The era of homebrewing a rig is very much on the decline if not almost gone. Perhaps less than 1% of US hams ever build anything. (That set is about 7700 hams and possibly much less than that as 1% of the US Hams with HF privileges is half that number or about 3800.) N6QW's 40M DCR ~ MC1496 Based The availability of ham radio products literally overnight is staggering. If it is not something advertised on eBay, then Jeff Bezos has it. Typically, the pricing is pretty fair and thus no need to whip up something in the lab. You can buy it and have it in hand faster than you can make it. [My daughter had an accident a week ago where she broke a rib and was in the hospital for two days. She is OK now, at home and will be joining us for Christmas. We all know about hospital food -- so she got Door Dash to deliver her food in the hospital -- all she took with her to the hospital was her iPhone and a Credit Card. Same thing with ham gear and electronic parts.] Then there is the pervasive ...
Friends and colleagues, Bill, N2CQR and Dean, KK4DAS, developed a Direct Conversion Receiver project that was featured in "hackaday" and the subject of a local High School STEM type project. Actress Terry Moore (now 96) Read about her in Wikipedia If you have listened to or watched on You Tube the SolderSmoke Podcasts #254 and #255 then you know this has been the subject of a challenge to another podcast group and to the ham community in general. Dean, KK4DAS in January is sponsoring a 4-week Zoom Buildathon to construct the DCR. W7ZOI Original DCR Circa 1968 The N2CQR/KK4DAS DCR designs builds upon the FOAM concept championed by Farhan, VU2ESE. FOAM is an acronym for the four parts of the DCR: Filter, Oscillator, Amplifier and Mixer. See if you can spot the FOAM pieces in the W7ZOI design? Because Bill and Dean know stuff, if you follow along, you will be able to do stuff. But I opine that just building the DCR while it adds to your knowledge base and provides a deep sense o...