73 Magazine 03 March 1961 PDF
73 Magazine 03 March 1961 PDF
73 Magazine 03 March 1961 PDF
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7/
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on your
desk top ...
or on wheels
While G-76 is properly called a transceiver becauseof some common audio circuitry, transmitter
and receiver are separately tunable. Receiver can be set to out·of·band OX, transmitter VFO
anywhere within theband. Transmitter VFO is intended to be spotted on receiver dial. Frequency
control may be either by VFO or quartz crystal. (Except on 6 meters which is crystal controlled
only.) Transmitter and receiver oscillators are both compensated so that drift with temperature
is negligible. Oscillator circuit has very low drift even with exceptionally wide excursions in
both plate and filament supply voltages.
HIGHLIGHTS: Transmitter power input 100 watts AM , 120 watt s CW • pi network OUlp'ut for 52 ohms· Dual
conversion reeerser • BfO for CW/SSB recept ion· Automatic noise limiter· Sensit ivity: appror. 1 microvolt
at 50 ohms for 6 db S+N/N ratio· Select ivit)': J to 3.5 kc bandwidth at 6 db down, 14 kcs or less at
&0 db down.
AMATEURS-
Complete data on I n te rna t ion al's all
transistor su bassem b lies; 6 and 2
meter transmitting and receiving gear;
crysta l controlled converters for 75 ,
-lO , 20, 15 and 10 m eters.
CITIZEN L1CENSEES-
In ternat ion al tran sceive rs , accessories
and an tennas for dependable 2-Way
rad io comm unication. See I n te r n a-
tional's k it for constr ucting y ou r own
Citizens transceiv er.
EXPERIMENTERS -
Printed circuit oscillators, RF con-
ver ters, IF units. audio u n its. tran-
sisto r s u basse m b lies, c rys ta ls an d
crystal ovens.
Here is the sixth issue of 73. We're still age each other . . . and perhaps the)' wanted
around, still bringing you good articles and to hear what someone's vo ice sou nded like
lots of 'em .. . plus eig-ht more pages, t ha nks to without the phasing r ig between t hem.
the adverti ser s. Our original policies a re sti ll T his ca utiou s gathering of avant-g a rde
fairly intact. 'Ve're st ill not mad at anybody. amateurs ha s now grown to a full fledged ham-
Disgusted maybe, but not mad. we've been fe st, complete with di splays by manufacturers
bringing you the promised technical and con- and a huge banquet at the Statler-Hilton. Send
st r uction articles and, if the mail is to be $10 for your ticket to the 10th Annual SSE
believed, a lot of fellows have sta r ted building Din ne r to the SSBARA, c /o Mike Le Vine
home-brew gear a s a result. W A2 B L H, 33 Allen Road , Rockville Centre,
L. I. , N. Y . 10 u.m . March 21st at the Statle r -
Your C autious Editor H ilt on , with dinner at 7 :30. Naturally 7:1 will
have a booth.
Unfortunately for my piece of mind I am
mi s- or iII-informed on many subjects other
Phoenix, May 26-29
than ham radio. Thi s manifests itself, a s
with most would-be writers, in an ambition to The Southwestern Division AHRL Conven-
write on these subj ects. In an attempt to tion is g-irding itself for a rea l whingdi ng a f-
keep from lo using u p th is otherwise ( possi bly) fa ir over t he long Memor-ial Day weekend. Th is
interesting- pamphlet with s uch drivel a s shou ld he one of the best Conventions in the
mig-ht erupt when I attempt to over-compen- western U. S. thi s year, so how about all you
sa te for a well developed inferiority complex, Southern Californians bu zzing on over for a
but st ill to provide a limited outlet for the-e real western holiday. It may be a bit of a
psychic di sturbances, I will channel my cre- damper, but I'll be there wearing' my western
ative (?) energies to the office Ditto machine. outfit. To make up for thi s we will al so have
The point is thi s: if anyone is in te r ested on display our entire subsc r ipt ion department
or morbid ly cu riam; enough to take t he tim e (see Decembe r cover.') This isn't enough? \ Ve'll
and send a stamped self addressed envelope also have on display our western representa-
then I'll st uff som e of my stuff and return it. tive J im Mort-issett 'V A6EXU, formerly A s-
Look what you get for 4c! All sorts of non- sis t a n t Editor of CQ and foreign correspondent
rad io (u sually) chatter on subj ects you'd on "Frozen Jim" trip to Antarctica.
rath er not read about and are su r e to violently There will, fo rt un a t ely , be a lot more inter-
di sagree with, st uff which I'd be out of my esting things than a vacationing' 73 sta ff to
mi nd to publish in 73. Consolat ion : only one look at . Like they will have prizes: a Viking
Ride of the pa per will be used so you can teal' K ilowatt & Ra ngel' , un SS B station, a tower,
the pages up and use the back for notes. a V II I" tru nclever, a nd scads of (Ither goodies.
Be s u re to bring' at least a s ta t ion wag-on so
RTTY Dinner, Ma rch 20th you can cart all that st uff home afterwards.
Regi stration is $8 ¥.!: per. Send for info or
The Sixth Annual RTTY Dinn er and Gen- sen d dough to George Mezey K7NIY, P .O. Box
eral Conflab will be held Monday even ing 814, Sun City, Arizona. Thi s includes regi stra-
March 20th at the \ Vhite Turkey T own House, tion, the big banquet, and a bre a k f uat .
260 Mad ison Avenue (at 39th Street) in New
York. T he gathering commences at 5 pm, Swampscott
dinner at 7. Formalities will he interesting and
brief. Reservations are extremely important Being' only in the throws of preliminary
thi s time : send $6 .00 to El ston Swanson, c/o organization and planning- of 73 magazine la st
Instruments for Industr-y, 101 X ew South year- at the time of the now hi storic Swamp-
Road, H icksville , L. I., N. Y. Please make •VOUI' scott Convention, I unfortunately mi ssed out
reservation a s soon a s possible. on it. That is a blunder that I don't intend to
d up lica te thi s year. Po ssibly, for some reason
of your own, you a lso mi ssed th is event last
New York Sid eband Dinner year . . . if so it would seem prudent for you
Ten years ago a sma ll group of amateurs to correct this er-ror, if you are within driving
held a clandestine meeting during the heighth di stance.
of the I. R.E. show. The way was hard for the There s ure mu st have been a vacuum on
Sideband pioneers and they needed to encour- the ham band s in the first di strict la st year
Kit
HIGH·LEVEL UNIVERSAL
~
- Kit $25.95 Wired $39.95
MOOULATOR-DRIVER # 730
Kit $49.95 Wired $79.95
Delivers SOW unc tstcrted audio.
Modulates transmitters having
-
- RF SIGNAL GENERATOR # 324
(150kc·435mcj
Kit $26.95 Wired $39.95
TV·FM SWEEP GENERATOR
RF inputs up t o 100W. Unique • &. MARK ER # 368
over-mecu tancn indicat or . Cove r Kit $69.95 Wired $119.95
t-s $4.50.
_ .. GRID OIP METER # 710
If I'r--
-.~ I
• I fl Q'
' ."
. '. " . c: -
Kit $29.95 Wi red $49.95
Includes complet e set of coi ls
f or full band cove rage. ccntrnu-
DYNAMIC CONDUCTANCE TUBE
&. TRANSISTOR TESTER # 666
Kit $69.95 Wi red $109.95
~!Jr-- ous coverage 400 kc to 250 mc. TUBE TESTER # 625
• sao ua meter. Kit $34.95 Wired $49.95
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•
• with loud est WI on the ba nd. T his is a n even ing
he'll never fo r get.
T he ot her asoo are havi ng a n even ing t hey 'll
never forget too. Decide now wh ich it will be
the for you : the Convent ion or lot s of DX all t o
yourself. \Vr ite Radio Convention, 15 Mac-
Arthur Blvd ., Da nver s, Ma ss., for reg istra-
LETTERS
Tower Deur- Wayne :
The Mi cI'oWIl Vlo" Society o f Lo n g Hench hal! j u ~t been
fo rmed lin d club meetjn~l! u r o he ld o n the s ec o n d wed n ea,
da y of e a c h mon t h a t t he ll a Yllho r e P u blic Libra ry, 2 n.1
S t reet a nd HlIysho r e A ve n ue, Lena Bea ch a t 8 p.rn. We
Ra i!<l' and lower YO II T an ten na in minutes , but ha ve pla ns for constru ct ion p rojects thllt you m igh t be
leav e the 100\('f lip. The Hy-T rack makes it a ble t o u se in 13 , Can you put th is in 73 !
Ralph St ~in"tr.. K6GKX
si mp le In malt' adjus tment - o n your bea ms ,
1(-'",1 I1I"W a n tennas, UT prot ec t yOUT arrays from
Dear S ir :
wind da mage. KT\' are available ill a
In Wt-'T " I s a w one iss ue a nd I thin k yo u h uve somet h in R' t her-e.
"a ri d)" of !'o iZt'" 10 ma lt.. h t h ~ helgh t a nd load whut we need ilt mo r e tec h nicn l a nd conat r-uct.io n ))r. d-
you have i ll mi nd. cots and I f'll !! lid ,.. WE' cnn eot n il the cn taloea we wan t
f o r nothtna . W.' ,!on't han' to s u bse r ibe t o them . H i. Hi.
I • . , 1."0 l\In.'lter!4t'.l n W3 1XO
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••
1 I I is rclrcslii"[1 t o find such Ilait'{fe at this latr d at e, I
'I'otldl" hO'7(' [ast L cD 'I'D/lid "'lSh in lIis sllb.rc,ipt;OIl to 7J
il hc had to se-nd in $10 a )I,'ar! Tllis is 11,hat it u'(Iuld haN'
to cost 'l"ithOlIt the ads. It costs lIS orrr SOt per copy to
trOdlle€, ; 1I €' "'r1'/a::i"r at its /,1('se"t sicc t .\'0, Leo .•• j'OI/
look eare/lllly at lire ads and Ihank coch one lor their co-
O/,I'ru tion in bnllpi'l[l .\'OU I1ris mayu::in(' , • , 1('it1l01lt them
it ,"mlld br imrossible to pllbli,dl an)' hom maga::i'les.
•
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Advertising Rates
Th ere are proba bly hundreds of likely
\lI'e hope ca n see in the photo how the
)'O U adver t is ing prospects t hat we haven't
array a nd the rota tor hoth go li p and down the cont acted. S ince ou r ra tes a re s o ridicu-
l i y-T ra ck un rail s. Wllf'n you cra nk it 10 th e lously low it might just be clever to un-
top it lucks in place. It automa tica lly unlocks veil what rem a in ing s h ro uds of secrecy
there are a bou t t hem. They 'll be going
when you want 10 low er it agai n. No te how
up shor tly a n yway. Note that our 1" ads
Hn le gr ound ar ea is needed . are only $12 on a 12X basi s,. mak ing it a
fine deal for s ma ller compan ies t ha t wa nt
If' hal )' 0 /1 do next : Send for nrices, S/If'('S, etc. to keep their na me alive.
1 page $120 I< pa ge $40 ( 4 ")
" 'rit e to :
% page 70 % page 25 ( 2")
i. P a ge $ 15 (I " )
KTV Towers Frequency di scoun t : 6X- lO % ; 12X-
20% . Closing date: 5th of the previou s
TOWERS , P. O. Box 294, Sullivan. III. mon th.
6 • 13 MAGAZINE
MARCH 1961
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~ DRAKE ;~A ~
ill~ Discrim inat ing sidebanders have accla imed th e performance of t he Drake 2·A
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•
RECEIVER ~
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yet its low price and simp licity of opera tion make it an ideal receiver for novices•
who have t he assurance th at it wi ll contin ue t o serve thei r needs, whethe r CWo
• $2&9·!~""
~ ~ AM or SS B, when t hey gra duate to general class or highe r. For detailed free
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brochure, wri te t o R. L. Drake Company, Miami sburg, Ohio.
ANNOUNCES
THE NEW
2 0 0 'V"
BROAD-BAND
Exci ter-T rQ n sm itte r
•
How To Read
What the PhD Writes
H andy Translator f or Scholarly P ublications
\ 1
' T HAT w ith t he r a pid advances being made Jim Kyle. KSJKX/6
" by the commercial boys these days, not
to mention the research carried on by govern-
ment-sponsored laboratories, the ham who E ng li sh is one of t he fine points of the prepa-
wa nt s to keep ahead of t he game almost has ra tion of 73.
to read sever a l of the "Scholarly Publications " But , s ince many of u s like to keep even
devoted to electron ics at t he design-e ngineer - fart her a h ead of th e ga me than is p ossible
in g' leve l. wi thi n t he cove rs of j ust one magaz inc-even
H owever, the se people h a ve a la nguage a ll so chock-f'ull-o'ccon tent a p ub licati on as t hi s
t heir ow n-or at least t hat's the w ay it seems - we' r e about to open our top-secret file and
to the ty ro bravi ng' t he t hin air of the high- p r ovid e you a Gu idebook to t he H igh-Level
level resea rc h report for the fir st time. T rans- Repor t. \V it h it, you can at least fi nd out w hat
lating thi s language into ordinary ham-style the engineer mea nt to sa y. Rea dy ? H er e goes:
Grid D ip Meter,
Trans istorized,
Improved
e S
~<Y'Co>--<._i",,'·---<oo""":o---J I{J -IOK s u b m i n ia t ure pot, P h i !m o r ", :: P C5 1 .
Cu bin("t - LM B ::TF77t'. 2% x 2 1~ x 5 .
SIA + - SIB ~lll . 11 ~. " 0· 1 Mil. D C
•
Coil Ch art
H and t·r~u t'n (")· ( rod Turn s
a ble to use a two color ribbon su ch a s a r ed I 2.1 - 4 . :~ 63
and black. Thi s will help to sepa rate the sca les. 2 . ... . . . ... ... • 4.:J- 8.6 .. • • • • .. . • .. .. 2 4
:J . . ..... .... • .. 8.6· 17.2 ()
The fini shed calibration will then look like .1 •. . • ...•.. . . .. 17.0·31 .4 . . . . . . . ... . . • • 4
that in F igu r e D. Cu t a sh eet of good quality All cofls excep t ::01 close wound on %" form
~ Amphenol 24·5H ) .
paper the sa me w idth a s the rim of t he knob
and long e nough to go a round t he r im wi th : 01 " pa ced diameter of wi re.
.;:-2 1:> D. C. C. u sed for n il coils .
about a half in ch overl a p . A ttach one end of
th e st ri p to t he knob by mean s of Scotch tape.
\Vrap the st r ip a round the knob and hold it
in place with a r ubber band. Ca l ibr a t ion is
most easil y accom plished by listening to the
oscillato r on a continuou s coverage r eceiver. SHORT ITEM
As ea ch point is f ound, mark the paper with
a light pen cil mark. Pencil in lightly the fre-
H is a cir cu it whi ch may be of ge ner a l
ERt}
interest. It has been bu ilt into sever a l rigs
q uency for each pa rk t o avoi d conf usion . After here a nd has been pr oven qui te satisf actory.
a ll cali br ation point s have been f ound, trans-
It s th eor y of operat ion is qui te sim ple. In
fe r the pape r to the t y pewriter and t ype in
sta n d by positi on t he zero bias triode sees block-
t he fi gures. The lines m a y be inked in with
ing bias across the 5K portion of t he bleed er,
Ind ia ink or a ball p oin t pen. Era se t he pencil
the cathode seeing the positive end of the fi K
marks with a soft erase r and re-attach the pa-
r esistor through th e 20K resi stor. I n transm it
per to t he r im of th e dial usi ng a piece of Scotch
posi tion t he g ri d is g rounded by t he VOX relay
tape. Wi nd t he sca le arou nd the dial just as
result ing in a sim ple grou nde d gri d circuit.
before except t his time anchor the free end of
t he sca le with tape. Con t inue wi ndi ng the t ape
completely a rou nd the sca le being careful to ""
a void wrinkling the tape. The tape will pro-
tect t he scale a gai nst wear an d soili ng. Tune
a r eceiver to one of t he ca lib ration f r eq uen-
cies, inse rt t he appropria t e coil in th e dip per
and set the dial t o a f oresaid calibration fr e-
qu en cy. Lo osen th e set scr ew in t he sha ft
cou pler be tween the var iable condense r and
knob s ha f t. Rota te t he var ia b le conde nser u ntil
the osc ill ator is hea rd in t he rece iver . Tigh ten
t he set screw and the j ob is done.
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O peration 20<
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The vari ous applications of t he dip pe r are ",.."
"--, M'' 'OC
well know n and will not be repea ted here. T he + " "'"
trun aistori zed dipper shou ld not be used a s an
ubsorbt.ion wa vcmeter a s the transi stor will Robert li le K6QG E, WA6LFD
like ly be dama ged due to excess ive rf, I n use, J r. Eng.• J ennings Redic Mfg. C orp.
10 Rules of
Thumb for the
SUPERRECENERATIVE RECEIVER
Hcwerd F. Burgess, W5WGF
180 1 Do rothy Street. N.E.
