Field Day is coming?

14 04 2009

Already?  Yep, Field day is only 2 months away. Remember that getting elected officials, the press, etc. to show up takes planning.  You may be able to get the station equipment together in a week, but important people’s schedules fill up fast!

As usual, I’ll be operating wtih the W1MOO group here in VT.  We’re a group of folks who like to pack as much radio into a weekend as possible, and therefore always make lots of contacts.  We’ve never enjoyed fooling around with low dipoles or longwires.  We always put up at least 2 military surplus towers with Yagis on top, and operate FD as a contest.

This year will be no exception.  Plans are already underway.  You can check out w1moo.wikispaces.org to see the planning that’s gone on so far.

Hopefully this year I’ll have my QRP PSK station available and we can use that to make our 5 alternate power contacts.  It will consist of an FT-817 and NUE-PSK modem.  Should be fun.

So, start thinking about Field Day.  What are you going to try out this year?

73 de Al, KE1FO





The Saga of the Serial to FSK interface

11 12 2008

So about a week ago I decided I wanted to build two Serial to FSK interfaces and try out the Software Generated FSK feature of Writelog.  After a quick trip to Radio Shack, I sat down and started to work.  I used the circuit descriptions from AA5AU’s RTTY contesting site.  Not knowing what my rig (TS-940) would need, I built up the first circuit on the page – using an NPN general purpose transistor and a 1K ohm resistor.  Plugged this in and all was well – almost.

My FSK was inverted, and the TS-940 has no “menu setting” to change the FSK polarity.  So, back to AA5AU’s website, and at the bottom of the page is a circuit using a PNP transistor to use if the NPN version above transmitts inverted FSK.  So, got the soldering iron hot again and built up the circuit.  Much to my surprise and dismay, nothing!  Ok, maybe I wired something wrong, or had a bad transistor, or got the transistor too hot.  Tried rebuilding it, again to no avail.  So I joined the RTTY reflector and sent out  a message.  Lots of answers, some helpful for their thought provoking, others notso helpful.

I spent a 2nd evening after getting these responces from many folks trying to figure out what I had done wrong.  I tested transistors to make sure the pins were not mis-marked, I tried using a heat sink, I tried connecting pin 5 to the shell of the connector.  Nothing.  Off to bed in frustration.

Third evening at the bench I tested to make sure that something hadn’t happened to the RTTY input of the rig.  Sure enough, shorting the tip to the ring of the rca connector caused the signal to shift.  So that was working OK, but for some reason the circuit wasn’t doing the job.  I could see that the port was changing states as the USB/Serial converter has an LED to show activity.  What was goign on.  In my testing, I just happened to connect the FSK interface to the radio while the rig was keyed – the tone shifted!  In it’s regular state, the circuit was closing the RTTY line and causing the tone to shift.  Very interesting….so I left my “just follow the directions” mode and put my logic hat on.  What I wanted to happen was for the RTTY line to be grounded when the FSK was keying, not when it was not.

In testing the transistor, I remembered that there is contunity (or should I say low resistance) between the collector/base pair and the emmitter/base pair when there is nothing connected to the transistor.  So, if you look at the PNP circuit at the bottom of AA5AU’s page, you’ll see that the setup will ground the RTTY line when it’s connected, because there’s low resistance between the collector (which is connected to the rig) and base which is connected to ground).  I don’t want a connection in that state, I want the connection in the shifted state.  So maybe the collector should go to the rig, and the emmitter should go to ground, and the base should be connected to the signal line from the serial port.  That way when there is voltage present on the base, it will cause there to be a low resistance path from collector to emmitter.

So, I put the hypothesis to work and built up a circuit.  Phew – no smoke AND it worked.  Here’s a schematic of what worked for me to key my TS-940.

pnp-fsk-circuitI’m no technical guru, but it doesn’t seem to me that the circuit shown on AA5AU’s page will work.  Hopefully I havnen’t done anything that will cause grave harm to my computer or rig, but I built two interfaces using the circuit above and both work just fine.

