[MarinTeams] QRP SSB Project
Peter Bland
peterbland at comcast.net
Tue Apr 27 23:39:57 EDT 2004
Bill, my call sign is KG6MZV and I am interested in the project and will
attempt to price the package at HSC in the next week. Peter
-----Original Message-----
From: marinteams-admin at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:marinteams-admin at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Bill Smith
Sent: Tuesday, April 27, 2004 8:01 PM
To: marinteams at mailman.qth.net
Subject: [MarinTeams] QRP SSB Project
Hi, all
We are borrowing a reflector once set up for local communications practice
in Marin. The list has been otherwise inactive and so we can use it for the
SSB project.
Please send mail to marinteams at mailman.qth.net. It will be distributed to
other members who have expressed interest in the project. So far they are:
Peter Bland K6AJB San Rafael, CA
Rod Rigg NNN0VNW Stockton, CA
Paul Kitagaki NNN0AEX South San Francisco, CA
David Hirtz NNN0UFV San Francisco, CA
Bob Buck NNN0LHO Las Vegas, NV
The project information for the SSB transceiver (80 meters) can be found at:
http://www.qrp.pops.net/Idaho.htm
This is an open experimentation project, that is you can choose to do
anything you think will work for you! :-) It is work in progress, as a
device of this kind has not been assembled except for the PSK devices
offered by http://www.smallsonderslab.com.
Small Wonders has discontinued the 80 meter PSK-31 transceiver, but offers
40 and 20 meter kit versions for $150. This may be attractive if your
budget can adsorb the cost.
The concept is to build a low-cost portable digital low power station that
is PSK-31 and/or MT-63 capable. Both modes require SSB transmission
capability in order to maintain proper signal phasing and transmission
envelope. The qrp reference above seems to be the lowest cost SSB approach
found so far. If you discover a better circuit, please feel free to let us
all know.
Another alternative is the DSS (digital signal synthesis). Development work
is underway and information may be available on the net. If you poke around
on Internet and find anything interesting, please let us know. This would
be the preferred transceiver approach.
Paul brought up the issue of frequency stability. Generally a crystal
controlled transmitter will not have 10Hz stability unless controlled by a
TXO (temperature regulated oscillator) device. But most of our transceivers
used on the MARS net don't maintain this stability either.
Terminal devices (the unit that can type and display ASCII characters) can
be either one of the Palm Pilot models, or a laptop. If you have a
laptop, you can use the several soundcard programs that have been
recommended on the PA1C net.
Terminal software ($39.95 or was it $29.95?) is available that will run on
many of the older Palm Pilot devices. Palm is selling reconditioned Palms
for low prices (see their website). However, a TNC device will still be
needed. Likely this will rule out MT-63 as there doesn't seem to be a
hardware decoder/encoder for that mode. However, there may be PSK-31
software written for some of the Palm models, and there is also a dedicated
TNC for PSK-31 available.
Specific URL's covering this information will have to be "rediscovered"
through search engines if there is any interest in the Palm approach. I was
originally very interested in the Palm, but have since obtained an old
laptop. Actually, used laptops appear to be available at swapmeets for
$50-75 and up, which is about the same price as a used Palm.
Please feel free to offer any suggestions, discoveries, comments!
73 de Bill, NNN0BIO/AB6MT
billsmith at ispwest.com
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