Alb uq ue rq ue, New Mexico
DRAWING A PARABOLA
W7FGG via W9ALU
V HF men , particu la r ly t hose interested in
bu ildi ng a ntenna s for 1296 me, m ay be int er- C hoose th e mo uth width you wa nt a nd d raw
ested in a simple method of drawi ng a n a ccu- a line (L J. The ce nte r of this line will be the
rate parabolic curve. focal point (fp J. Tie th e end of a string which
rea ch es fro m fp to L to a na il a nd nail it at
When we t ake t he b a sic idea t hat in a fp. Th e o the r e nd ca n be tie d t o a not he r nail
pa r abolic curve with the focal point (f) at the whic h yo u can run a long t he lin e Ip-L By letting
mouth of the parabola, the width is 4f and x the string slide aro und a pencil a t po int A !!I nd
plu s y is al ways 2f, then we can set up a .ee pin g y perpe ndic ular to f p-L your pen cil will
mech an ical method of trac ing t his curve. d ra w a pa rabolic curve .
A A
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L B
N YON E who h a s eve:- attempted even the detect inadvertent wiring mi stakes such a s
A sim plest bit of homebrew construction havi ng the high-volta g e li ne connected to g r id
undoubtedly has Mu r phy's L a w of the I nnat e in stead of to plate on a 4X25 0B.
Perversity of Ina nim a t e Objects-"If any S hake out all th e bi ts of solde r and other
ite m can possibly fail to ope r a te properly, it construction debris after your inspect ion , bu t
will !"--comm itted to memory the hard way. don 't t urn t he g-ea r on yet. Ste p number t wo
On e of the major se Iling point s of f a etor y- is a point-to-po int check, using your ohmmeter.
built a nd kit-styled equ ipment , in fa ct, is that Thi s double-checks your inspection. T est for
all design bu gs ha ve alre ady been elim inated con t inu it y in all fila ment a nd other a pplicable
f rom it. circ uits. Measure r esist an ce f rom t he hig-h -
Despite the bugs, though, t her e 's a certain voltage line to grou nd; this reading should
sat is f a ction in homebrewing that no amount be almost zero initially, increasing rapid ly to
of fa ctory-b uilt gear ca n duplicate. Bes ides, the value of the power-sup ply bleeder resistor .
what else ca n you do if no one is marketing The t hird st ep----S ta y away from that power
the kind of equipment you need? s witch for a few minutes more !- is to di s-
Since every de sign , by Mu r ph y's Law, will connect the high-voltage lea ds t em porarily a nd
contai n a few bugs in u n predictable loca- connect j u mper w ires leadin g outs ide the
t ions, the h a p piest way to solve t he p roblem is chassi s. \Vit h h igh voltage circu its b roken,
to e stablish a procedure for "debugging" ea ch you can now t u r n the equipment on-but be
new proj ect a s painlessly a s possi ble imme- carefu l to keep clear of the expose d high -
<Ha tely upon completion . The p urpose of t hi s volt age lead s.
article is to describe s uch a procedure in a If no sm oke POUl'S forth, and all filaments
f orm which ca n be adapt ed to any need s. light properly, you're doing fine. A t thi s point
For t he purpose of chas in g them down, bug 's you can be rea sona bly certa in tha t you ha ve
can be grouped into two major clas ses : t hose made no w iri ng goofs; you st ill don't know
due to design, and those due to construction about all the ot he r possible bugs.
practices . \Vit h in ea ch of these classes, sub- In the next step, you have a choice . T he
divisi on s may be established . objective is to ope rate the eq ui pment at re-
Des ign bugs freque ntly encountered includ e duced plate and scree n voltages. You can
oscill a t ion, para sitics, ot he r form s of instabili- either connect a heavy-duty r esi stor of the
t y, and overheati ng of components. All of t hese a ppropriate val ue in the exter nal high-volt a ge
may be fo und in t r ans mitter s, receivers, a ud io jumpers, or you can st ea l power from a lower -
eq ui pmen t , and most other el ectron ic gadget s. voltage sup ply in other equipment .
Co nst r uct ion bugs include all of the above, If you stea l power elsewhere , be certa in
a s well a s u nwa nted hum a nd noi se, and spu r i- th at you n ever a p ply vo ltage t o t he screen of
ou s s ig na ls . any t ube u nless plate voltage is app lied a t t he
One of the first ste ps in the d ebugging pro- sa me tim e. Application of sc r een voltage only
cess st a r ts before construction comme nces: a will pe r m a nen tl y dam a ge the t ube, by permit-
ca r ef ul review of the plan ned proj ect to try ting excessi ve scr ee n cu rrent fl ow. You ca n,
to detect any possible de sign trouble a r ea s. however, apply voltage to the plate on ly if
Since this step has been adequately covered you like without damage.
elsewhere, it will not be described fur ther. Th e va lue of red uced voltage t o u se will
For our pu rposes , debugging w ill be consi d- vary wit h the equ ipme nt being tested and
ered a s st a r t ing at the compl etion of const r uc- w ith the availability in your shack of suit-
tion. able r esi stors and /or lower-voltage power
Befor e applying- power to t he equipment, a sou r ces . The best sta r ting point is a pproxi-
detailed in spect ion of the fi nis hed job is in mately 50 percent of opera ting value.
or der . w hi le it's u sually hard to wait before If the equipment und er test is a transmit-
tu rn ing it on, t hi s in spection can freque ntly ter, be sur e to loa d it w ith a d u mm y a ntenna .
save val uable components f r om damage if you Any signals em itted d u r in g the test pr ocedu r e
Top
Loaded
AI Ne wla nd W2 1HW
206 Sou th H ig hwood Aven ue
Whip
G le n Rod. Ne w Je rsey
interest in shor t efficient mobile whips vent unraveling and the wire is then extended
T HE
is ever increasing. If one can conveniently for the balance of the rod using about a 3 turn
make his own ,v·h ip to help cut costs it becomes spir al. If a r od less than 52" long is used then
more interesting. Some added attractiveness it will be neces sary to start with a longer coil.
lies in the fact that the whips can be selected Scrape in sulation from end of wire and fa sten
or cut to the exact length you.. desire. \Vith the secu rely under scr ew head. Attach antenna to
proper length to clear your garage door there car and add a jumper wire from the antenna
will be no need to bend it down . If you do not to the car frame as shown in Fig. 2. It is sug-
bend it down there will be no need for pur- gested that the coax be removed from the an-
chasing a spr ing or tie down clip. The method tenna mount when grid dipping.
of mounting, of course, is quite optional. A With an excess of turns in the coil, a fre-
method of t erminating the fibre-glass rod for quency so mewha t lower than that required for
attachment to a sta nda r d mount is shown in 28 me will be observed. In order to raise the
Fig. I. frequency proceed as follows. Unfasten wire
If a 52" rod is u sed (a s shown) then a close from under scr ew head, r emove turn s from
wound coil 7" long made of No. 22 enameled the lower end of the coil, pull the wire taut,
or Formvar wire is suggested. No pruning of clip off t he excess wire, scrape off t he insula -
the coil is done on the upper end of the whip tion a s before and refasten wire under screw
so a small hole is drilled as shov.... n to anchor head. It will be noted that the d ip fro m t his
the wire prior to winding. A piece of electronic type antenna is qui t e shar p-so tune carefully.
tape is applied over the la st few turns to pre- When the whi p ha s finall y been trimmed to
1----,-----.1
.. -24 ne
('ULL L.£NTlil ADAPTER
TEMPCJRARY TAPE
SEE NOTE 3
h''-----, - -
.. -
I,
- --- ...e
,
l'- _ ,
ANTENNA ASSEMBLY
!!Qill
CD APPLY CEMENT TO 80T H HALVES
18 • 13 MAGAZINE MA RC H 19.1
the desired frequency, it will be necessa ry to
coat it w it h severa l protective layer s of va r-
n ish or lacquer. K r ylon or lacqu er in p r es- WHlJ>
su r ized ca ns is very conven ie nt. After t he fi rst
coat is dr ied t he tape m a y be removed a nd the
additional coats applied. Allow ample drying
t ime between coats.
The use of thi s type whip is not limited to
10 meters but may be used on any fre quency
where a full length is not desirable. A g rou nd
plane or beam ant enn a may be const r ucted SCHE MATIC
amat eu r s in genera l an d many a cti ve- of m anually perforated paper tape. Then, as
R A DIO
ly engaged in the com mu nica t io ns field ci rcuit ti me becomes available , the tapes a re
are appa r entl y n ot awa re t h a t perfect C\V tra n smitted b y a s pecial t a pe read ing d evi ce
cod e tran smiss ion is possi ble w ith s t a nda r d k nown a s a t r ansm itte r di stributor or , a s it
Tel etype tape equipme nt. At the risk of boring is com mo nly know n, a TD. Tape prepar-atio n
the a vid RTT amateur, a bri ef review of basic is a ccomplish ed by a pe rf'crutor which is elec -
Teletype theory will be helpfu l in und er-stand- t ro-mechani cally link ed t o t he T eletype key-
ing th e method used. board or by a reperforator w hich a cce pt s
T he standard Amer ica n T el et ype code con- T e lety pe signals a nd simultaneously pu nches
sists of the presence or absence of a total of and prints the intelligence on the tape.
five code im pulses. T he teletypewriter key- The prepared tape has a total of six rows
board sets up t he combination app ropriate to of pe rfora tions, five of wh ich constitute the
t he key depressed and thi s information is se- fi ve element T elet ype code. The si x th r ow
quen tially r ead out by t he inter na l mechanism engages a s procket in t he t ape hea d a nd is
of the mach ine a nd t r a ns m itted a s a ser ies of used to advance th e tape. T he t ape head h a s
el ectrical impul ses . Add ed t o t he actual code fi ve se nsi ng' pin s, one for each ele ment of t he
are t he star t a nd sto p impulses whi ch are cod e. T hese pin s a r e li nked to a ssociated con-
used t o effect sy nch ron ization between t he tacts w hich close if a ta pe perforation is
sendi ng and r ece ivin g equipments. sensed. Once the code combination is sensed
Act ua l keyboard to page pri nter communi- by the tape head, the distributor sequentially
cation is rarely used for the passing of traffic read s out this information. I n addition, the
fo r several reasons. L ea sed commu nications distributor ad ds a s pa ce impulse at the begin-
channels a r e qu ite expens ive and are usua lly n ing a nd a mar k impulse at t he end of the
obta ined on a sc hedu led or call up ba si s. Since code combina t ion. Th e ta pe is a utom atica lly
few op erators are ca pable of sust a ined, error - a d va nce d one set of ho les and th e di stribu to r
fr ee ope r a tion a t the ma xim um rate of t rans- makes on e read out r evolution at a fi xed rat e
m ission t hat the system a llows, it i s more o f 368 tim es per m in u t e. Th is results in a
econom ical to store the tra ffic in the form no minal rate of transmi ssion of no wo rd s per
minute .
E nou g h for T ele t y pe theory and now a
S~ E~"'--.,..,--- ---<.
TO llMTIl KEY TER~NAI.-S
look at t he construct ion of I n t ern a t ional Mor se
Code . The dot is t he bas ic element of t his code
an d t he dash is t hree ti mes a s long a s th e d ot.
An interva l equ a l t o one d ot se pa rates dot s
and da sh es with in a chara cte r , a n int erval
CONTACTS HOR MALD' OPEN
equu l t o t hree dot s se parates cha racte rs w ith-
WITll \/fljPERFOflATEO TAPE in a word and a n interval equ al to five dot s
IN POSITION
POLAR RELAY separates words .
By ar bit r a r ily selecti ng t he presence o f one
element of the T elet y pe code a s a key closed
condit ion and its absence as a key open con-
r "'.
MARK
- l~-. .
COf(fACT
-....0
J di t ion, it woul d appear pos sibl e to form C W
churncters by pu nch in g a series o f character s
t hat cont a in t hi s element for key closed con-
d iti on and a se r ies of cha racte rs t hat do n ut
73 MAGAZINE • 21
MARC H 19b 1
-
•
A New
All-Bond Antenna
Jir.'l Kyle. KsJKX/6
185 1 Stanford Ave.
Sente SU S~M, Celif.
N all -ba nd anten na which gives perfect yard (or a han dy city park if no back yard is
A perform ance on ever y amateur band availabl e) . Measure off a lin e some 25 to 30
fr om 160 down to 10 is the dream of al- feet long, t hen mark off other lines at right
mo st eve r y ham . Many suc h devices have been a ngles to it every foot in a sor t of herring-
described in the past, but all ha ve represented bone pattern . Mea s ur e out the proper lengt h s
comp r om ises of one form or another. Some re- a nd st a ke them.
quired additional tuners, a few utilized tricky N ow, take your 1'\0. 14 wire and st r etch it
traps, a nd seve r a l fl a tl y failed to live up to from st a ke to s t ak e in the sha pe show n in
t heir design er s' claims. F ig. 1. U se plastic clothesline for t he horizon -
Here's a new version of the all-hand an- tal st r etchers-t hey 'r e neces sary to hold th e
t enna, which offe rs les s compromise than many array in sha pe once its erected. W hen spa cing
of it s predecessors. It involves no tra p circu its, gets dow n to less t han a foot, the t rad itional
a nd will work without an a ntenna tu ner (pro- wax-soaked dowels can be used.
vid ed your tran smitter ca n t olerate a load Once built, the ar-ray mu st be rai sed into
wh ich varies between 50 and 450 ohms, always position. The original wa s hoisted to an alti-
r esistive) although u se of a tuning circuit will tude of some 24 f eet a nd su ppor t ed by more
give improved r esults. pla st ic cloth esli ne at each end. The feed-l ine
Old-timers will r ecognize the layout of the was brought off horizontally so that the entire
ant enna (see Fig'. 1) a s a derivative of the antenna was horizontal to the ground-but
de lta match, wid ely u sed some years ago to equa lly good or m a ybe better resu lts should be
match the then-popular 600-ohm fee d line to atta inable with t he fa n pointing skywa r d.
beam antenna s. H owever, there's a major dif- I n theory, the Exponential Array's opera-
ference. t ion is sim plici t y itself. A s you know, two
Th is a nten na, dubbed the "Exponential parallel cond ucto rs (the fam iliar ope n line or
Array" by the de signer, matches the transmi s- twi nlead) won't rad iate if current in each is
s ion line to free s pace. balanced, s ince the field of one cancels the
The general theory em ployed in its des ign field of the other. At the sa me time, the line
is a logical outgrowth of that used to develop ex hibits a defi nite characte ristic or "surge"
t he Discone antenna, once highly popular and impedance w hich is, in part, a fun ction of t he
st ill wid ely used in commercial circuits. I n spacing between the wires.
some re spects, al so, it is simila r to the log- If the s pa cing is increased (gradually, so
periodic antenna. And before t he sli de-r ule that there's no sudde n im pedance "bump" on
boys r ise in arm s, we will adm it that other t he line) the im pedance will a lso increase. T he
theories insist that the thing can't possibly line st ill won't radiate, so long a s the con-
work. A bumblebee can't fly, eit her , by the laws ductors are spaced closer than about one-t ent h
of a eronautical engineer ing . wavelength.
At t hi s point, it should be em phasized that As the s pa cing incr ea ses past the one-tenth
the dimension s shown in Table 1 have been wave dimension, the fields no longer cancel
measured and tested. Whf le other dimensions and part of the energy in the line is radiated
s hou ld give equal r esults , not h ing can be into space. A nother way of expressing t he
guara nteed if either leg leng t h or fee d-l ine sa me re su lt is to sa y that t he impedance of
length is varied . Don't let this stop you, spa ce (377 ohms) effectively shor t-cir cu its the
though. Try it and let us know what happen s mu ch high er impedance of the line at this
for you . point, and the power flow s into the lesser im-
The easiest way of building a n Exponential pedance.
