With a temperature around 0 deg C I did a field trip today TXing on 8.76kHz VLF to test two things: (1) to check the rebuilt 4-5W TX based on the TDA2003 could be copied at moderate range and (b) to try out the new tuned preamp with earth electrode receive antennas and see how these compared with a loop. The usual first test site, a National Trust car park about 1.5km from home was chosen. Today it was totally deserted with more sensible people curled up in front of warm fires. Using the 80cm receiving loop or with the earth electrode antenna (electrodes placed about 13m apart) decent
copy was achieved in QRSS3, using Spectrum Lab this time rather than Spectran on the PC. For the earth electrodes I just used barbecue skewers pushed in about 10cm into the very cold ground. Reception was also possible with the two earth electrodes just 2m apart. The first picture shows the signal received with a loop. The second is with the earth electrode antenna on receive. The ground was covered in a thin layer of wet snow and results when the soil, and soil surface, are dry should be better on earth mode conduction using earth electrodes at each end. The roads in the Fens were too icy to try reception at a more distant point 5-6km away. Also, I need a much longer baseline earth electrode pair in the car in case this is needed at greater range.
1 Dec 2010
28 Nov 2010
New front-end for 8.76kHz VLF earth mode tests
Today I completed the design of a new "front-end" for my tests on 8.76kHz when using earth electrodes as the RX antenna. Up to now I've used an 80cm loop/preamp at the far end of the test, usually with the loop on the ground for maximum signal pick-up. Now I want to compare results with an electrode pair antenna at the RX, laid across the road to form a pickup loop within the ground around any buried pipework and cables. The electrode pair is about 30-100 ohms, so I needed a low input impedance. I decided on a grounded gate FET amplifier with a simple LC tank circuit in the drain tuned to 8.76kHz fed via an emitter follower into the PC sound card. It has sufficient selectivity to reject 50Hz and lower harmonics and reject the stronger VLF and LF stations which could cause intermod and overload. I've also added a small LC lowpass filter on the input to the FET. This will be field tested at a site 5.3kms from the home QTH as soon as the weather improves: it is currently below freezing day and night!
Labels:
8.76khz,
earth electrodes,
earth mode,
vlf
25 Nov 2010
Receiver/grabber improvements on VLF
Just received a special build of Spectran from Alberto I2PHD that keeps the same filename for captured grabber images. This means I can now use Spectran with my VLF grabber. This is fired up from time to time when people are doing VLF tests. It will also allow me to look for my own signal at home when I am out transmitting in the Fens locally some kms from home. I find Spectran easier to use than Spectrum Lab, which is a clever program but complicated for someone like me to configure.
I have also rebuilt the 4-5W beacon TX on 8.76kHz and given it a 1 hour continuous soak test. There is a video about this on my YouTube channel.
My next job is to work on a permanent VLF E-field probe outdoors and to make improvements to the receiving system for field use. I need a better preamp/filter that can also be used with earth electrode receiving antennas as well as the loop and E-field whips.
I have also rebuilt the 4-5W beacon TX on 8.76kHz and given it a 1 hour continuous soak test. There is a video about this on my YouTube channel.
My next job is to work on a permanent VLF E-field probe outdoors and to make improvements to the receiving system for field use. I need a better preamp/filter that can also be used with earth electrode receiving antennas as well as the loop and E-field whips.
22 Nov 2010
Looking for G3XIZ on VLF this evening
G3XIZ is transmitting with 20W to his Marconi vertical on 8.9719kHz this evening from 2000-2200z. I am looking out for his signal with my loop into both Spectrum Lab and Spectran software. You can look on my VLF grabber to see if he is visible at all over here in JO02dg. At the moment all that is visible is a wobbly 50Hz related signal and my 8.760kHz QRSS3 beacon running on a dummy load. UPDATE: nothing copied and Chris had to close because of an antenna fault at 2100z.
Labels:
dreamers band,
g3xiz,
grabber,
vlf
21 Nov 2010
VLF Grabber operational capturing 8-9kHz in JO02dg
I'm setting up a VLF grabber at my home QTH to take periodic screenshots of the 8-9kHz Dreamers Band and make these available online. At the moment it is taking input from my earth electrode "antenna" into Spectrum Lab and is very much a work in progress and needs a lot of improvements on the RX and antenna front. It won't be ON unless I'm in the shack and don't need the PC for other VLF stuff.
The resulting screen grab every few minutes appears at https://dl.dropbox.com/u/ 15047843/xbm_grab.jpg .
The resulting screen grab every few minutes appears at https://dl.dropbox.com/u/
Labels:
dreamers band,
grabber,
vlf
VLF Grabber
Today I intend to make a VLF grabber to receive sub9kHz signals and automatically upload the screen grabs to the Internet. My aim is to use Dropbox as the place where the grabs will we stored and visible.
19 Nov 2010
6 Spanish stations get access to 501-504kHz
The Spanish authorities have granted limited access to 501-504kHz (100Hz bandwidth, 5W) to 6 stations (EA1AY, EA2HB, EA3CC, EA3WX, EA4BVZ, and EA5DY) until the end of May 2011,
Labels:
500kHz
16 Nov 2010
iPod Touch 4g
Recently I upgraded my pocket PC - I used a Dell Axim for 7 years - to a new iPod Touch 4g purchased at a good price from Amazon. It really is an amazing piece of kit in a tiny size with an incredibly pin-sharp screen which is so good that individual pixels cannot be seen: the resolution is better than my TV. I've already downloaded the Echolink app (free) so I now also have a 2.3GHz pocket ham transceiver too. I hope to use it for some other ham radio applications including datamodes and VLF reception.
If you want to see what is inside the iPod Touch 4g look here for a tear-down analysis: there is a lot in this small package!
If you want to see what is inside the iPod Touch 4g look here for a tear-down analysis: there is a lot in this small package!
14 Nov 2010
First Norwegian VLF amateur transmission
From Jan LA3EQ:
"First succesfull transmission on 8.760kHz using WSPR mode in Norway using 40 meter longwire and only speaker output from the pc soundboard as a transmitter and a 12volt to 220v transformer as impeadence "antenna matching" transformer.. Several WSPR spots of -2dB to -7 dB. distaince only 50 meters, but it is a start. Next try will be with earth dipole and 10 watts and an active e-probe antenna on receive."
VLF kite transmission by DF6NM
DF6NM's signal in the UK |
Marcus DF6NM carried out another successful VLF test yesterday on 8.97kHz (200uW ERP) and 6.47kHz (50uW ERP) with reception by Paul Nicolson in Todmorden UK. Marcus is the second German VLF amateur to be copied at this distance.
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