I forgot to upload the pictures I took of the interface last night, so I’ll be adding some pictures to this post later today or tomorrow.  I think it came out looking pretty good as I was able to build it into a DB9 all metal connector shell, and the panel mount RCA connector fits perfectly where the cable would normally exit the “back” of the shell, making for a neat little package.

Now hopefully I’ll see you all in the ARRL RTTY Roundup in January – I should be able to hear you better as I’ll be able to use my narrow CW filters instead of the wide open SSB filters!

73 de Al, KE1FO





Weekly Links

20 06 2008

Again, I’ve been somewhat off schedule with this post, but here’s some links from the past couple of

Amateur Radio Still Going Strong according to Louis E. Frenzel of Wireless Systems Design Magazine.

K1VR, Fred Hopengarten, maintains a nice site about antenna zoning. If you ever need a zoning permit for a tower, this site may come in handy.

K5LAD has a good site about maintaining a HyGain Tailtwister rotor.

The K7NV Notebook on towers has some great resources.

Dunestar 600 Characteristics by K0TO

N1LO has a neat “notebook” about tower construction (and some other topics as well).

73 de Al, KE1FO





K7LXC on crankup cables

11 05 2008

QUESTION: US Tower recommends replacing the cable every 2-3 years, which may be overkill but is definitely erring on the side of safety. Since my tower is 7 years old I’d like to start out with fresh cabling.

ANSWER: The UST recommendation is known as a “weasel clause”; that is, if something happens to your tower and you hadn’t changed the cables, they can weasel out of any liability. Tower manufacturers are insurance-driven enterprises so it’s no surprise they are reluctant to provide any helpful information.

The other gotcha is that there isn’t anyone around who can do the cable change anyway. I spent a couple of days at the factory to learn how to do it and what I found out is that it’s an involved and semi-complicated
endeavor. It’s not something I would try myself.

I’ll bet you a nickel that you don’t have to do anything other than lube the cables and you’ll be good to go. The actual circumstances that would require cable replacement are:

1) Excessive broken strands. Industry standards allow you to have six broken strands before replacement is necessary.

2) Excessive rust – not surface rust but real cancerous into the strands rust.

3) Damaged cable. This would be kinks or flat spots in the cable. I doubt that your cables meet any of the above criteria.

OTOH you should lubricate the cables annually at a minimum. Champion Radio products sells PreLube 6 which is recommended by the wire rope manufacturers.

You should exercise the tower a couple of times a month by running it up and down. You should also park it at different heights rather than just at the limit switches all the time. The cables can take a permanent set by sitting on the pulleys at the same spot for years. By doing these 3 things, you will prolong the service life of your cables.

BTW I have never personally seen a ham tower that the cables were so bad that they had to be replaced. Some were pretty grungy but didn’t meet the aforementioned criteria.

Lube it and enjoy it and don’t worry about replacing the cables.

Cheers,
Steve K7LXC
TOWER TECH -
Professional tower services for hams





Grounding & lightning/surge protection e-mail reflector

9 05 2008

Interesting resource posted to the TowerTalk reflector today:

Grounding and lightning/surges questions answered:
http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/LightningProtection

Technical references:
http://www.polyphaser.com/technical_notes.aspx
http://www.lightningsafety.com/nlsi_lhm.html

73 de Al, KE1FO





A Ham’s Guide to RFI, Ferrites, Baluns, and Audio Interfacing

6 05 2008

At the Visalia International DX Convention,  Jim Brown, K9YC, hosted
an excellent presentation on “Coaxial Transmitting Chokes” as they
apply to Amateur Radio. In his professional life Jim is a consultant
in the audio systems industry. He has many years experience in
designing audio systems and resolving RFI problems in all types of
audio systems.

His presentation included some interesting data on commonly used
commercial chokes and baluns available to hams. He also describes how
to easily build chokes that far exceed the performance of those
commercially available units, at a lower cost.

The presentation is available here.

Enjoy.

73 de Al, KE1FO