Array is to sta ke out a pattern in the back From t he point a t which the line is " short-
•
-
5R4GY
II
A Different Approach
are many times when it should be T he reader should not be lulled into forget-
T H ERE
advantageou s to double your power su pply ting the requ irements for any method of alter-
voltage, particularly when you have a project ing a power su p ply to double your voltage
to bu ild a linear amplifier for SSB, or change output. Her e are the key facto r s ;
amplifier tubes to higher voltage and lower 1. Be su r e the rectifier filament winding
current for greater efficiency, yet would like insulation (and tube or tubes) will
to u se the sa me power su pply. T he purpose of st and the new double peak voltage.
this article is not t he construction of a par- 2. \Vhen the voltage output is doubled, the
ticular pi ece of gear to be followed implicitly, current will be halved. Your gain is
bu t to suggest a method anyone may employ through the use of amplifier tubes
to fit their particular power supply problem. wh ich are more efficient at the hig her
The classic method in voltage doubli ng for voltage. The amplifier input watta ge
tran smitter su pplies has been to employ the may be no higher, but the output prob-
well k nown bridge rectifier circu it. Voltage ably will be.
doubling by the capacitor method has not been 3. Your fi lter choke or chokes must sta nd
so popular when voltages really g et up there t he higher voltage breakdown r equired.
due to r egulation problems and the need for A common "dodge" is to put the choke
such large electrolytic filter cond ensers. Par- in the negative lead.
t icularly when such good oil impregnated types 4. Your filt er condensers mu st be repla ced
are pl entiful and r elatively cheap and reliabl e. or be capable of with standing the new
A maj or di sadvantage of the bridge circuit is higher voltage.
th e four rectifyi ng elements required and the 5. The bleeder resistor mu st also be of
three heater or filament sou r ces. \Vhen you the proper value to meet the needs of
have an existing power su pply, the addition of the higher voltage.
two more rectifier tubes and two more high
voltage breakdown fi lament transformers, or Fig. 1 ill u st r a tes a hybrid power su pply.
a triple transformer, usually r epresents impos- Note the su r ge resistors to limit cu r rent. These
s ible space problems a s well a s a high cost are usually fr om 5 to 30 ohms, depend ing upon
fa ctor. fi lter capacity, an d are placed in each leg of
To rip out the rectifier tubes in your supply the power transformer secondary. A word about
and r eplace them with silicon rectifiers at first s ilicon rectifier ratings to be used would also be
g lance appears to be the solut ion, however thi s in ord er. A full wave circuit with 250 ma recti-
approa ch costs a lot of money today a nd it fiers would yield 500 ma, whic h is usually
seems fooli sh to throwaway u sable rectifying enoug h for most amateur applications. These
capability. A hybrid power su pply-half silicon sizes would be much cheaper, of course, than
and half rectifier tubes-appear to represent the 750 rna variety wh ich, for example, wou ld
th e happy med ium as a solut ion of space and give you 1.5 amperes. However , nothing could
economy. Many ex isti ng su pplies could use thi s be gained in a hybrid circuit with the larger
method wi th a minimum of cons t r uct ion and r ectifiers since thi s would be beyond the capa-
cost. bility of commonly used rectifier tubes which
•
Impedance Matching Surplus Equipment
Rad io Set Transmitter Receiver Trans. In Re c. Out
SCR.I77-B BC.1 9 1-C BC-l I4-C 35 to 200 4,000
SCR.188-A BC-19 1·C BC-H2-C 35 to 200 4,000
SCR. 19l -( I BC-1 9 1·C BC· lI2 ·C 3S to 200 4,000
SCR·l99-A BC-b IO- E BC·l I2·( I 200 4,000
Roy E. Pe fen be rq
P.O. Boll. 844 BC·H 2.! I 200 4.000
SCR-499-A BC-b IO-E BC·lI2- ( ) 200 4,000
Fort Ctevtc n. Cene l Zo ne 4,000
BC-l 42.! ) 200
SCR-50b-A BC-b5 l BC·b52 200 8,000
5C R-508. ( I BC -b04 BC-bOl 200 8,000
SCR-528.( ) BC·b04 BC -bOl 200 B,OOO
5CR-509.A BC.b20 BC·b20 200 250 o r 4.000
5CR-510 BC-b20 BC·b20 200 250 o r 4.000
5CR-5 4l- ( I BC-b99 BC -b99 100 100
5C R-b08-A BC-b84 BC-b8l 200 8.000
and out- SCR-b28-A BC-bB 4 200 8,000
T H E I NPUT
put impedance of SCR-b09-A
SCR-bIO-A
BC-b59
BC·b59
BC-b8l
BC·b59
BC.b59
200
200
250 o r 4,000
250 o r 4,000
military equipment is
ofte n unknown to t he SC R-b I9-( I BC- I335 sc. ms 200 250 o r 4,000
per son co n side ring 5C R-b94-C BC.Il Ob sc.uos IbO 250 o r 4.000
SCR-808 BC-92 l BC ·92 l 200 B,OOO
amateur application of SCR-B2B BC-924 BC-92 4 200 8.000
these items. I mped an ce AN/TRC- I-( ) T-14-( I/ TRC- I R-1 9-1 I/TRC· I 500 500
match ing is impo r ta nt AN/TR C·8 T.lO/T RC -8 R- 48/TRC-8 500 500
and t he use of matched . . . .. .....
AN /PR C -B.I O • • ••• • • • • • 150 bOO
audio accessories will AN/ GR C-l ·B . .. . . .... . 150 bOO
do much toward cor- AN/ G RC .9 RT.77/GRC-9 RT-77/GRC-9 I bO 250 o r 4,000
recting the fa irly com-
mon and ofte n u nj usti fied com pla int of in- be gi ve n to the use of extern a l lin e ma tchin g
sufficient a ud io gai n. transformers. Small com mercial u n its are
The chart lists a number of surplus radio availab le to meet a wid e range of impedance
equipments and t heir a udio input output im- match ing requ irements and these transformers
pedances. will of te n mount d irectly on t he loudspeaker
I mped ance var iatio ns in tran smitte r in put fra me.
circuitry are not too g reat a nd in mo st in- Careful attention to impedance matching re-
sta nces match either a carbon microphone or quirements will result in improved perform-
a 500-600 oh m lin e. On t he other ha nd, r e- a nce of sur-plus conversions and u se of ex-
ceive r ou t put imped ances va ry widely a nd tern al, speaker mou nted li n e ma tch in g tra ns-
more 01' less unpred ictably S ince it is usually formers will mini mize t he work in such p roj-
desirable to effect a minimum number of in- ects. The results more than justify the
ternal equipment changes, consideration should expense.
LL of the articles and instructions on phone into the jack and plug your t elephone into the
A patches end up by directing you to connect other end of thi s cord. \Vhen you are finished,
the line terminals of the patch to the red and put your patch patch cor d back in a drawer,
green lead s in your telephone's junction block. return •your t elephone to its regular resting
This leaves you more-or-less on your own from place and there is no sig n of your installation.
there on. A s you can readily imagine, most Unfortunatel y, the telephone company uses
telephone companies take a very dim view of a rather odd type of four -pronged jack in its
anyone not in their employ connecting or dis- extension installations and these have until re-
connecting anything in their installations. cently been hard to come by u nless yo u had
So, in s pit e of thi s, you're determined to a friend at the t elephone com pa ny. Recently,
have phone patch facilities (after all, other Olson Radio in Toledo, Ohio has st a r t ed to
people have them) and you are willing to bear market th ese plugs and jacks and a patch
the possible wrath of the telephone company. patch cord is practical for all now.
If ) 'OU take the st ep and are perman ently con- All that you n eed are one male and one f e-
nected, then in case of trouble on your line, male t elephone extension jack connectors, a
the ser viceman is likely to discover your con- few feet of three wire cable and a few min utes
nection, cut it off, report it to the company of your time. The screw terminals in both the
and blame you for a ny trouble on the line. j a ck and the plug are marked with the color
Thus can begin a fir st-class rhubarb with you of the leads. Be sur e to connect a wire be-
in the role of underdog. tween the terminal s marked similarly, i.e.,
wouldn't it be better to have a patch in- red to red, green to green, and brown to
s talla t ion which could be connected to the line brown. Make this wire a s long or as shor t a s
by a plug-in connector and which could be you need for your convenience in placi ng the
plugged in when you want to run a patch telephone and phone patch unit at your operat-
and taken out when not needed-all of thi s to ing position. The jack is made for su r f ace
be a ccomplished without making any unauthor- mounting with two scr ews and can be mounted
ized changes in the telephone installation permanently on the desk by the rig if you
itself? choose.
Fortunately, this is fairly easy to accom- Then, in either the plug or jack of your
plish. The key to the whole thing is to have patch patch cord, connect the two line leads
the telephone company install extension jacks from your phone patch unit to the terminals
in your house. For a small installation charge marked r ed and green r espectively. This can
they will fit jacks at any and all locations be a permanent type connection s ince the
where you might wish to plug in the tele- whole patch patch cord can remain at the op-
phone in your hou se. This doesn't add to your erating position connected to the phone patch
monthly billing. There is only the one-time-
unit.
only installation charge. However, you must It's simple to use . Ju st plug the male end of
have at least two jacks installed. t he patch patch cord into the extension jack
Once the jacks are installed, you can un-
installed f or you by the telephone company.
plug your t elephone and plug it in at any
Then, plug your tel ephone instrument into the
jack in the hou se. Thus, when you want to
run a patch, you can simply go and get the female jack on the other end of the patch
t elephon e a nd plug it in at the oper at ing pat ch cor d and r un you r patch traffic. When
position. you are fini shed , merely unplug and sto re your
Ma ke up a patch cord with your phone patch patch cord and retu r n the telephon e to
patch connection in the cord. Plug this cord it s usual position. Neat, eh?
Transistor Converter
J . Spe cle lnv, J r. W3HIX
Philco Corporation
l a nsd ale Divi sio n
Lonsd a le , Penne .
THIS article presents a fully transistorized make the trans istors even more des irable.
conve r ter operat in g in t he 432 to 436 me
frequency ba nd . It employs a cr yst al con- RF Section
trolled local oscillator to improve frequ ency
sta bilit y. A commun ications r eceiver capable The two RF st a ges are operating a s com-
of tu n ing the 28 to 32 me range is used for mon-base ampli fiers a nd the mixer a s a
th e if system. It f eatures an overall power gain common-em itter s t ag e. A seri es capacitor,
of 31 db with a noise figur e of 7.1 db. Th e C2, cou pl es th e signa l from th e antenna t o
3 db bandwith was mea sured to be five mega- t he emitter of the first RF amplifier s ta ge. A
cycles. variable capacitor, Cl, is inser t ed between the
Th e UHF spect r um present s a n ew ch a l- input and g roun d. In operating an amplifier
lenge in t he u se of tra nsistors. There h a s common -base, t here exists some in phase feed-
been very little in the way of published ma- back from the output back to t he input circuit
ter ia l on the usage of th e transi stors at these th rough t he transistor. C l is adju sted t o
frequ encies. minimize any tendency t owards instability r e-
This converter wa s const r uc ted with the su lt in g from t hi s feedba ck.
idea of determining how effective transi stors Th e output circuit is tuned by ca pacitor C3
would be in fun ctions previously accomplished and coil Ll. A coupli ng ca pac itor C4 feeds
by t he use of vacuum tubes. The Philco sma ll the output to the emitter of the secon d rf
area MADT* transistor wa s selected becaus e s ta g e. The ou t put of thi s st a ge is tuned by
of its su per ior performance in t he V HF ca pacitor C5 and coil L2 . A coupling capaci-
spect r um . t or. C6, feeds the sig n al to the base of the
The r esult was a 432 me convert er whose mi xer. A 30 me trap is inserted between th e
oper a t ion su r passes that of most tube types. base and ground of thi s st ag e. 'I'his trap s hort
Compact ness and low power requirements circu its the in pu t admittance of the m ix er a t
30 me p r oviding- hi gher convers ion power guin.
·Trudem a rk - RI 'R'. U .S . P a l . O ff . The output is coupled t o th e load through a
::...'
\
-p .
I OSC' , Il.TOfl
to con vert t h is rig t o 2 meters , This should be : PAO: ... ,
an excellent proj ect for th e Novice who would ' t-~
I ~ IOIt I _L_
like to take a cr ack at thi s VHF band. If t he -L ~IW I "'T,
,
in str uc tion s are foll owed carefully t her e shou ld
be no probl em s s uch as getting on the right "'"
frequency.
T he first t hing needed is a 48 mc t h ird
ove rto ne r ock. F or t he N ovi ce approximatel y
48.5 me is needed which w ill have a fina l f r e-
quency of 145.5 me well in th e Nov ice band.
Th e coil mo difications to be mad e are t he between turn 1 a nd 2 from the pl ate end of
follow ing ; Add a 3 mmfd capacitor to L1 t he final coil. Sold er t he 2 ,uh RF C cho ke 1
parallel t o the 5 mmfd t o reduce t he oscilla- t urn f rom t he ca pac itor end .
tor resonan t f requency. Take a pi ece of # 14 N ow t he power can be turned on and tune'er
w ir e and w ind 4 turn s 74 inches in diameter. up . The tu n ing procedures are the sa me as
Remove th e 6 meter fi nal coil L2 and in stal l w it h the 6 meter rig.
the 4. 't u r-n coil in series !w
, it h th e plate of th e Sin ce th e frequency is t ri pled in the final
6C X8( B) a nd th e 25 mm fd variable capacitor. it is not the most efficient 2 meter rig, but
Pad the 25 mm fd ca pacitor with a 30 mmfd . you ca n have a lot of fun getting on the air.
Mak e a ' I th t urn antenna coupler coil from It's fin e for loca l rag chewing . Better results
a pi ece of soli d hookup wire *
inch es in can be expected if a shi eld is u sed between
dia mete r . P la ce the an tenna co upler coil L3 t he oscillator and final. . .. K8NIC/5
SURPRISI NG amount of excellent equipment, on how to build a tran si stor aud io power am-
A much of it virtually ready to use, is st ill plifier-it introduces a completely different
availabl e in sur plus throughout the country. type of audio output circuit, which can only
For VHF and /or mobile u se, especially, sur - operate with tran sistors. I n addition to the
plus stock s st ill prove a gold mine. four tran sistors , though, you need only two
An d since conver sion of t he standard auto r esi st or s , one transforme r (for input, not
voltage from six to 12 volts, the same a s the output!), and t he speaker itself. A power am-
long-established military st a ndar d, many it ems plifier can hardly be s impler than that.
require no conversion before installation. No This amplifier oper a tes on the bridge prin-
conversion, that is, except to provide for loud- ciple, thereby eli mina t ing any dc from the
speaker operation.... loud speaker whi le st ill doing away with the
Al most every milita ry use for the equi pment output tra nsfor mer. A simplified schem at ic
requ ired hea dphone output; virtually n one of is shown in Fig. 1, with t he t ra nsistors repre-
the mobile-adaptable gear now to be h ad was sented by variable resistors. As sume that the
originally equipped to drive a s pea ker . But set ti ng of each resi stor is a ccomplished au-
phones are inconvenient, to sa y th e least, in t omatically by the input sig n al a s shown by
the amateur mobile se r vice. dotted lines : a positive-going input increases
The simple way out of this problem is not the resi stance wh ile a n ega t ive-going input re-
to convert t he equipment at all, bu t to add an d uces resistance.
outboa r d power ampli fier. Since the tran sistor If, at t he begi nni ng, all r esistor s are set t o
works excellentl y at 12 volts, its use is a the sa me value, the bridge will be perfectly
natural. But thi s is not just another article balanced and no current will flow through the
~
cycle of audio frequ ency power, and the s ame '00'"
action with r eversed polarity occurs on the ""''''
GAIN ! - 16A
PM
other ha lf-cycles. As a resu lt, the curr ent
through the voice coil is that of t he af wave- . 3 ! !OO .J'l..
0' l.w · 0 4
form applied to the input t erminals. a
Du r ing th is act ion, each transistor is acting
mor e like the automatically-variable resistor
we have a ssumed for explanation than it is
act ing like an amplifier. Its res istance will
vary f rom approximately ha lf an ohm a s mini-
mum to a maximu m of several thou san d ohms. ' - - - - --<> 12 VOLTS 0- ...1
This means that current flow through the +
voice coil is limited, not by the t r a ns is tors, but
by t he impedan ce of the voice coil itself. To FI G. 2. Schematic d iagram . QI-Q2 .Q3 -Q4
be more exact, t hi s circu it is capable of pro- should be PNP tran sist ors of the same type
ducing approximately 18 watts in an 8-oh m ... such as 2 N 107 o r C K72 2. TI -I nput o r inter-
stage t ran sist or transformer. A Sta nco r TA-32
speaker , or 36 watts in a 4-ohm unit, p r ovided with pri ma ry and seco ndary reverse d and only
only that the tran sistors are capable of ha n- ha lf of t he origina l second ary conne cted was
dlinrr t h at variety of power. used in the prototype for d e liberate mismatch
The unit shown in schem atic f orm in Fig. to protect the tra nsistors fro m overload.
