wrote in message
ups.com...
I've been having a lot of fun the past few weekends with my "new" Eico
720 and a couple of 40M crystals and a dipole strung between two trees.
But now I'm tired of QRM'ing the same frequencies all the time and want
to build a VFO. I've got some random variable capacitors, a couple of
nice dials, and would love to spend a weekend punching holes in a
chassis and putting something together.
I look in the 50's and 60's era handbooks and am a little confused. The
"SSB exciter" construction articles almost exclusively use a Vackar VFO
made out of a twin triode. Looks really straightforward and simple. But
the cookbook section inevitably shows pentodes in usually both grid-
and plate-tuned circuits, and then with extraordinary amounts of
buffering (say, a cathode follower AND a buffer amp).
I don't anticipate doing anything but 40M and some 20M in the near
future, and the Eico will double up to 14Mc just fine from 7Mc.
Will probably use a 0A2 type regulator in any event.
Am I giving up anything by just using the simple twin-triode Vackar?
The Eico 720's crystal oscillator combined with the crufty old crystals
I had isn't perfect to begin with, remember :-).
I'm guessing that all I need is 5V or so to drive to the Eico, correct
me if I'm wrong! With the crystal oscillator in it I almost always have
to back way way down on the grid drive so I'm guessing I've got some
extra oomph if I need it.
Tim.
I always like John Seboldt's K0JD's approach to homebrew / build a VFO.
He used a military surplus T-368
http://www.seboldt.net/k0jd/analogvfo.html
http://www.seboldt.net/k0jd/t368vfo.html
Other VFO's
http://www.seboldt.net/k0jd/othervfo.html