To: tsowellfan
Does a 6 meter rig, rx and tx in an altoids can sound like a DXer? Longest I ever worked a station with it (CW obviously) was 400 miles, back when we had sunspots.
If I want DX, I'd put up a 100ft tower and slap a monster yagi on it.
I do like playing with milliwatt power homebrew transmitters.
Fun times. Keeps me off the streets. ;)
/johnny
To: JRandomFreeper
Nice. But come the Ogizmo deluge, you better be mobile. Those bands are easy to jam and DX, then there are the 30,000 drones they plan to put up over the US. You do not want to see a Hellfire up close and personal.
133 posted on
07/08/2012 4:30:06 AM PDT by
PIF
(They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
To: JRandomFreeper
Life is too short for QRP. We are on 100% emergency power buried underground in bunker. Have 100’ tower filled with V/U/HF antennas.I will communicate. 3.503 or so?? K
172 posted on
07/08/2012 7:10:52 AM PDT by
halfright
(FAST & FURIOUS! DON'T ALLOW THEM TO DIVERT YOUR ATTENTION.)
To: JRandomFreeper
I know of a guy that worked just about the entire world using a 20-something MHz clock oscillator from an old computer... Built the entire unit into a little Bayer aspirin tin (about 1"x1.5"x.25"). Had a little tiny insulated (from the case) terminals for the antenna, ground, key, and power. Inspired by his little xmitter, I built one myself and managed to get a QSO from 45 miles away using nothing more than a correct length of zip cord laying on the radio room floor. Talk about tiny QRP... And it all came from a "junk box." Wonderful things, those junk boxes...
I have all the stuff up in the radio room to take a step back in time to the early Marconi designs... Every so often I have to just build something old school. It is sad that so many people today do not even know what a crystal set radio is or how it works. A properly built rig with the 250uH coil with about 12 equally spaced taps can be used with a 12 position switch and a 365pF variable capacitor to pick up everything from from the bottom of the AM broadcast band (560KHz) all the way up through 6MHz in the shortwave band. All with no batteries or use of house current... That's real radio building... And it's fun!
246 posted on
07/08/2012 10:21:41 PM PDT by
Raven6
(Psalm 144:1 and Proverbs 22:3 --- Peritus Expello Formidine)
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