Up Front
Staff
"Y OU ca n't work 'em if you can't hea r 'em," Mu ch ha s been wr itten on the subj ect of
is one of t he oldest maxims in ham radio. noise in rf uru plifl ers , a nd ma ny pe rson s are
Since virtually no one is certa in that his re- now convi nced t hat a ll rf amplifiers sho uld u se
ceiver posses ses ultimate se ns it ivit y . everyone only triode tubes to achieve low-noise r esu lts .
wants to improve that department of his Don't you beli eve it ..•.
shack's eq uipm e nt. \ Vhile triodes, with their few er elements, do
F ortunately, se nsit ivity of most r eceivers show lower noi se than their pentod e counter-
can be improved-and it doesn't cost a fort une, parts, the difference becomes sig n ifi ca nt only
either. Tube design s developed d uri ng t he past at VH F f requencies a nd above. Even at 50 me,
10 years far exceed the wildest dreams of pre- a well-designed pentode amplifie r will r ea ch
1950 receiver designers, a nd as a result, im- below t he level of antenna noise-a nd whe n
proved r eceiver sens it ivit y is sim ple fo r older you've gone t hat f ar , you 're at the en d of the
sets. Although newer rigs make use of t he new line. No amount of im p rovem ent of your set
tubes already, there are gimmicks for them can reduce antenna noise.
too. At thi s point, before reading much more,
In m odifying an e xisti ng r eceiver for greater you can perform a s im ple test to determine
sensit ivit y, you have a choice of three courses: whether your r eceiver is already at the lim it
subst it u ti ng of hott er tubes, changing cir- of usable se nsit .i vity If it is, concentrate on
cuitry, or using p lug-in adapters. The choice the a ntenna-work on the receiver f ront end
is up to you, but to make it intell igently you under t he se conditio ns is only wasted effort.
need full inform a t ion a bout all res u lts to be T he t est is th is: Turn on the r ece iver a nd
expected, bot h good and bad. That's t he pu r- adj ust all gain controls to t he wide-open pos i-
pose of thi s article. I n addition to a su rvey tion . A ft er t he rig warm s up, discon nect t he
of the design fac tors you will encounter, you'll antenna. Substitute a ~ - w a tt carbon resi stor
find a select ion of circuits. At lea st one of them with the sa me resistance a s the antenna, at
should, with on ly minor modifications a s dic- the receiver ANT terminals (u se either 5 1
tated by your requirement s, prove s uita ble f or ohms, 75 ohms, or 330 ohm s) . Reduce rf gain
your own receiver, until noise hi ss from the spea ke r is barely
whi le there a r e sever a l poi nts in a rece iver audible. Di sconnect the resi stor and reconnect
at whi ch changes can provide greater ga in, the a ntenna. If noise output increa ses, yo u 're
the "front end" (rf stages and mixer cons id- a lready a ble to receive an tenn a noise. If no in-
ered a s a un it) controls t he set 's sensitivity. crease results, your r eceiver can sta nd im-
Any gain which follows the front end will provement. The test, incidenta lly, shou ld be
amplify only receiver noise, and will be of no performed at your receiver's highest operating
practical u se in hearing those weak s ig na ls. fr equency s ince noi se level from the antenna
The gain will make st rong sig na ls stro nger, decreases with frequency.
t o be su re, but the w eak ones can be captured If you're st ill with us , the next ste p is to
only by improving matters up front. S ince this decide whether you want to (a) u se newer
is the case, let's look at the first rf stage for tubes (b) change t he i-f-stage circuits, or (c)
a st a r t . use a pl ug -in gadget.
An rf st a ge , to t he set des igner, ha s three U se of a la ter-mod el t ube wh ich can be sim-
major fu nction s. P r ovid in g se nsit ivit y for t he ply plugged into the set is al wa ys tem pting-
set is only one of the three. The ot her two are but th is way lies disaster. T ubes vary in many
to isolate the local oscillator from the antenna factors besides that of gain; input and output
and t hus prevent r adiation, and to elimin ate or ca pa cit y may be so far off that the set can't
min imi ze image r e spon se. Frequently, com- be aligned, the grid cutoff characteristic may
mer cia l designs are ba sed on isolation or se- prevent proper Ave action, the hotter tube
lectivity rather than on sens it ivit y-a nd so may cross-modulate all sig na ls. . . . The list
can st a n d improv ement in the matter s of noi se is long and the p itfa lls many. H owe ver , with
and gain. proper care, excellent results a re possible.
32 • 73 MAGAZI NE
Circu it changes, s imilar ly, ca n create ma ny
problems. Lead dr ess is critical above 25 me .
Circuits which are excellent at 30 me give up
and die a t 3.5. Th e set may fail to t r ack after
modificat ion. In other words, thi s too t akes ---
r-;---
some prior pla nn ing.
P lug-i n gadgets combine the advantages-
and t hus s ha r e t he disad va nt ages-of both the
othe r types of changes. I n add itio n, t hey have
pecu lia r it ies all t heir own. T he worst is t heir
tendency to oscillate, caused by necessarily
long grounded leads. This can be cured by an
external grou ndi ng st ra p-but it's a n awk -
ward device at best . +2>.
One aid to making your choi ce is to lis t .""
ever y t hing you hope to achieve. If sens tt ivtt y
(g reater ga in and /or les s set noi se) is t he only
goa l, a s imp le tube switch with mino r ci r cu it Fig. 2. Adding a high-valued resistor from
cha nges will usua lly achieve it . On the other screen to plate sup p ly in the circuit of Fig . I
hand, if you need greatly improved sens it ivity , results in th e tube's g a ining se mi-re mo te-cutoff
better image rejection, and increased oscil- c ha ra cte ristics. No ot her changes are ne cessary.
la to r isola tion yo ur only h ope is to ch a nge t he
com plete circu it. In -bet ween r esu lts ma y be ob-
t a ined in any of the three poss ible ways. bes t of each type.
Naturally, if you're swit ch ing from pentodes In practice, quality is usually expensive. As
to t riodes 01' vice ve r sa you 'll h ave to mak e a res ult, triode!' hold a s lig-ht edge in t he 20-
ci rcu it chang es. Theref ore, one of t he early de- 50 me f reque ncy range , si n ce the p opula r cas-
cisions leading to the big choice is t hat of cade circuit give!' th em bot h the pen tode's
which tube type to use. advantages and retain s their low-noise char-
To sta rt with, all discuss ion of triodes vs. a cteri st ic- a Il at a moderate p rice .
pent od es is ba sed on t he idea t ha t on ly the In a ddit ion, any rf stage ca n be conve rted
best of each t ype are be ing compa red. It 's to a cascode by means of a plu g-in a da pte r
only logical that a fair triode wif l outperfo rm ( see the references) at low cost.
a poor pentode, and t han an excellen t pentodc For u se below 20 mc alm ost any recent-
will r un rin gs a rou nd ei t he r. model pentode gives good r esults. E ven the
But wh en you compa re t he best of each a nc ie nt GSK7 series performs well at these
breed, you'll find that triodes are characterized freque nc ies, bu t it ca n be improved. In this
by ext remely low noise, moderate gain, and ra nge, tube s ubst it ut ion is the best policy.
sever e insta bility when used in conventional T o s ubst itu te t ubes, start by obtai n ing a
circu itr y. P en t acl es, on the othe r hand, h ave good tube handbook. The best ar e t he RCA
excellent gai n and good at a bilit y, but show Tu be Han db ook HB-3, in fi ve volum es and
higher noise than their three-element cousins. priced at $17.50, a nd the G E Elect r on ic T ube
For operation at 50 mc a nd below, the nod Ma nua l. al so in five volu mes a nd similar ly
goe s to pe n t od es when consider ing only t he pri ced. T hese book s list a ll chara cte ristics of
a ll t ubes produced b y these firms , r a t her th a n
the abbrevi ated listi ng of popular tu bes fou nd
in t he s ma ller manual s , and are h ighly rec-
ommended . However, information in t he $1-
ra nge t ube ma nuals is accurate and ca n be
used.
Wit h handbook in hand, first look up char-
to acteristics of the tube now used in you r re-
ceive r . Wri te them do wn. Be su re to check
r-~Ii
:i":
"
input an d outpu t ca pacit ies, opera t ing bia s
range, electrode voltages, and tran scondu ct-
ance.
Then, s ta r t through the ha ndbook looking
"00
f O I' t ubes wh ich match yo urs in a ll cha r ac-
-cc te ri stics except tra nsconductance , which mu st
be greater. The best areas to sea r ch first are
."" the 6B A- through 6E8- type prefixes, since
those a r e the n ewest types.
Fig . I. Typic a l circuit of receive r first- rf sta ge . \Vhen yo u ha ve sever a l cand idates , check
Tub e ma y be a lmost a ny rem ote-cut off p entod e. to see that basing arra ngement s a r e compat-
Screen re t urns t o low-volt age line esta blishe d ibl e. It's easy to change socket connections,
fro m re cei ver power supply. but not so easy to cha nge th e socket itself.
73 MAGAZINE • 33
a ny sharp-cutoff tube act like a semi-remote-
cutoff des ign, for reason s too comp licated t o
go into in detail here . Com ponent va lues in
thi s diagram, also, are ty pical-wit h the ex-
ce pt ion of the screen resistor, R 3, whi ch is a p-
..~
II
::
TO NEXT
Rf S TAG[
plicable to any tube .
With t his change, yo u can sa fely use s uch
" tubes a s the 6BC5, 6BC6, and 6DK6, all of
which give higher gain than most r emote-cut-
... •
off tubes.
If you decide t o switch t o triod es for th eir
lower-noise p roperties, you ca n take your pick
of a n umber of circu its . As mentioned before,
Fig. 3. The simplest triode amplifier circuit is th ere is lit tle advantage in triodes below about
the grounded-grid arrangement, shown here. Its 60 me, but in a f ew cases they work better
ma jor disadvantage is low gain , requiring at t h a n pe ntod es.
lea st two stages of rf ampl ification . One of the sim plest triode circuits is the
grounded-grid a mplifier, shown in Fig', S. U se
of t hi s circu it requires t hat two st a g es he
Finally, look at th e characteri stic curves for employed, and overall gain will und oubtedly
both th e exi stin g tube a nd your r eplacement be lower than with the older pentod e. N oi se ,
ca nd id a tes. If th e g eneral sha pe is t he sa me , however, will drop more than sig na l st ren g t h ,
the candidates will probably perform sa t is - which mean s that a hotter tube can be u sed
fact orily. in the if strip to bring back a ll t he lost gain
Whe n all thi s preliminary paperwork is com- with lower front-end noi se.
plete, the on ly thing left t o d o is to t ry the The t wo st a ges r equired by most tri ode ci r -
t u bes a nd see wha t h appens . P lug in th e re- cuits ca n be combined in the sa me s pace oc-
placem ent t u be ( m a k in g wir ing cha nges if cu pied by a sing le pentode. One way of doing
neces sary) and try it. Check carefu lly for thi s is by u sing t he cathode-coupl ed am plifier,
proper AV e a ction a s well a s improved sens i- F ig. 4. Signal st r eng t h , again, will show a
t ivity, and t est f or cross-mod ulation by tu ning slig h t drop compared t o the r eplaced pentod e
to weak sig-na ls ne a r st rong ones. If the strong - bu t noi se will be much lower.
signal rid es in on the weak one, yo u have The only triode amplifi er ci rcui t ca pable of
c ross-mod ulati on which mu st be co r r ect ed by com pet ing at equal st a t us with pentodes in
changing to a nother type of tube . t he " stage gai n" department is the cascode,
One of the biggest com pr om is es you mu st show n in Fi g . 5. Gain is eq ua l to or greater
make wh en choosi ng fr ont-end tubes is th a t t ha n that of most pentode st a g es , while noi se
between m aximum g ain and minim um cross- level is even lower than that produced by most
modul a t io n. Remot e-cutoff t u bes are usually ot her t r iode circuits. Since compl ete analyses
better when a void ing c ross-mod ul a t .ion , but of the circui t ha ve recently been p ubli shed
maximum gain is a chi eved on ly with sha r p-
cutoff tubes. Fortunately, it's usually possible
.BK7:...r=~~=h
to r each t he ant enna-noise level wi t h g ood r e-
mote-c utoff t u bes.
Tube su bsti t utions u sually t a ke care of a ny
---
",...-+-.,L'F-~
p roblems below 20 me . At higher frequenci es
the choice is between t he USe of plug-in adapt-
e rs a nd ch a nging the circuit r y. Sin ce plu g-in
a da pte rs sha re m an y of t he features of circuit ""II"
II
::(":
II
~--,:I
changes , let's ex a mi ne ci rcuitry first. ~::
T he basi c c irc ui t used for the first rf am- .,..::::l"'t'''''i1r----...,.-.....-----'
plifi er in most rece iver s is show n in F ig . 1.
Com po nen t va lues s how n are only typica l-
ex act va lues, natu r a lly, will vary fr om set t o
..."'
set depend ing on t he t ube an d the designer's
wh im. All band swit ching ci rcuit ry ha s been
om it ted f or si m pl icity.
Thi s ci r cuit has no inherent noi se pro perties, Fiq. 4. This cat ho de-co uple d amplifier can be
but the tubes most adaptable t o usc in it are substitu t e d fo r stan da rd pe ntodes in a ny re-
not the most se nsit ive r f a mplifiers available. ceiver. The on ly part ad ded to the receive r will
As mention ed ea r lier, se nsit ivity and f reed om be the rf choke in the cathode lead .
from cross-mod ula t ion seldom g o hand in h and .
And in the circuit of F ig. I, fre edom from el sewhe r e (see bibliography), it wo n't be gone
cr oss-m od ula t ion requires remote-cutoff tubes. into in deta il here.
T he sim ple change shown in Fig. 2 will make Any of th ese circuits can be const r uct ed on
34 • 13 MAGAZINE
*
~~*~a~n:o'her FIRST 'rom FINCO
Patent Re 24 ,413
Other patents pending
6 & 2 Meter
Model No. A -52
A ma"teur Net. A·5 2 $33 .00
Sta cking Kit AS·62 $2.19
-
ca n be obt a ined fr om the tube-handbook c ha rts .
E it he r fixed grid bia s obta ined fr om the power
681<1 su pply 0 1' from a mer cury cell, or cathode bias
developed across a resistor of the prop er size
"
••
~"" (as sho wn in Figures 6 and 7), can be used
,",r"'~
"n
"'"
"(
,",
""
instead of t he or igina l grid -leak bia sin g . The
gri d resistor can t hen be red uc ed in va lue, or
3
... I '
,1
"'
ez 1,l,. ,iiI left unchanged.
W it h a ny biasing a rrangement ot her t han
t he g ri d- lea k circuit , m ixer pe rforma nce is
= = extrem ely dependent upon proper oscillator
inj ect ion voltag-e. Oscillator output mu st be ad -
j usted while listening to r eceived sig na ls , for
best results. At th e right point, you will notice
low noi se, good gain, and little distorti on.
Fig . 5. This ceseede circu it is th e only triod e E xcessi ve oscilla tor ou tput will resul t in re-
rf a mpl ifie r which be a ts pen todes in their own d uced ga in and increased noise. while too little
field. It can be built in with ad dition of only out pu t gives relatively noise-free r esults but
four compon e nts . little mixing gain.
A cir cui t for use of t he GUS is show n in Fig.
7. Note that no cou pli ng between oscill a tor
a s ma ll plate of copper or tin- t an stock using and m ixe r is indicated. All necessary couplin g
Vector turret sockets, and subs t it ut ed fo r t he is provided by t he pr o xim ity of t he t ube sec-
old octa l socket in the set. Naturally, t he re- tion s wit hin the envelope. Th is circuit, ad apt ed
ceive r mu st be realigned after any such from the Lnte rna t ic nol Cr ystal .llig. Co. model
change. .
T hese circuit s (except t he g roun ded-grid)
a re also adaptable to being constructed in the
form of plug-in units wh ich s im ply subst it ute
fO I" t he e xi sti ng rf tube . Com plete un its of thi s rc •
nature are t he S-ge r, t he Im pr oved S-ger, •"'",,) hr..,
and the S-ger Ma r k II (see bibliogra phy r:'" r: _£;:1--1---
again ) . T he pentade circuit cha nge can al so
be incor por a t ed into a plug-in ad apter .
With noi se in the first rf st a ge minimized, 3 :
$llIQ;
i
II
"
"(
",,""
"
it 's time to check elsewhere in you r efforts to " '"
""" "
attain t he u ltimate in sens itivit y. P reque ntly,
the mixer st a ge of a receiver makes a su b-
st a nt ia l noise contribution an d masks weak
sig na ls. This is especially true if the fir st rf
stage is not doing it s job properly, but by n ow
that portion of your set should be at peak per-
formancc. Fig. 6. Th e 6AC7 mixer circuit show n here give s
The d iffer e nce betv..een a quiet and a noi sy lowest mixer· stage noi se o ut p ut of a ny f re·
mixer is largely a matter of tube choice. ~ li x e r quency con ve rters t e st ed . according t o resea rc h
tubes de signed es pecia lly for low-noi se se r vice reports. Its major d isadvantage is t he exte nsive
set surge ry requi red f or installa t io n.
include t he 6B A 7 a nd t he 6S B 7 ~ Y (now almost
ob solete.) T he GUS is a good one also but usu-
ally r equires ci rcuit changes. F CV -2 converter , provi des exce ptional results
If yo u don 't m ind exten sive su r ger y inside whe n preceded by one s ta ge of rf amp lifica-
the set . substi t u t ion of a 6AC7 operated a s a tion, even at 144 me, •
pentode mixer a s shown in Fig. 6 will yield ex- W it h bot h th e rf sta ge and the mixer clea ned
ceptiona lly low- noi se mixing a ction . H owever, u p. the re's littl e m ore to do in yo u r sea r ch for
you may exper ience a bit of difficulty in r ea - se ns it ivit y. It's a good idea, howeve r , to check
ligning the set aft er this change due to the A VC a ction after all modifications ha ve been
drastica lly differe nt circuit an d resulting mad e. Tube a nd circuit ch a nges some t im es up-
ch ange in circu it capacities . set normal f unctioning of th is important circuit,
Once the proper tube type is subs t it uted , a s ince action of the front e nd at low bias vol -
few cha nges in circu it constant may increase t a ge s may be vastly diffe rent f rom its a ct ion
mi xi ng se nsit ivit y. Lowest noi se and g reatest ne ar t ube cutoff.
freedom from cross-modulation are obtained T o check AVe. tune across the broadcast
with a non-gr-id-leak-bia sed mixer . Howe ver , ba nd if you r receiver has one. Lackin g t hat ,
s uch m ixers a re a lso t he me at sens it ive to va r i- listen t o t he k ilowatt down t he block. E xa min e
ations in oscillator output and so are usually t he sig na l carefully to see if you can detect
avoided by set designers. distortion , spla tte r , or oth er objectionable fea -
Bia s val ues for t he m ixer t ube of yo ur choice tures ( t he broadca st st ati on is r ecommend ed
as • n MAGAZINE
LAFAYETTE " I'
6 to 80 meter
TRANSMITTER
by AMATEURS
- EVERYWHERE
HE-25
for
* SINGLE KNOB BANDSWITCIDNG * "STRAIGHT THROUGH" OPERA-
80 THROUGH 6 METER TION EVEN ON 6 METERS
.. *
NEW YORK, N. Y.
