Showing posts with label shack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shack. Show all posts

30 Mar 2014

No amateur radio

At the moment I am unable to do any amateur radio operation in my shack for the next few days.

Firstly, my shack  has been taken over to house my 2 year old granddaughter in her cot.

Secondly, the XP shack PC seems to have terminally died. It has served me well for very many years, but now is the time to replace it. The new PC is apparently ready and is in the process of being delivered.

My little granddaughter goes back home on Wednesday and my new PC is likely to arrive shortly afterwards. I will need to load WSPR and other software and check all is well with the new machine. As a 64 bit Win 8.1 machine, some software may prove incompatible.

30 Aug 2013

Shack pic

Well today I completed the set-up of my "building desk" in the new shack. After several weeks out of action, I am now ready again to start building gear. For the first time my desk for building kit is in the same room as the operating position, so I can readily test gear "on-air" by simply connecting a coax cable or wire. This image is not very good quality I am afraid.

3 Jul 2013

My 1990s station ...and clearing out

Whilst sorting through my collection of SPRAT magazines to give to a local amateur G4NUA - I recently bought the SPRATbook and have most on DVD - I came across this photo inside one of them. It must have been taken around 1992 I think and shows the amateur radio station I had then. What is interesting  is that I actually had a 100W radio (FT747) at that time, although it was hardly ever used at that power because of the problems with RF feedback into the rig. The shack then consisted of a table by the window in our main bedroom. My wife must have been very tolerant!

The 10m Lincoln President, derived from a CB radio, was actually a very nice radio: I recall working mobile with it and having a solid SSB QSO with a station in India early one evening around the 1990 solar maximum whilst driving near Cambridge. It was sold long ago though. The little Mizuho MX2 (I still have one) was used to drive a 10m transverter and I worked plenty of 10m DX with it and around 1W pep to a vertical CB halfwave. The Standard handheld rigs came from my workplace: at one time we were considering OEM-in of PMR radios from Standard (before they joined with Yaesu)  and one of my colleagues got a pile of samples on a trip to Japan. Guess who got some of them after they had been "evaluated"? In the end we got some portable PMR radios from a source in South Korea and that was a disaster.

Today I have far fewer transceivers - all QRP - but get just as much fun. There are no homebrew rigs in this 1990s picture although I did have some. Today quite a lot of my kit is home made, although not all rigs remain in their cases for too long as I tend to note the schematic and take a few photos, then reuse parts and enclosures.

20 Jun 2013

Progress with the new shack

Today the builder has started to fit out my new shack at the bungalow with work surfaces, cupboards and shelves being put in. I have a small workbench area for the test gear and where soldering will take place and a separate desk area overlooking the garden for the QRP rigs, PCs and printer. It will be the first time in over 50 years in the hobby when I'll have had a dedicated room for my amateur radio activity. Up to now I have had to split the "working" area and the operating area with the latter doubling as a bedroom for the grandchildren. The room is not big, but it should be ideal for my needs.

21 Mar 2013

The current G3XBM (operating) shack

G3XBM QRP shack in a bedroom corner
Thought readers might like to see what the G3XBM station consists of currently.  In the photo I have annotated most pieces. The little silvery box to the right of the SignaLink interface was a VX2 programmer (software for which crashed my PC a year ago), but this box  is to be used to house my WISPY 10m WSPR beacon transceiver. The K1 was last used yesterday and the FT817 gets almost daily use, with the very nice audio speech processor underneath. Not shown are the lightbeam kit or the LF and MF tranverters for 136 and 472kHz which are housed elsewhere close the the earth-electrode antenna feed. There are also several homebrew rigs in drawers that get brought out from time to time. For the time being, the Elecraft K1 is not being sold.

The maximum power I can run currently is around 7W from the K1 and about 12W out on 472kHz from the transverter (about 5-10mW ERP) and 30W from the 136kHz transverter (about 50uW ERP). I have no great desire to run much more power. The FT817 is only used at 2.5W or less.  

8 Jul 2012

G3XBM Shack - 1977 style

My shack in 1977. I still use the same Morse key.
Just came across this picture of my shack in 1977. On the left is the Eddystone EC10 receiver. Next to it is a crystal controlled CW transmitter for 28MHz and a down-converter to 4-6MHz IF, tuned on the EC10. On the far right is the Belcom Liner-2 2m SSB transceiver, a state-of-the-art rig at the time. The boy in the chair is my son aged 2 at the time. These days he is a successful professional jazz musician. I never did interest him or his younger brother in amateur radio.

3 May 2010

10m WSPR - real DX

Here's a shot of the shack since it's been repainted. All is back in place and I've just been rewarded with a WSPR report from CX2ABP at 11127kms by F2 TEP mode when running 5W to my 10m wire halo Homebase-10 antenna. I wonder if this is a combination of Es and F2 TEP as I'm also getting WSPR spots from Spain.

30 Apr 2010

Shack repainting

Just got back from a few days in Brittany and straight into DIY! The small bedroom used as the operating shack, and a bedroom for my little grandson when he comes to stay, was in need of a repaint, so everything was removed and the whole room is being repainted. All being well, the radio gear should be operational again by Sunday.

24 Apr 2010

Got my shack back

For the last 9 days my little grandson has been sleeping in the single bed in my shack, so amateur radio activity was on  hold, especially in the evenings. Today he went back to London so the shack was free again. I went on 500kHz WSPR again with 1mW ERP this evening and managed 4 unique reports so far with best DX 306kms to PA3ABK. At the end of next week I'm planning on repainting the room, so will again be unable to operate for a few days.

1 Apr 2010

Temporarily QRT - shack becomes grandson's bedroom!

It had to happen sooner or later: our elder grandson, now 2.5yrs old, is staying with us a couple of times in the next few weeks as his mum and dad pack to move flat. Tonight he moved from the usual travel cot to a real bed for the first time .....in my radio shack. So, I shall be unable to operate evenings for a while so no 500kHz WSPR I'm afraid. Daytime operation may be possible, but apart from 10m WSPR I doubt I'll be able to do any serious operating. In the meantime he is fast asleep and looking very cosy.

17 Dec 2009

Video of the G3XBM shack

Just for fun, I've put a very short video of the G3XBM operating "shack" (actually a corner of the smallest bedroom) onto YouTube. It shows the current set-up of homebrew and commercial equipment in use as well as the 500kHz transverter. I do most of my construction elsewhere.

25 Jan 2009

Help in the shack?

Contest operating was a little slower this morning as I had a "little helper" in the shack. This is my 14 month old grandson who is staying with us at the moment.

He was fascinated by the morse key, so there is hope that a future radio ham is in the making.