components. This last element of the project involved a very complex engineering solution... read on! This design was hailed as a DifX... something different than a Bitx and advanced features like a 10 second 988Hz Pulsed Tone for tune up and small size for p...