100 6th Avenue
NEWARK, N. J.
24 Central Avenue
BRONX, N. Y.
542 E. Fordham Rd. ..
: Nam e . . _ _. ... ............................... ................. .
**
ic Address , , _............................. ............. :
PARAMUS, N. J.
182 Roote 17
BOSTON. MAss.
110 Federal Street
PLAINFIElD. N. J.
139 W. 2nd Street : City ............ . , Zone s t ate; *
..***********************
MARCH 1961 13 MAGAZIN E • 37
for t his test, s ince the cha r a cte r ist ics of it~ Fig. 7. Using half of a bUS t ube for the oscilla -
sig n a ls are more closel y controlled.} If you tor ond the other half os a miller. this circuit is
eepeble of ouhta nding perfo rmance et freq uen -
s pot trouble. repea t the test on a weak sig n a l. cies up t o 148 me. It req uires o nly one sta ;e of
If troubl e is apparent on ly on st r ong sig- rf amplificat ion ahead of it.
nals , th e A ve ci rcui t probably is at fault .
Most usu al cause of t h is difficulty is ind is-
criminat e tube s ubst it u t ion w ithout regard fo r
cut off c ha r a cte r ist ics ; a tube which goes dead 6UO
at 10 volts bias can't gi ve good results wh en
used on an A ve line developi ng 20 volts .
Double-check t he cutoff cu rves a nd values
fo r both t he old and the new tubes. If there's ~
::,......... ..• ::f
much difference , r ig voltage divider s using the
AV e r esi stors (RI, Fig. 1) a s the upper leg
of the divid er to cu t AV e voltage down to
] ".
II
,--'00"•0
Bibliography
I.a n l(ronl-S m ilh . R a d io t r o n n ""ill'nt>r ·,. He ndb....k. Foui-th
!': di t io n . -
Orr . W 6S AI. The Redt.. Handbook. 15t h t :diti"n . -
K y le. K flJKX . The S ·9.., M a r k II . CQ. M a y . 1 9 f1~1.
Kyl (>. K flJK X. M.. r e o n t ht> S-9t>r Ma rk II. C Q . Decemh-r,
1959. lht> Imp royt'd s-se-. C Q. AU J,::tI"t. Hl.-,Ii.
K j-le, K 5JK X. C a lW."od" nrtuits. 11 0 00' and Wh)", Elec- H fld lork. Duill' n ('on"iut>rllti"nli o r 5 11·\1 C'. t'en ...e r t e re.
t ron il' lI Wo rld . Sep t em be r. 1960. QST. Mn rch, 19 57 .
Feder-al T elephone and Rad io C".• Rf' fer"nr" Uala for Jones, W 6AJF. I."w .(~ro lill·;a lk S;:\-.\lrt t' r ('"nyuln.
Rad io ":nll"hl"t>U. 4th Ed ition.- ~ST. J un E'. 19 !t7 .
!'; a lltm a n . Fundam.ntalll or V a ruum Tub"".
Ca nter. W 6 T SQ. Th" S · 9u . CQ. Ma y . 1956. - A I·ai/a M... fr"m R ar/i,. Hook.llto f' .
- -- - - - - -
"THE O!"i LY g ood bug is a dead bu g," sa ys one ' the message. N ow that one of th ese de sirable
of the TV commercials. A little listening lit tl e doohinkies graces you r operating table
on the C W bands may convince u s that t h is a re you r eady to step up and master it ?
ru le should be applied t o ham radio too. Not You ca n an swer t his qu estion only after an -
so. Despite all of the horrible examples we sweri ng a couple of others. First, can you
heal' on t he air it is true that any opera tor, handle a st r a ig ht key sa t isfa cto r ily at twenty
can master t hese s lip pe r y cu stomers. If you \..-ords pel' minute? Second , ca n you m a ke solid
get the bug to use a bug get the bug'S out of copy at le ast t he sa me speed or better'? If th e
th e hug' before you bug people. 'WS W(' l" is yes to t hese two latter questions , it
The first co ns ide r a t ion, of course, is ",'hat will be yes to the first one . You a re now r ead y
kind of bug to buy. There are seve r a l fin e to t ake the sac red oa th and vow of a ll good
models on the ma rket which boils th e sit ua - bug twiddlers, Repeat after me .
tion down to your own personal preference in " I, Sam Lieberknocker," do take thi s oa t h
st yli ng, size and weight. Weight is an im- and vow that I forever more w ill keep thi s
pot-taut f a ctor since t here is nothing more little monster under cont rol at all t imes and
annoying than to ha ve th e bug go j umping ' never exceed the speed limit set by my own
around on your operating table from the f orce capabilities. Thi s, I swea r to on a stack of
of your fi st. You ca n a lwa ys sc r e w it down to TVI com pla ints."
the de sk top, but a properly weighted base Now th at thi s impressive ceremony is over
will r esult in one less hol e in your ex pensive a nd we have dried t he t ear s of emot ion fr om
ham shack furniture.
We 'll gloss over the dub iou s finan cial -In r-ase your n am e d Of. 1l n o t happen 10 be Sam Liebes-;
k nocker it i>l per-mis eab le to m ak e a r ellllu na bly a Cl'ura t e
h 1
st r -at egems you may ave . to emp o~ to promote su bst tt u t fon fi ll lo n g as y ou do not make an y "th ~ r
yourself to bug ownership and skip ahead tc ... .m odifil'atif>fl>l. huweve r s lht ht. o f t his ritual.
)8 • 13 MAGAZINE
We Buy - Sell and Trade
HE ATH CO. oX -J5 . 45 .00
TEST EQUIPMENT G LO BE Chompion Model 350 ....... ..... . ....•... 345.00
( RECOND ITIONED ) ElOICO TR -7.5 TV, 50 wett . 29.00
ElOICO MT-2, 2 mfr. 22 w ., fill ed o r mobile . 35 .00
SIGN A L G EN ERATOR , TRIPLETT 3433. AM -FM., HEATH CO. OX· 40 , 60 -7.5 wolt . 58.00
100 k.c.-120 m.e . I 69.00 HEATH S8·1 0 , SSB odopter . 75 .00
SCOPE, Dum ont 208• .5 inch . 59.00 1 Mfd. .sooo v. oi l cond. . . _ . 2 .00
SIGNAL GENERATOR. f~" i s 188. 18-155 m.e . 49 .00 0 .4 Mfd. 4000 v. D.C., 1350 v , A.C . 4 .95
SCOPE, Navy RCA.3 inch ...... . . ....... ..•.... 29.00 Vo cuu m Variable Cond., 30-300 m mf. . 29 .00
FREQ. METER, LM., Navy type of B.C. 221 with
origina l Co lib. book & modu lation . 49.00
f REQ. METER. Some as above len CcUb. book .
SCOPE, Tektronix 511 ·A _
25.00
. 395.00
POWER SUPPLIES
SIGNAL GENERATOR, f ico 322, 150 k.c,·102 m.e, 22 .00 500 » , 0 .C. ·280 mo., 310 v. 0 .C. -180 mo., 22 v. 8io s
SCOPE, Heath .5 inch ... ... .....•.. . . .......... 35 .00 12 v . 0 .C.-2 omp ., new . S 35 .00
SIG NA L GENE RATO R, Navy -Triumph 13 1, 100 k.e.. 630 v. 0 .C.-230 mo., new . 28 .00
96 m ,e. . •. . .. ... ... . . .. .. .... .... . .... ...... 24.00 900 v. 0 .C.-300 mo . 18.00
SCOPE, Dumont 224, 3 inc h . 49.00 Dual supply, 600 v. D.C. & 400 v , D.C.-2oo mg . 12 .00
SIGNAL G ENERATOIl, Clough-8rengle OCA, 100 k.e . SUPER-PRO power su pply by Hommorlund . 18 .00
30 m.c. . . . . . . . . • . . • • • . _._ ......•....... ..... 22 .00 Supp ly , 12-24 v , D.C.-.5 amp. . ... ... .. ... . .•.. 15 .00
T1UIMETEIl, by Fisher . 39 .00 Slug - Se t heod DYNAMOTORS .. .
FIlEQ. METEIl, TS·1 27/U, 375 ·725 m.e • . . . . .. . • .. . 45.00 In p ut 12 v.-outpu t 6 2.5 v.- 22.5 mo . 9 .00
BOLOMETEIl, He wle tt-Pa cko rd 41 5 · A .. . .• .. . . ... . 75.00 CA RTER 6 v , inpu t , output 400 v.-270 m a o . ... . • 8 .00
SIG. GEN. , 1·208, FM, 1.9-4 ..5 m.e. & 19-45 m .c . 45 .00 TCS, 12 v , in., 0400 v.-180 mo. & 220 v.- l 00 m o . 9 .00
FIlEQ. METEIl, 8.C. 338-A, 100-1.5.5 m.c . 45.00 PE -103, 6 o r 12 v. in., .500 v. ou t . 15.00
SIGNAL GENERATOR, Koy Megosweep . 69.00 PE· IOI , 12 o r 24 V . In., 400·800 v. o u l . 6 .95
WAV EMETER _OSC., OAP, 1.50- 230 m.e . 39 .00 LEEC E-NE VILL E, 6 v. _ . 35 .00
SIG . G EN. , IlCA 710 -A, 370 -445 m.c ., 4.50 ·500 m.c. 50.00 12 V • . . .. •. • . • .• • • .. . • • •• • • • • • • • 65 .00
8. F. OSC ., RCA 1.54, 30 -1.5,000 cy• .. . . • . . . . . . . . . . 29.00
SIGNAL GENERATOR , LAD, 2700-2900 m.c . " .00
RCA CHANA LYST, $4 5 .00,
m.c. .
VHF Converler 1.6 ·80
. 25 .00
TRANSFORMERS
G. Il. 80.5-A, Stando rd Sig . Gen., 16 k.c.-SO m.c . 250.00 7.500 v , C. 1.-2.50 mo. $19 .00 .5000 v. (. T. -500 m a o 22 .00
G . Il. 916·A, Radio Fre q ue ncy 8r id g e . 175 .00 3200 v , C.T.- 3.50 mo. 18.00 1100 v. C.T.-300 mo . 3 .50
SIG. GEN ., Meosurements Corp. Mad. 7.5, 50 ·400 2.500 v. C.T.·300 mo., 2 .5 v.- IO om.o., 10
m. c. . . .......... ...........•..•.............. 150.00 2 .5 v. -l0A .,6v.· kv. _•...... . .... 2 .95
8A 7 .95 1.5 V . C.T.-30 am p . 7."
29.00
CONSTAN T VOLTAG E TRA NSF., .500 wott .
1400 v. no C.T. 100 m o ., 6 v.-4 omp., use tw o : or
RECEIVERS 1400 v.·200 mo . fu ll wove ... . . .• . . . . . _. . . 2 o r 6 .50
I RECO N DITIO NED) 8.50 -e , C.T.-4.50 mo., 750 -e , C.T.-2oo mo., and
6 v.- 2 amp., .5 v.-3 omp., .5 v.-6 omp. . ... 4 .50
COLLINS 7.5AI . 220.00 1100 v. no (.T.-100 mo ., 71h v.-4 omp., use two
HQ ·129-X $125.00 N.C.-98 . 85.00 fo r 1100 v.-2oo mo. f ull wave 2 for 5 .50
N.C.· 12.5 115 .00 SX-28 . 95.00 MO DUL ATiO N TRAN Sf ., 200 wo tt mu ltimotch . 18 .00
N.C.- 109 135.00 N .C. ·120 , • .5.5 ·30
SX·71 139.00 mc. _.. _.•...•.• 65.00
S·38-E 39.00 S-.53-A indo 6 mtr.
HAMMARLUND SUPER: PRO with 11 0 v , A.C. supply
58.00
110.00
MISCELLANEOUS
S·27, AM-fM, 27-14.5 m.e., 11 0 v . 75 .00 G .E. 25 wo tl omolifier, 6 tube . I 15 .00
4.50 m.c., FM, RCA C IlU-1A, new . 40.00 T8S Rece iver, 60-80 rn.c., 11 0 v .- 518 .00 , Xmitte r . . 24 .00
GONSET COMMUNICATOR III , 6 m lr . 189.00 ARC.3 llmitter, receiver, suppl y, ee e t. bOll . 75 .00
GONSET G -33, .5-3 4 m .c., new ......•.•....•.... 85 .00 DAE-l : D.f. receiver ond loo p ..... ...•. .... .•.. 3.1.00
8. C. 344-0, 1.50-1.500 k.e., 11 0 v , . . 49.00 CO LLI NS t ype P.T.O., 600-800 k.c . .. . . . . . . . . . • . . 19.00
RAO·2, .3- 17 m.c., 11 0 v . 39 .00 8.C. 645, llm itter -re c., fo r 420 m.c. . . 19.00
IlBM, 2 -20 rn.c , 110 v . 49.00 fREQ . SHIFT ADAPTO R, RCA -CfA ·4.5, new . 65 .00
APR.4, 38-1000 m .c . 125.00 P.M. speoker, no vy outdoor t yp e , 10" dia., co se . . 7 ."
GONSET M081LE CON VERTER, 10-20 ·15 ml r . 24 .00 LINK, )l(mitter-re ceiver, 1.50 m .c., xte l . 35.00
IlME, MC-.53 M08ILE CON VERTEIl, 2 -6-10 mlr . 29.00 .500 wott vertce, 110 V . or 220 V • • •• • • •• • . • • • • • • • 12.00
GO NS ET MOB ILE CONVE RTER, 3 ·30 m.c . 24 .00 APIl -l / APR.4 Tu' s, 40·90 m .c.·5 18.00, 300-1000 m .c. 24 .00
SONA Il MO BILE Il ECEI VER, 10 -20 -7.5 mtr . 29 .00 8.C. 375 t un ing u n its, new-53.50, used ; . 2 .50
GONSEl M081 LE CONVEIlTER, 6 mfr. _ . 24.00 freq . me'er, No v y LM type, new but Incomplete,
GO NSET MOBILE CONV., 1.6-4 m.c. & 3 .6-6 m.c . 24.00 le ss cover co nd., lllol, tubes • .•... - . . • .. • . • . . . . 9.00
CENTRAL ELECTRONICS DQ, Q m ultipl ier . 24.00 CO A X, RG-B/U .52 ohms, 50 ft. w ith 2 p lug s, new
DRAKE Q ' X'er, Q mult iplil'r . . . .. • . . . . .. . .. .. . . .. 19.00 se o led pocks . 4 .50
TBY Xmitter · lle c. or T8 X . 24 .00
TG-34 · A Keye r 524 .00, Instruct og ro p h . 18 .00
TRANSMITTERS Si9nol generators, 1·72 , 100 k.c.·32 m.e. . . .. • . .. . . .
Teletype receiver, Incl. 11 tubes & pow e r supply ..
19.00
24 .00
( RECO N DITI O N ED I Wilco)l( re ce ive r, F· 3 or CW-3 ..• .. .• .•.• .••.. .. .. 19.00
LAKESHOR E Pho se ma sfe r II with VFO . . . ... . . .•. . $225.00 RU-16 re ce iver with 6 lub e s . 4 .95
JOHNSO N Viking Chollenger •. • ..... .. ... ... . . .. 99.00 B. C. AR-231 receive r wi th 6 tubes · 4 .95
WRL Globe Chief . . • • . • • • • • • • • • . . • . . .. . . .. .. ... 49 .00 R.f . Wo ttmete r, 15 /60 wott, AN /URM -43A . 30.00
HEATH CO. oX -100 . • .. . • . . ... . . . . . . . . . . ... . .. _ 160.00 D.F. re ceiver MN -26 o r 8 .(.-433 ........ . .......• 15.00
SONAR CFe, Exciler-VFO, 80-40 mtr _. _ . 25.00 8 .(. 906-0 f re q . meter, 1.50-225 m.c..•... ........ 7 .95
Price s ere ba sed on {eir- reletlve value s. some it e ms Me new e nd some Me used .
Encl ose s uffi c jen ~ po ste q e . e_c ess wilt be retu rned.
