MAPA = Make America Poor Again! A Lame Duck is nothing more than a Left-Over Turkey!
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Money for nothing and the chicks are free.
Friday, February 13, 2026
Yesterday I bought a Yaesu FT710
8 Foot of Fence with Gate $1300
Those prices I quoted for the ICOM and FLEX radios were actual alternate bid prices for the same fence task. It is imperative to get three bids and have a common set of evaluation factors.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Switching Sidebands in a Transmitter.
Most commercial built ham SSB radios made during the 1960' often touted as being cost effective (read cheap), provided coverage of the ham bands with only one choice of sideband. The SWAN 240 gave you LSB on 80 and 40 and USB on 20. The Hallicrafters SR-160 and even the National NCX-3 and NCX-200 had the same deal. Today that is viewed as a shortcoming.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Magnetic Loop Antennas
I know absolutely nothing about Magnetic Loop Antennas! The OT's used to say if you want to make contacts then build a dipole, put it in the clear, up 100 feet in the air and you are there. The thought of a 40 inch in diameter copper loop sitting 2 feet above ground does not sound like a DX antenna, or any kind of antenna.
The best analogy I thought of for those using a loop: Taking your cousin to the prom and convincing yourself... she is a YL; but in truth is sort of unattractive, not a 44DD and your cousin.
Monday, February 9, 2026
The Regen Receiver
Predating the Direct Conversion Receiver was the "Regen" (Regenerative). Invented by E H Armstrong in 1912, it was a staple of ham shacks from then up to even today. Hams have described the "Regen" as evil, possessed by the Devil, a cause for alcoholism, diabetes, loss of hair, insanity, jock itch, infidelity, divorce and even pes planus.
Of course, in typical QST fashion you have to have the article to find out how to build L1. This is all part of the evil aura surrounding Regens. I will try to find the info on L1. The follow-on text suggests a film can is the base for L1. You know like 35mm film cans --- that was before smart phones.
Now you know, direct from the author. He seems to be telling us that it took him a long time to arrive at this configuration and hopefully did not endure pes planus in the process.
Sunday, February 8, 2026
Multus Proficio MKII, A QRP SDR Transceiver
Meet the Multus Proficio, a 5-Watt QRP SDR Transceiver from the USA.
I did two tours of duty in St Louis totaling 11 years and it was all about the job. I was paid well and it was a good place to raise kids, but it had an unmistakable terrible mindset. That mindset was the basis of my saying St. Louis is a great place to retire from not to! In between tours was a job assignment in Mesa Arizona where the same saying applies.
Saturday, February 7, 2026
BC-348 Receiver
A ham friend who also grew up in Western PA shared his recent BC-348 video with me. He too dabbles in Boat Anchors... he has had more pass through his shack than me. I am in awe. He also reads the blog.
But three pieces of information for other blog readers and the 1st is the power supply. Many WWII vintage radios on eBay lack power supplies as the source of power especially those used in airplanes was a dynamotor.
For those with a question mark on their face, a dynamotor was a small motor generator set running usually off of 24VDC that supplied all the operating voltages. Read noisy.
The small ARC-5 receivers had a space on the back where the dynamotor attached. Often the filament string (transistors weren't invented as yet) was series/paralleled to operate from 24VDC.
The BC-348 had an internal space to install the dynamotor. The 1st important point the video shows how a $30 switching power supply from BOZOS can power the BC-348 and fits in the space where the dynamotor would attach. This power supply could be used for many other WWII surplus receivers.
The second point is the radio itself as it was as much electronic as mechanical assemblies (to switch bands). Keep in mind these radios were designed in the late 1930'w... No Internet, No Computers, No Nano VNA's and no Transistors or IC's. I marveled that the VFO had set points for various bands. In other words, you can calibrate the VFO at 5 MHz WWV and then a separate set point for 10MHz WWV.
The third point and that is radio tuned from 1.5 to 18.5 MHz, operated AM and CW and no band spread. Dial markings could be as much as a 100KHz apart. It struck me that the BC348 could be the principal receiver on a B-17 traveling across the Pacific and was the sole piece of long-distance communication receiving equipment. Good Luck!
Them that know, now don't care if you know.
Here is what Mr. Carlson did with a BC-348.
73's
Pete N6QW
Money for nothing and the chicks are free.
Those iconic words are from the British group Dire Straits. We have free info available to us from the blog stats and data from you tube. S...
-
Cruise through the lower part of the ham bands bands and what do you hear? Well, FT-8 and CW. Often you will not hear any SSB stations yet g...
-
What a great day to Binge on Chocolate and experience the pain of that filling that has been leaking. I would be in that category with the ...
-
Shown below is the Block Diagram for the 20M PNP SSB Transceiver steered in the Transmit Mode . The components shown in the dotted block ar...










