Amateur Radio DSB Transceiver


Describes a homemade 20 meter Double Sideband transceiver using NE602 chips and ceramic resonators

Tagi : radio electronics ham amateur homebrew SolderSmoke

Juliacupcake57 napisał :
i'lll show you everything ) dateherwow...dot...com
Amishman35 napisał :
My favorite voice station to listen to is 3.885 Mhz. Even the cheapie shortwave radios pick it up, since it is AM DSB. The sound quality when there's no interference is awesome.
xmare napisał :
If your montage satisfies your needs, then don't bother about how it looks physically :)
killerdalek napisał :
Good to see a decent bit of home construction - makes a nice change from 'black boxes'! I love dead-bug construction on copper-clad board - it's so much more sustainable than 8-layer PCBs, and the electrons are perfectly happy! Do you have plans to remove the redundant side-band?
iambob47 napisał :
entertaining video! my names Hannah, kinda feelin bored if any1 wants to join me on cam or wana chat i will be signed on at __ PLAY-CAM...dot...COM __ my user ID there is Hannah_sqamh chat soon xx its FR33 to j0in! mwah
kc7fys napisał :
Just watched the LTSpice demo, the one made with WINK. I am impressed with both the meta-information (I'm going to use wink myself), and the presentation about LTSpice. Go ahead and laugh, but wouldn't it be nice if there was a program that was an actual graphic-based workbench simulator? They have surgery simulations, why not a virtual soldersmoke generator? Click on the solder, click in the iron, small wisp of virtual smoke rises. I prefer the real thing, but...
xlqex napisał :
What's wrong with NE602?
1945tonden napisał :
UR QRP RIG is Great!
radioham67 napisał :
great if you could show your schematic! a talk-thru describes little
maciejwrotek napisał :
I dunno much about this stuff but it looks interesting.