-
our eyes, let's get to work. First, blow some Fire up your receiver and tu ne around on
of the heavier encr ustations of dust off old the commercial freq uencies until you fi nd a
code osci lla tor. Hook the bug to it and plug s ta t ion r unning arou nd twenty to twenty-five
it into the wall socket. \Vh oops ! There went words per minute wi th tape sending. If you
t he fu se! Now just replace it and the fried happen to have the type of receiver that tunes
filter condenser. only the ham bands, don't be d iscouraged ,
Once you have t he oscillator worki ng it is t here are ple nty of commer cials u sing t hese
time to ad j ust your bug'. F ir st , check t he ad- freq uencies too .
j ust ment of the pivot bearings on t he dot arm- Nov..· that you've found on e, listen to the
a t u re. These should be loose enough to allow dots. Cock your ot her ea r t oward your oscil-
the arm to move freely in a horizontal direc- lator and punch th e dots on your bug. Adju st
tion between the two stops but there sh ould the weights on the dot armature until they are
be very lit tl e vert ical play. Next , move t he t he sa me speed a s the ta pe. If t hey seem too
weig hts ou t t o the end of t he dot armature heavy or light after th is maneuver, a slight
and tighten them secu r ely. Loosen the right adj ust me nt of th e spa cing between the dot
hand dot armature stop adju stment. Operate cont a cts will remedy thi s. Of course, if you
the armature with your left hand and set the are lucky enough to have your own tape ma-
stop so that when the p addle of the bug is re- chine, you can forget about the above system
lea sed , t he a r mat ure damper st ops all a rma - an d check your b un ag ainst its sendi ng. W e
ture vibration at t he in stant it comes to re st all know t hat a da sh is s up posed to be three
agains t the sto p. Screw down the locknut and times a s long a s a dot. Remember this and
take a drag on your. cig a r ette. Relax, you get your la test copy of "73" off the shelf and
should never have to make this adju stment practice sending t ext from it. Try to make
agai n. Now set t he left hand a rmature stop your fi st a s identical a s you ca n to t a pe se nd -
so th at the ti p of the armatu re t ravels in ap- ing and don 't worry about picki ng up speed.
prox imately a half inch arc. On e of the common faults of some bug tw id-
\Vith th e dot armature pushed over against dlers is that they send their dots at sixt y
the left hand stop, screw the adju stable dot wpm and their dashes a t twenty. Speed will
contact up until it touches the spr ing contact. come with pr-actice.
Check to see that th ey align perfectly, t hen You 've no doubt not iced that between us we
back the adj ustm ent off again. Operate the haven't eve n menti oned trying your bug out
dot armature and adjust the contacts until on the air. I know you're anxi ous to give it a
you can hear approximately ten good clean whirl bu t please think of the guy who would
dots before the armature quits bouncing. Lock ha ve to try and unscramble your fir st efforts.
the adjustment and relax again. Set the da sh Listen arou nd for awhile and you'll find the
cont act s pa cing and spring tensions to your ty pe of cha racter who ha s learned to sen d
liking and we're ready to g ive the lit tle ra scal CQ and his call very n eatly on hi s bug. Th en
a tri al twiddl ing. listen to what happens when he comes back
The- proper way to handle the paddles is up to a call. li e sends 6·s for d's and b's, i-n for
to: you. Of course, there's no way out of using t, etc.• etc. The point is that you certainly have
your t humb on the dot s ide. Fo r the da sh more respect for you r repu tat ion a nd th at of
side, pick a fi nger that's handy and comfort- your st at ion than to get on the a ir before you
able a nd relax your arm. The secr et of good can handle yours. It may be boring but keep
clean sendi ng on your bug is to keep your at it with the oscilla tor an d practice, but t he
arm and wrist relaxed and use a smoot h com- practice you get in t his manner will make the
bination of wrist and finger motion, plus di fference bet ween the s mile of appreciation
rhythm. A good exercise is to sit and practice whe n an other ham t une s you r sig na l or h a ving
sen ding a se r ies of V's. him la ugh a s he tunes aw ay from "that Li d !"
~~~I
appearance. Ideal gift . For
can, doors , equip., boats. P.P. within 7 days. No COD's
please. Enclose cheek or
plenes, etc . Beautiful design
of world available in place
~
r. "(~iI M.D. Designate world design
af state fer Canadian and ..::::::-- ~= if desired . Ask for quote on re-
DX Amateurs. 4 ,1 producing your club insignia .
40 • 73 MAGAZINE
at
ZIMeo
THEFT ALARM
URits line 6 posit. bp ,.itt..
,,,teet 'Iur "Ifi, lur mOllllt!d DI ceramic cDil finn ,
10 cars, hats Jlld trucks Mod. 4/111 dnicned for ne
win- lime.'s "'r,lu r with two B07's Dr 6146's (in par-
,roof situ ,'arm. Unit allel). Freq. Range 3.5 to 211.1 me;
consists of ~amllu proof siren ..nd Jatcllina: relay, key-operated Mod. 4/112 is dl!Sicned for us.
on/off SWitch and 6 push button alum switches See QST with single 801 or 6146. Handles
Jan. ~61. Pile 27. • up to 60 w. Range: 3.5 to 29.7 me.
Complele kit. 12 VDe 59 95 Mod. 4/111 or 4/112 , nch $4.95
S, 24, 32 VDe & 115 VAC models
..., .-
anilaille '" ,.ecial order•
PRECISION PlANETARY.VERNIER
far exceptionally fine tuning
24 HOUR CLOCK
Superb craftsmanshIp by Jackson Bros.
at Eneland. Ball bearing drive, V4" 24 hr. chrome plated I"
dla. shaft. lV," long. 6:1 ratio, metll waii crock. Inner dill
Vy n for fine tuning. Easily adapt· with south polar proJection
able to any shllt. Comparable map of world Indicates time
~:::~~Y~'I:u:e - $5.15,
around world. Polar proJec·
tren dial adjustable for varl·
• Amateur Net $1.50 ea. ous time zones. ShPI. wt.
Shown 10 for $13.50 2 Ibs.
3Pproximatelyactual Amateur net S8.47
tax inc.
220V. SO cycl e model. .•.•• .• • ••. 9.95
COMANCHE
SIGN
Controllable, illuminated
sill that tells the XU
and laests Jau're traes-
Can ;;~_:.;:.:.::~~~~~
"Wonder Bar" 10 Meier Antenna MiWII. Cats
lI.cklTla" ORM.d OWIf
As featured in Hoy. 1956 OST. Complete with B It. W III,. ript ilt, nil of altena
3013 Mlnlductor. Only, It. long for 10 meters. cllalle-"er rtilY fir cntrolled
Wt. Sibs, "ON THE IIR" sillf.1 wlln XMTG. RelY)' laule .11 steel u.
Amateur Net $7.85 smcliol wiD Ilandsome IIlack or Iray hked filislt. Cia tie lied
01 desk" blllet.p " maullled directly '1 w.lI. DilleuiDIS 11W
"ICI 31/2" lIilll I 3" deep. Specify desired filis' il bllck If ITt)'
Versalile Miniature Transformer Ind operatine nltaee: Ii or 12 VOC, or 110 IC.
Amateur net
$6 •9 5
Same as used in W2EWL SSB Rl( - March
1956 QST. Three sets of CT windings for
a combination of Impedances: 600 ohms,
5200 ohms, 22000 ohms. (By using eenter- MAil ORDERS PROMPTLY PROCESSED
taps the impedances are ouartered.) The
Ideal t"nsformer for a SSB transmitter. SAME DAY SHIPM~NT FROM STOCK
Otller uses: rnterstase, transistor, high
Impedance choke, line to grid or plate,
etc. Size only 2" h. I ¥4" W. I ¥,," d.
New and fUll, shielded.
Amateur Net SI.39
3 lor S3.49 10 lor S10.75
IRROW Authorized distributor of HEATHKIT equipment
..
Semi-Conductor Style
A I Newland W2 1HW
EVANS OFFERS
COMPLETE SERVICE
the current t ren d towards miniaturi-
W IT H
zatio n a nd the a ttract ive pr ice of s ilicon
• To HAMS - - • By HAMS
(12 licensed e mpl o ye e s)
diodes, we now can co nst r uct a sm a ll inexpen- • EQUIPMENT a nd COM PON ENTS
sive sem i-cond uct or noi se clipper. A s sh ow n (Hom - He ctr c ni c • Ele ctri cal)
in F ig. 1, the pre-fabricated clipper is s m a ll • TRADE · INS
enough to conveni ently fit i nto a printed circuit (o n new or used units)
t ype radi o. If you do not care fo r the pre-fab- • TIME PAYM ENTS
ricated version, you may wire t he component s jrle ..ibl e , finonced ourselves)
in directly, a s they are all sm a ll and se lf sup - • ENG IN EE RING DEPARTMEN T
porting. (bac king a ll equ ip men t sa les)
In selecti ng the diode, we are interested in • RECONDITION ED EQUIPM ENT
its back r esist ance and a value of a t least 100 largest in ven to ry in the Northeast
megohms is desired . T he back resistance may • EXP ERIENC E· • • 26 years as :
be ca lcul a ted by di vidi ng the P IV by the ba ck
current . T he two latter values can be obtain ed "YOUR FRIENDLY SUPPLIER"
from the publi shed cha r a cte r ist ics of t he diode .
\Ve mention t he foregoin g to p reven t the build-
er from s pe nding unn ece ssary time looking for
t he exact diode that we used .
It is s ugg ested t hat th e va lue of t he capaci-
tor C1 be found e xperim entally aft er the un it
is in o pe r a t ion . A valu e between .001 and
.005 is s ugg ested . In the schem a t ic, we show
a .005. In t he photo of th e actual u nit , a .001
is show n . In cr e a sin g t he value will incr ea se the
clipping- a ction. Excessive clipping will clip
too much audi o. If you desire t o make provi-
l CUT THIS OUT'
si ons for s w it ch ing the clipper in and out,
a s ingle pole single throw sw itch connected W ell , you d on't rea lly have t o cut this page.
a cross t he di ode is s a t isf a ctor y. W hat we want you to do is let us know which
N ote : The unit show n in photo is l "x % ". 73
articles In 73 you found most interesting .
W inner gets edra money and all that. Helps
us give you whot you li ke in the future too.
Num ber at Ieest t he fi rst five best liked articles.
,,,..---- ----, I
DETECTOR
................. ...........
, I
,
, I
,
,1-
,.J'' - - Tra nsl<'lt ion --Sq uaw k Box
I - -Xsisto r G OO
- - I a n Interfer
--Up Front
- -Don't Bug
--~S u p e r re g e n --V<'Iric<'lp
T= - -De bug ging - - Noise Li m
- - 8 0M DXing
- -Top Load ing
- - CW Xmissio n - - DC Me te r Amp
VOL.... - -All Band Ant - -Moto rol a Test
CONTROL
--IDouble PS V. - - Propagotio n
- -Po tch Petch --Sine YB
- - ,432 me Xsistcr - -Save- Lee rn
- -2M Xmlr - -F;le QSO',
L -' -+A""'"
1
\
'"" >
"CQ IlX80:' This is a familiar ca ll heard on Sout h Afri can st at ions operate between 3690
the low end of the 75 meter phone ban d d ur- and :WOO. Th e New Zealand, A ustralia, Cen-
ing- the winter seas on. Usually one th ink s of tral a nd South American boys are a pt to ap-
DX on 75 meters to mean a contact two s ta tes pear anyw here from 3HOO kc all the way up
away, but we mean a cont act in excess of 3000 to and including our phone band. F or the
miles such a s Europe or Asia or some far most part the Un it ed States st a tions transmit
exot ic country. In ot he r words OX on 75 meters between 3800 and 3830 kc on lower s ideba nd.
mean s the same a s it does on 20 or 15. Working Most of t his work is done on aingle sideb and
OX on 75 takes a s pecial type of operation, using lower sideba nd, but is n ot necessary
if you want to work OXCC as fa st as pos- limited to SS B as ma ny of the DX stat ions
s ible t hen you had better st ick to 10, 15 or worked are operating AM a nd have a good de al
20; but if you are interested in doing it the of success. A receiver with select a ble sideba nds,
hard way, 75 is your band. If you are inter- good select ivity and sensit iv it y is almost a
es ted in working DX r eliably, it is very de- necessity due to t he very high interference on
s ir able to ha ve some so r t of vertical antenna the DX st at ions frequ ency.
and medium to high power, Although when T he received s ig-na ls usually ra nge from S l
conditions are good almo st any antenn a con- to S8, therefore some sor t of notch filter or
fi g u r at ion will produce excellent r esult s. Q m ultip lier is qu ite helpf ul in eli min ating
A great deal of exp erimenting- ha s gone in to dead carriers and C\V st at ions that appear in
75 meter DX anten nas both for tra nsmitting- the form of interference. As far a s eliminat-
and r ecei ving. T o date the most sa tisf actory •
ing A:\I or SSB interference th ere is not mu ch
all-rou nd a ntenn a h as been a sl oping vertical
antenna. I n or der to cons t r uct thi s antenna
you mu st have one high ma st preferabl y in
the 100 foo t region, a nd st r ing' a di pole to-
ward s the groun d at a 30° to 40° angle. If
necessa r y, because of li mit a ti ons in height,
the dipole may have loading coils at the ends. •
This type of antenna will be directive towards
t he low end with a front-to-hack ratio of 15
to 25 db depending upon the angle of the r e-
ceived s ig na l. It ha s been fo und that a tru e
vertical ha s t oo Iow an angle for most 75 met er
DX work . T he sta nda r d 75 meter (quarte r
wave) high fl at d ipole un der most conditions
will do qui t e well.
:\lost of t he European st ations oper ate fr om
3780 to 3800 a ltho ugh if r equested they will Ga rland Tomlin KIIDR and his medium power
go down into t he CW band about 3600 kc. The OX final amplifier
with
\
THE·FREQUENCY results, ••
Install a Telrex anten na . .. dollar for
doll ar better in eve ry way! Antenn a
SI NC E
1921 rex LABORATORIES
systems from $6.95 t o $1 2 ,000 .00 ASBURY PARK 40, NEW JERSEY, U.S.A.
A Transistorized
DC Meter Amplifier
Roy A . M cC <'.lrt hy. K6EAW
737 W. Mexrim Ave.
Fu llerton . C a lif.
RAGrICALLY everyone has an inexpensive to 115" F was less than ten percent.
P0 -1 rna meter around the sh a ck or in the The tran si stors u sed were a pair of 2N l38's
junk box. By using this sim ple ampl ifier cir- with Bet a of 130 and l eO of 6 u A. Other su it-
cu it t he sensitiv ity can be increased to 10 able types would be the Raytheon 2N467 or the
mic roamps f ull scale, a nd th e zero can be ad- General E lectric 2N508.
just ed to the cen ter or right end a s well as A n inex pensive t rim pot was used fo r R5
the u sual left en d. B y a dd ing a fe w selected s ince it is a " set a nd f or g et " control. A screw-
m ultiplier res istors and a ra nge swi tc h a volt- dr iver adj u st pot was used f or R3 since it is
meter with 100,000 ohm s/volt can be quickly also a set-up control. The zero set , R 2, and the
a ssembled. Or, if u sed with the capacity meter switch 8 1 are all that are requ ired to be u sed
in the October '60 issue, a s low a s 10 mmfd in normal operation, and could be combined
full sca le can be measured. Field Strength if desired. TR1 and TR2 should be mounted
meters al so benefit by the addition of a linear close together and away from any sources of
current amplifier with a gai n of 100. heat if t he ampli fier is mou nted in a ny ex ist-
The circuit is the f amiliar b alan ced ampli- ing vacu um t ube gear. T he m eter u sed had a
fier, w ith the addit ion of bot h pos iti ve and resi stance of al most exactly 100 ohms. Use of
neg a t ive fe edback. T he positi ve f eedback ob- me te rs w ith a different r esistan ce ma y r equ ire
tained w ith Rl and R3 in Fi g. 1 increases the adding a sl ight am oun t of fi xed res istance in
gai n of the circu it by a sli gh t amou nt to com- series in order to avoid changing the other
pensate for transi stors which have a bit less circu it constants . Obv iou sly the iron-va ne type
gain than desired. Negative feedback is pro- meters which require seve r al volts for opera-
vided by R4 and R6 and is controlled with R5 tion cannot be used .
to set the gain to exactly 100. The two tra n- :\' othing is ever obtained free and the h id-
sistor s are first select ed a s closely matched den price he r e is the increase in im peda nce.
as is conve nient for Bet a and Ic O. Fu r ther T he ci r cuit tu r ned out to have an input i m-
bala nci ng- is done w ith R3 and R2 . R2 is also pedance of 8400 ohms, a s co mp ared t o the
used to set th e ze ro posi tion of the pointer. or iginal 100 ohms of the basic met e r move-
T he battery, Bl, can be a r eg ul ar or penli ght me nt . F or a current gai n of 100, we h ave the
fla shl ight cell, s ince the circuit is relatively in- impedance increa se of a lmost 100. A ctu al
se nsit ive to wide changes in the voltage. Zer o measured voltage sensitivity was 84 mv at
drift with a temperature change fr om 75" F 10 p'a full seale, which is still much better than
a popular 100,000 ohm /volt multi meter.
T he init ial set -u p consists of setting R3 to
ZERO SET a pproximately 10K, adj usting R 2 to g ive a n
on - scale readi ng, t hen shorti ng the input
0-1",,, a nd noting the r ead ing. R emove t he short , set
sr U:3 to t he noted read ing, t h en se t R2 t o zero
'"0' TRI- TR2
2N138A
the met er and apply a known cu rrent or volt-
"' 0' age. A separate fla sh light cell and a 300K
BALA N'CE ohm resistor will su p ply 5 ua . R 5 is then ad-
:"'- 8 1 justed to give the deaired gain for 10 IJ-a or
- l 5_
"
'00 "roc • 6 ",,,
..... 5 fla . The controls have some interaction so
nil adju stments should be repeated several
times until the circuit is bala nced and cali-
bru ted . Th e in put im pedance s houl d be a llowed
1'0 1" in cnlcu lu t.l ng low voltage multi plie rs . 73
4 711I lWATT
0 6
,0 = -.\A
,
... ,,
47MlWATT
,
-- -.
,
SPEAKER
M otorola Test
Set T BE unit pictured is a handy gadet to have
around on one's workbench w hile con-
verting t he popula r Fl\1 two-way rad io sur plus
eq uipmen t to th e s ix a nd two meter a ma te ur
frequencies.
Be ryl Dassow W9 HKA Thi s used out-dated commercial gear is d ri ft -
RF D 2. Clifton, Illi nois ing' into our amateur cha nnel s in an eve r i n-
creasing r a t e a nd a s im ple switch box is cer-
t a inl y a we lcom e a dd iti on fo r alignment checks .
A r eg ul ar test set can be obt a ine d f or some-
th ing a litt le ove r $150, however th is is u suall y
out of the question even to most Civ il Defense
or g a niza tions.
T he unit a s descri be d was design ed wit h t he
idea of checki ng the al ignm ent of the Motoro la
;W-D a nd !:t V un its of which our loca l CD is
equip pe d. T he older 30-D u nit s provide a meter
switch and a ll that is necessar y is a good 0-5 0
micro ammeter. However the 5V and la ter
uni t s pr ovid e a 11 pi n test socket in both t he
r ece iver a nd tran smitte r sections f or ext e r na l
mete!" switching and hence the need f or th e
sw itc h box ar-rangement.
Ot her features of th is unit are t he push-to-
test s wit ch , micro phone j a ck and rf j a ck for
overall check of the t runsmitter output.
Ma ny othe r ide as will no doubt co me to th e
rea de r's m ind pa rt icularl y those who have
s pent some time in converting t hese u nits . F or
exam ple, a transi stor ized crysta l osc illa tor
could be wired in for checking- purposes. Th e
exte rna l spea ke r co uld be m ou nt ed intern ally
by us ing a la rge!' box.
W hil e a meter movement of a h igher b a s ic
range may be used with almost equa l result s,
the 0 to 50 microummete r wi ll g-i ve s im ilar
read ings a s described in t he Motorola m a in-
tcn a nce ma nual s.
(Continued on pa g e 50 J
Receiver Transmitter
# 1-3rd IF G rid Mod ulat or G rid
# 2- ht Limiter 1st Quadrupler G rid
# 3- 2nd Lim ihr Trip ier Grid
# 4-Disc. (Se c) I st Doubler Drive r
# 5- Disc. ( Pri) Doubler Driver G rid
# b-Multiplier G rid P. A. Gri d
# 7- 81." P. A. Plate
# 8- Sla nk B Plus
50 • 13 MAGAZINE MA RC H 1961
New Products
. . . the ed itor
MARCH 1961 73 M A G AZ IN E • 51
-
(New Prod ueh from page 51) mike. I d on't know why it bugs me so . . . a fter
a ll, I already have a perfectly good mik e that
One of ou r inqu ir ing repor ter s st uck their
I've been using' fo r five years now .. . a little
no se in t o Ba rry Electroni cs and di scovered a
S h ure hand mi ke th a t I won out at the Day-
couple interesting su rp r-ises. F ir st of a ll the
ton Hamve n tion in 1956. I su p pos e that I
1961 Ba rr)' Green S hee t is off the presses and
mig-ht part with the new o ne . .. probably give
is gua runtecd t o ma ke any r ed blooded ham
me n ightmares. T ell j'OU what, I'll put t ogether
d ro ol. This a nd the new Inter nati onal Cr ysta l
a quick New Produ ct s Review for thi s issue
cata log r a t e a s the best literatur e o f the new
of i 3 and then we'll offer the m ike a s a prize
yea r that we've see n for the hom e-brew type
to t he s ideba nd o p that sends in the most
ham, excluding th e 440 page reference work
subscriptions b y Ap r il 5th. One catch . .. t he
put out by Allied.
winner ha s to u se the mi ke on the ail' a nd
A lden P r od ucts informs us t hat sev era l of
send m e a let t e r telli ng what the re ports were
our read ers ha ven't yet bought their operating
on it. H ow's that? BOj'! I f eel better already
bench. Thi s we can on ly a scribe t o an ove r-
s ig-h t . You must have f org ott en t o send for . . . bu t g ee, I' m s u re goin g t o mi ss that peachy
literature and sec what a d eal they ha ve. Or m ike.
maybe ).'OU don't cure what your shack looks
like. T h is is one of the nicest operating tables New Books
we've eve r seen . O ne of our most consiat a n t con tr ibutors,
Shure Howa r d Pyle \ V70 E , ha s just become th e
proud author o f a Sams Photo fa ct book (NH P-
A letter came r olling in t he othe r day fr om 1) ca lled "Building Up Your Ham S hack." Thi s
;\11'. H . T . Harwood , the Advertising Ma na g er is a fine book for t he newcomer to ou r hobby
of Shure Brothers. )Olr. Harwood explained for it will acquaint h im with what he is going
that he had a r r a ng ed to send me, compliments to need in the way of equ ipment and will put
of S hure Brother s, and at the r equest of B ill t hi ng'S in to per s pective. T here is a chapter on
S imo ns W 9YXJ , a model 440S L Si ngle-S ide- receiver s, one on tra nsm itter s a nd one on
ba nd Microphone. a n t en na s. Thi s is a well illu strated 128 page
\VeIl, here it wa s. I'd been fearing the day book and se lls for only $2.50. Thi s book will
when so meone would se nd so met hing directly probably be avai lable through most parts di s-
t o me f or a "test ." I put the letter a side and tributors and the Radi o Bookshop.
tried t o forget it. Th en, a day later, it arrived. Gernsback Library has just com e ou t with
With a sin k ing he a r t I cou ld feel all my a ltruis- a book that I wou ld have r eally enjoyed when
t ic plan s di sintegrating a s cu pidi ty took over. I I wa s ten to fifteen . It is called "Fun With
wa nted th a t microphone . I opene d t he box El ectr icity" and it has a b unch of experime nts
and screwed t he mike to t he st a nd . . . I had that you or your kid ca n have a ball with . T he
to have that mike . . . gad, what a beauty! I price is $2.65 (GL-83.) Thi s shows you how to
fel t all the sym ptoms of drug withdrawal make a sim ple d e motor, an a c generator, a
every time I even t hou g ht about send ing thi s solenoi d, a s pa r k co il, a Tesl a co il, etc. Litera-
fabulou s mik e to someone who cou ld d o a n ture like thi s a rou nd th e sha ck might get more
adequate job of testing it. of a r ise out of the j r op than anything else
The rationa lization s ca me t hi ck and fa st. you've thought of.
Wh a t kin d of a test can a nyone d o on a m ike Sa m s has a new book on "Eliminating- Man-
anyway? About the best you ca n do is repeat ylade Int erference" which will solve problem s
the manufacturer's literature and give the out- for a lot of hams. A lot of us r un into this
put level and frequ ency range. Beyond that mi sery now and then and wi sh for som e text
all you ca n sa y is that you u sed it on the air to help us through the difficulty. Thi s is th e
and the fell ows sai d you sou nded g ood. S hure n ewest (a nd the only, t o my knowledge) ref-
wou ld be sa tisfi ed with a s im ple new products erence on th e su bj ec t now available. $2 .95 .
release, I wo uld n't even have to dummy up a The book is quite thorough . .. 160 pages.
"tested" r eport. Another of our author s ha s been snea k ing
So f ar I had been able t o avoid all this some time away from hi s n writi ng. The re-
mental torture by having equipment ship ped su lt , publi shed by Sams, is the "Seco nd -C lass
directly t o ot her ham s f or t hem to t est. A s Radiot el ephon e Licens e Handbook" by Edward
long a s it didn't get into my hand s I didn't f eel Noll W3FQJ . The $3 .95 book ha s ever y t hing
too bad . Well, I felt bad ... but I could st a nd you'll need to get the license. This is a lot
it. There were times when it got rough . . . for more than the usual question a nd an swer
in stance when D on Sm ith W 3 U Z N sent in a manual, w ith a lmost half of the book devoted
p hoto of hi s station with a He ath T e ne r, Sixer to genera l in f orm a t ion a nd technical discu s-
and Twoer all st a cked o n top of one a nother. sion. The other ha lf covers the actual exam
T ha t wa s traumatic. I really wouldn't mind and give s details on regulation s. Thu s th e book
ot he r fell ows gettin g' all that gear free . . . not o nly will shep he rd you through the FCC
if I just didn't know abou t it. exam, but will g ive you practical operating and
So here I am with a brand new desirable maintenance da ta t o st a r t you in th e fi eld.
,r:
~:
'.,.-.-...-,
ft.:';" ::~: v·
.. 3
,.j!.
I .
III
.II.I.I~ ••
---- ------------
MESSAGE TO NON-SUBSCRIBERS:
--- - -- ----------
SUBSCRIBE!
- ----
Distributors tell us over and over of t he dozens of fellows who com e in ti me afte r t ime
lookin g for a copy of 73. Gloryowsk y! If you wou ld s pend a fra ct ion of all that effort a nd
ma il us a miniscule check yo u 'd make both of u s a whole lot ha ppi er. Ba ck is sues are get-
ting sca r ce : incl ude 50¢ each, while they last.
Na me Call $3 yr.
" , .. th e hand le he re is Sehast ian; what's 'eye-ball' ) QSO's. Tn add ition, I'd like to a t-
you r name old boy?" Bad enough on p hone tem pt to clear lip th e apparent m ystification
hu t imag ine spelling it ou t 0 11 C \ V! Yet w hich so many h am s have wh en some rela -
there are mall Y ju st as tou gh to tra nsmit ami tivclv •
'old-timer' casuallv• savs
•
". . , sine hr
for the rccc lviu g operator to interpret. N ames XX , , ," or some sim ila r group of two let-
like Ji m, Joe, Doc, T om and even Bill and ters. Let's find ou t w hat th is "si ne" busin ess
o ther sim p le one-syllab le contractions aren't is a ll abou t , , , shall we?
too had but th ey too ca ll he even simp lified As far as I can determ ine ( I'm not that
a hi t. Iut cnnediatc names, genera lly of two ancient, you know!) , it all started shortly
sy lla bles like m y OWI1 , arc not too much of a after Sam Morse invented th e electric tel e-
p roblem either hut, part icul arl y in C \ V op- gra ph in the middle 1800·s. Messages w ere
era tion, still a bit long to spell out. For ex- soon fl yin g ( well, stumbling anvwovl ) along
am ple, ". . . handle here is H owa rd", E igh teen the th in cop per th reads st re tched from pole
code characters to trans mit. l seldom use it; to pole uud from city to city. As th e telegraph
my custo mary p rocedu re is to say ". .. sine began to prove increasinulv p ra ctical and
YB .. :'. Onl y six characters b u t it tags me speedy, m essages b ecame of in creasing im -
as an iud ividuul apart fro m my sta tion call portance . Often messages were filed whi ch
which is i SSUl ' <1 to cover the gear itself, not dea lt wit h impressive transact ions , fin ancial
the opera tor! ~I y eq uipme nt is \ViOE ; I'm an d otherwise. An imp roperl y sent or re -
I1 0 t ! I'm "YB", owner-operator of station ce ived message could, and freq uently did , in-
\V70E. '1'0 11 wouldn't in troduce a sh ip board volve serious losses to either the sender or
operator to someone by savi ng. "T h is is re cipient or ha th . O ften the telegraph CO Ill-
KUHS ( or wha tever his call letter might h e ) p un y had to 'ta ke the hump' in th e wa y of
would you? Nor a b roadcast stat ion operator lawsu its which very often proved plent y
h v th e cull lette rs of the station at w hich he costly . Th ey in tu rn cast about for some m eans
works. More p ro perly, you would say , "T his of recovery from th e operator o r operators
is D ick of 1\:0\10". T he sa me in ham prac- on their circuit who were responsihle for
tice ; inform al int roduct ion of m yself for ex- errors in tran sm ission or reception or both .
amp le, woul d 1I0 t he, ". , . thi s is \V70 E" ; Hut whut operator (s)? T elegraphers chan ged
correct ly it wo uld he somethi ng like this .. . shifts, swapped around ami ad ded to the
" this is YB of \V70E". Sec the point? Never- confusio n of id en tificati on ill other ways. He-
th eless trad ition and long usage has tagged co verv• of an y• finan cial loss from an operator
th e indiciduals wi th the cu ll let ters of an inert d ue to his error was, o f course, a rather for-
bunch of eq uip ment ra ther than a more per- lorn hope on th e part of the telegraph com -
sonal idcnttficntiou. No th ing wro ng with it I p:lIl y. T elegrapher's pay was low and , in the
suppose as the vast majority of ham stations ea rly days, a good many of them were "d rift-
are man ned h y only one operator who, ill most ers" and p retty good examples of th e old
eases, is the sta tion ow ner as wel l. The p ra c- adage , " . .. a rolling stone gathers no moss
tice will no dou bt cont inue; it has gone on for .. . ". Xove-rthcless the teleg raph com pa n ies
too man y yea rs now to cha nge overn ight. d ecided to attem pt to do someth in g abou t it ;
"Shades of Emil y Post" some of you wi ll thu s th e "s ine" was born. Where th e spellin g
say, "arc you trying to tell liS that we must originated is nnvbody's guess. It is pretty
obse rve formal social custo m rather tha n the obvious thou ght th at 'sine' was probabl y a
somewha t looser cn murudcrie of ham rad io?" c-ontraction, speakin g code- wise, of th e word
No t at a ll; handle it any wa y you like, All 'sign'. '1'0 11 'sign' a receipt, a letter, a check
I'm tryillg to d o is to point out a fl'w usa ges am i by so doing acknowled ge it. Telegraph
ill cou ru-ction with tudi viduul ide ntifi cation opera to rs were n-qui red to sigll for each IIl l'S -
w hich. whill' not necessarily confusing to the sugc received by making; th eir 'sig;lI attl rc' in
ham, can be Improved u pon both on-t ile-a ir code characters. TIl e sending opera tor wa s
and in face-to-face ( 1 hate the expression re q uired to p lace his sig nature on the fa ce
covers. $10.00
R199-GETTING STARTED IN AMATE UR RAD IO - Be re ns
(W2 PIK). Fu nd o me llfals for getting No vice License. $2.40
RADIO BOOKSHOP
R221 -BUILDING THI AMATEUR RADIO STATION - Bere ns 1379 Easl 151h Sir eel. Brooklyn 30, N. Y.
(W2 PIK). Sequel to ebcve. Everything you need to know
to build your first hom sta t io n. $2.95 (N.Y.C. add 3% lax)
x recent years the myth tha t it's cheaper to meters. Another fe llow 1 kn ow also has one
I buy Own to b uild has been gaining accep- of these beautifully styled instruments.
tance as fa ct among a g reat man y rad io am a- Beca use of TVI, he w as p ut off the air by a
teurs. Thanks to the prosperity wh ich our visiting F CC inspector.
country now enjoys, a large number of U .S. Almost every case of really objectio nab le
hams can alford to pu rchase the ultimate in spla tter I've heard on th e phone bands in th e
ch rome p lat ed kilowatts, p recision receivers last 3 or 4 years has resulted fro m over m odu-
and delu xe beam untcnuns. \ Vhile attem p ting lation of on e very pop ular transmitter model.
to emulate these fortunat e fellows, less ulllucnt Another well kn own produ ct puts a truly ob-
hams resort to all sorts of lud icrou s rationaliza- noxious signa l right in the midd le of the 160
tions in order to salve thei r consciences for meter Loran assignment when it is supposed ly
spend ing so mu ch un what is, afte r all, ouly tu ned to 7 ,~ meters. So you see, even though
a hobby. a lot of engineering kn ow how is behind the
O zzie (short for O strich ) Ham, the one who des ign of a commercial rig, now and then
prefers to bury his head in the sand rat her somewhere a long the prod uction line some-
than to look at unpleasant facts, will tell you body goofs.
that his new rig set him back only $200. H e H ig h Po wer H arry bought his costly com-
neglects to mention th at he had previously mercial rig because it is rated at 2000 watts
paid $150 for th e transm itter he traded in on PEP. An old time A~ l'er . H arry didn't read the
the new one a nd he happily ignores the $20 fine print which claims an output of only 300
to $30 carry ing charges he's going to donate watts on that mod e of transmission .
to the fin ance company as part of his time Hu rry Up H al says he's too busy to b uild.
payment . He ju st ca n't stay off the air long enough to
T rade-in Tommy has co nv inced himself roll his own . H al's forgotten that it 's possible
that, in the long run , home-brew eq uipment to derive a great deal of satisfaction from cre-
costs a Jot more tha n facto ry bu ilt gear. H e a ting something with a soldering iron and a
points out that nowad ays it is very difficult screw driver. In fa ct, buildi ng can he just as
to locate a bu yer for a used compos ite rig. much fu n as yakking on 75 w ith the natives
Furthermore , a dealer won't even consider of New H aven, Nashville or X utlev.
such equipment as a down payment on a fac- - y con-
1£ you've read this far, you've probabl
tory produced transmitt er. T ommy p refers to cluded that I'm one of those miserable old d ie
overlook the fact that the p arts fro m an old hard s who spends most of his tim e w rit ing
hom e built rig either fi nd their way in to a ncw nasty letters to ham magazines a bout the
transmitt er or else they are stored in the junk bumper crop of kn ob twisting nitwits who in-
box for futu re use. True , these parts won't habi t the a mateur band s these da ys. On the
bring much at resale, but to the ham who owns contrary, I believe it is a privilege to live in a
them they a re just as good as mon ey ill th e country w here so man y individ uals can truly
bank. Maybe even bett er, if you weigh infla- afford the fi nest ma nufact ured eq u ip ment that
tion caused p rice advances against bank in- mon ey can b uy. Fu rthermore, I'm proud th at
terest rates. my chosen hobby is one which p rovid es year
Cautio us Kenneth naivel y assumes that a kit 'round pay checks to hundreds of American s
or a factory wired piece of eq uipment is bound who a re em ployed lry receiver. tran smitter a nd
to p ut out a superior sig nal that won't get antenna manufacturers. H owever, I do feel
him in trouble with the F CC . \Vhilc th is is that a lot of newly h atched hams, the kind
usuall y true, a poor qualit y signal can be who've never wound a coil, held a soldering
generated by a rig carrying a famous man u- iron or bu ilt a beam, get too litt le pl easure for
facturer's label. A friend of mine, for examp le, each dollar th ey invest ill th e radio game.
ow ns a $400 transmit ter th a t wob bles all over ]f you ha ve a well padded bank account
th e place w hen amp li tude mod ulated 0 11 ·10 or if you live ill a small apart me nt 01' a house
62 • 73 M A G A Z IN E MARCH 1961
tra il er where you ca n't fi nd room to set up a
mod est workshop, factory built gem obviously
is th e ans wer to your requirements. On the
MONOBAND BEAMS
o ther hand , if you must think twi ce before
spend ing a dollar and if you can locate enou gh 10 METER-3 Elem ent • • $21.50
Model No. A28-3. boom 10' x 11h"
space for a small workbench somewhere in 10 METER--t Elem e nt • • $42.50
your hom e, I contend that it will pay you to Model No. A28 -.4. boom 18' x1 %;"
cons ider th e advantages of building as much 15 METER -3 Elem ent • • $32.50
Mode l No. A21-3 boom 12' x 1%;"
of your ham gear as possible . \Vhat are th ese full Sized 20 METER-2 Ele ment • • $45.00
advantages? Am on g th e morc important ones
a re the follow ing: •
W ide Spoced
Model No. AU·3. boom 10' x 1%"
20 METER-3 Ele ment • • $62.50
Mode l No. AU-3. boom 20'6".. 1% "
\VH EI\· YOU nUIL.D IT YO UH SELF YO U I :\' CH EASE
YO UH STORE OF P HACTICAL K:\' OWLEDG E. -S ome
•
Light Weight
See your d istributor o r w r ite f or
~fREE CATAl OG ",.'l'I
hams attempt to lord it over th eir Citizens __ ...••.••••.•_ ST.
Badio breth ren by boasting of the difficult
CUSHCRArl MANCHESTER N . H.
ever, a rat her insignifi cant drawback, because J. J. CANDEE CO. D.pl. MS
the fellow on the other end of a QSO isn't 501 No . V ict o r y Blvd., Burb';l n k , C al if.
interested in the appearance of yo ur rig. All
he cares about is how it sounds over the air. .•..•. ..... .......... .. ...........
Pho ne : Vittorio 9·2411 •
-
4 Calibrated
Wired ready to use,
not a kit
Me d el 4/ 103
- 6CL6 YFO
6CU Xtal Osc
VFO with
dial
$2 9.95
- 12AT7 Multiplier
5763 Output
(less t ub e s & xta l) 12 me Xtal$
Will drive an 832 or 2E26
This GelO!'H \' FO makes an ideal exciter or low power transmitter. Th e "FO opera tes on 18 me
and is mult iplied to 144 0 1(' . The xtal osc. opera ted Oil 12 me a nd multi plies li p 10 144 me. Ha ndy
for nel s, ope rating nea r ba nd edges, CA1\ )IAH S, etc . A set o f tubes for the r ig are only ...6.75.
)I ode! 4/102 Yf'O, 5 Lands (80-10.\1), a-sembled , wired, tested anti cal ibrated. Will drive a pair
of 807 ' ", or 6146'". Price, with di al, but le-e tubes : 29.95
P I Tu ning Coils. complete with Land chan ge swit ch . )Iodel 4/111 for usc with parall el 807\, or
6146"s a nd Mudd 4-/112 fur usc wi th ;;i ll ~d e 807 or 6146 (60 wans ) . T unc 80-10 met er". Coil is
l % " x 3=}'l " a nd mounts to 3}1" dept h . Price for either: $-'1 .95.
And this is just a tiny fr action of the int erestin g ~ t ll fT I' ve got around . How'd you like 10 rea lly
see some li;;,t ;;, of equ ipment a nd parts ? Drop me a line or drop in and che w the rag. . . . Ru ss
\V2Ur U. And hey, don't pa ss up th at Celoeo VFO, you' II love it.
The Curta Computer There are two si des p rinted of the cards.
The curd s are filed alphabetically a ccord ing
to the calls, and naturally the s ide with the
This. t he world 's smallest computer. is mode in (I
call s ig n is kept in s ig ht . So, here we go:
tiny factory up in t he mountains of liechtenstein. Al-
most unlcnown in t his coun try, t his is an incredible
Look a t the Fig. 1. The 'box' in the upper
inven tion. It will do everyth ing tha t 0 big d e sk type
ca n do, th o ugh it is only 2" in diamete r (2 ~!.l"
fo r the "big" Cu rt a) . If yo u hove to do a lot of J ohn. l:cl s i n}:i O!I2n-·
co lcu lo t ing in you r business and you woul d llke
something smaller or le ss ellpensive t ha n t he Mon - Bnd S SB PHO NE cw
roe or Frid e n. then send for lite rat ure . The " b ig" 3,5
,- 1-----'"'-;--1
I !
Curta has e leven Ice ys and will g ive em answer ac-
7 I 1 /1 / 151 Ix
curate to 1.5 dig ih. You can mu ltiply on 11 dig it
n um b er t ime s on 8 digi t nu mber a nd ge t you r on- I-To- 11LU,Q. X--Jl2Lai<7 'iX+£.8.L:lJ.
'-" /' 8 x
swe r to 1.5 p laces. Adds, sub t rach, m u ltip lies, d i-
1.2! 1/1/l5q x 7 / 6/ 60
v ides q uiclcly and accu rote ly. Talce s on ly a f e w
minutes to learn how to use. Rug g ed .
,
MA RC H 1961 13 MAGAZIN E • 69
THE MIRACLE IS POSSIBLE • THE IMPOSSIBLE CAN
BE DONE ADVERTISERS INDEX
ITS NEW, ITS COM PACT, ITS POW ERF UL,
ITS LOW IN PRI CE Ad Spec 71
PRICE Alden . . . . . . . .. ...... .... . 57
Algeradio 39
$39.95 Allied Ra dio . . . . . . . . . .. 73
N.t to Amot.un,
Campi.,. with Tube •.
5•• Your Dealer.
All t ronics-Howa rd . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 49
SEND MO NEY Amber Industr ia l . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 71
OROE Il:. A rrow Ele ctronics, Inc. . .. .... . . . 41
Price s Sub iect to
Cha nge without Barker & Williamson . . . . . . . . 47
Notice.
TUBE COMPLEMENT
Barry Ele ct ro ni c s 69
5763 finol Amplifier Ca llbook 65
6AQ5 Modulolor
6U8 Oscillator Multipli.r Call-D-Cal 40
12AX7 Speech Amplifier C a ndee . . . . . . . . . .. 65
EXCELLO ELECTRONICS PRESE.NTS .
A Ne w Lo w Pr ice V.H.f . Six Me ier Tra nsm,tte r wlred Central Electronics .. _. . . . . . . . 8
and te ste d w ith tube s. The Excello Mark II Six Me te r C lark .......... 55
Tro nsm itter is t he lo we st p riced six meter t ra nsm itter
o n t he morket today. Th is is no t a kit, but a co mplete
unit, read y to put o n th e a ir w ith a ny power sup p ly
Clegg . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . I
sup p ly ing 300 v, at 100 m.e. Columbia .. ... 67
TRANSMITTER FEATURES
Me te r In d icato r- Prov idi ng moni to ri ng of fi nal Tuni n g , C ushcraft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 63
G rid Dri ve and Mod ulation, a t a glo nce .
Tu ning Co ntrols-Tuning Contrals are a ll a n the fr a nt
Dale' s . . . . . . .. 45
Pa nel. Dra ke _ 7
Acce ss to Compon,:nls-Removoble Endosure gives ac-
cess 10 a ll Components. EICO _.. 5
T. V.!. Suppre ssion- T. V.1. Suppression is a ccomp lished Evans Radio . . . .. 43
by sh ie lding a nd design: . . . . " ..
Compoc t Size - Co mp lete size o f. urut IS '" x~ x6 mo.k- Excello 70
ing it one o f the Smo llest SIX Me te r Xmllters a vail -
a b le. Finney 35
Low Power Consu m pli on - 2 50 ·300 v , a t 75 m.O. 10 Gidge ts & Gadgets 51
Wa tts on the Ant e nna .
Gl obe Industr ies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Excello Electronics Co. , Inc. G onset C over II
196-10 116TH AVENUE • ST . ALBANS 12, N. Y.
LAurelton B-381)4 G raham _ 55
Hi-Par 71
Hou se of Antenna s . .... 68
Get Smart! International C rystal . . . . . . . 2
le arn
Build t hese and 13 other Ham Radi o Jeff- t ro nics 45
pieces of equipment wh ich KTV Towers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
the Easy Wa y
will enable you to learn
the in's and out's o f Rad io Lafayette Radio ......... 37
constr uct ion and ser vicing Le ktron ...... 63
lIa m gear. L-R Electronics . _. 55
LW Elect ronics ... ..... .. 53
R-F Signa l Ge nera to r McElroy ... . . . . . . . . . .. 65
AM XMTR Nationa l C over IV
A ll t he necessar y parts
Neil . .. . 47
and simple, easy to u n- Pete rsen C over III
dersta nd instructions ac- P&H 51
com pany each RTTA Radio Ama teur Ca llbook . 65
K it, wh ic h is desig ned
and engineered to meet
R-W Electronics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 68
th e most ri g id require. RTTA 70
me nte. Sho recre st .... .......... 49
Co rrespo ndence courses or residen t instruction a re
Spe ra 66
a va ila ble Ior bot h the beginner a nd for t he advanced Stella r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 49
s tuden t ill a ll phases of Ra d io and E lectronics. Subscriptions to 73 .. . .. . . .. . 55
for information write to: Tapetone 63
1--------------------------------1 Telrex .. . 45
!I Radio Television Training of Ame;tc~
52 East 19th Street New Yor. , N. Y.
!I Texas Crystals . . . . . . . . . . . .
US # I Electronics . . . . . . . . . . . . .
59
71
VHF-U HF Associate s . . . .. 67
I Name " . .. .. .. I Weste rn Radio (Neb raska) 67
I Address . .. . .. . I
Western Radio (San Dieqo] . .. 49
I City State . . .. . . . I
1.------------------- . 1
human eye is probabl y the most sensi- THO USAN DS O f ITEMS-THOU SANDS O F BARGA INS I
T HE
tive homegrown transducer kn own, yet it
Write for fr ee lis ti ng-25% depo sit o n C.O.D. o rd e u-
Min im um o rd er S.5.00. All prices f.o.b . Linden, N. J .
does not diffe rentiate read ily between sma ll Price s Subject t o Change Wi thout Natice
ch a nges in light intensities, especially at high
ligh t levels.
w hen tuning a rig with a lamp for a dum-
my load, it is d ifficu lt to tell, by eye, whe n t he
r esonant point ha s been r eached. The lamp no YO U NE IW S S S S S
appear s a s bright a few degrees eit her s ide of OWN YOUR OWN BUSI NESS
resonance a s it does at reso nance. JFr;h~ Tmlay
A sola r battery, connect ed in ser ies with a
microarnmete r and held nea r the dumm y load AJ)·SPEC INC. - 6 LAMBEHT
lamp, wiII give a posit ive indication wh en the S I' Il IJ\G Fl ELD, ILUJ\OI S
ci I' cui ti s tun ('d t ore:; 0 n a nce. , . . W2"V Y l\[~d;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::;:;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~
• • •, •
I •
sta s
STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE SINCE 1934
AMA T EUR T YPE S
Fundam enta l, PR Type Z-2
Freq u e n c y R an g e s i n K cs . : 3 ,500 t o 4,000 (80 M ) ; 7,0 00 t o 7,425 ( 40 M ) ;
8 .000 t o 8 .222 ( 2 M) ; 8 .334 t o 9,000 ( 6 M) .
Ru g g ed . L ow drift . fundan u.-. n t al os cill a t o r s. Hi gh activitv an d
p o w er o u t p u t. S tand s u p u n d e r m a x imum c ry s tal cu r ren t s. Stahle,
lo n g -la sti n g ; ± 300 cyc les __ __.. -- 52.95 Net
Th ird Overtane, PR Type Z-9A
H e rm e ticall y sea te d : ca lib rat e d 24,000 t o 24,666 :11111 2.; ,000 to
27. 000 K c., + 3 K c. : .050" pin s·_-_ __ · S4.95 Net
6 Meters, PR Type Z-9A
F ifth O\"crI OHe; for o pe ra t in g directly in ti-rnctc r band : he r-
m etically sealed ; ca lib ra ted 50 to 54 Xl c., + 15 Kc. : .0.i O" pins.
56.95 Net
CITIZENS BAND CLASS " 0"
Type Z-9R, Transmitter
FC C assign ed freq uencies in mega- COMMERCIAL TYPES
c y cles: 26.965, 26.975, 26.98 5,
27.005, 2 7.0 15, 27.02 5, 27.035, Commerc ial Cryst a ls ava ilable from
27.055, 27.065, 27.075, 27.085, 100 Kc. t o 70 Me. Prices on req uest.
\ 27. 105, 27. 115, 27. 125, 2 7.135, Type Z-I , MARS and CAP
\' '~\ 27. 155, 27.165, 27.175, 27. 185.
. \ 27.205, 27.2 15, 27.225; calibrated O ffic ial a s si g n e d Irc qu e n cies in
.... ~ to .005%. (13e sure to specify manu - t he ra ng-e. Calibra te d to .00.1 % .
facturer of equipmen t) $2.95 Net 1600 t o 10000 Kc 53.45 Net
Type Z 1, TV Marker
CITIZENS BA ND CLASS " 0" Channels 2 thru 13... 56.45 Net
Type Z-9R, Receiver 4.5 Me. Interearrier ,
Specify I. F. frequency, also wheth - .01 % 52.95 Net
er receiver oscilla tor is above or 5.0 Me. Signal Gen era to r,
below transmitter frequency. C ali- .01 % 52.95 Net
bra ted to .005 %. (13l' su re to specify
manufactu re r of equipme n t.) 10.7 M e. F M, I F ,
$2.95 Net .0 1 % 52.95 Net
EXPORT SA LE S: R o yal Natio n al Corporation , 250 \V. 5 7t h Street, New York 19 , N. Y•• U . S. A .
_ _ _ _ _1
with buill-ill PR ODUCT DETECTOR
This newest and finest precision double conversion ama teur receiver wit h 6 meter coverage, bri ngs you
an ease of sideba nd tuning previou sly available only in the most expensive equipment. The NC-270
features an exclusive "Ferrite Filter" for instant upper-lower SSB selection and a degree of selectivity
to conquer even the toughest A~t and C\V signal condition s. The solid }/s" steel panel. ceramic coil
forms, double-spaced tuning gang, and full ventilation cabi net combine to give mechanical and
thermal sta bility that wil l surprise even the most critical operator. Even the color of the NC~27 0 is
outstandingly d ifferent, National's new duo-to ne "Cosmic Blue." Write for detailed specifications.