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#1
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At last spring AWA meet I picked up a homebrew novice transmitter
of unknown provanence. It has a close resembleance to the one in the 1976 Handbook (except that it uses an electron coupled 12BY7 instead of a 6DK7) and was built by a fine craftsman who did a first rate job on it. The previous owner got it at an estate sale and didn't know who built it. Last weekend I got around to bringing it slowly up to working voltage on a variac and tuning it into a dummy load with a variety of Xtals. The 6146B final will deliver between 40 and 60 watts to the load on 80, 40 and 20, but I had to stop testing before I got up to 15 meters as my Tek 922 scope expired. Since the rig will deliver power to both 40 and 20 I thought to see if I can put it on 30 meters, but I haven't any Xtals which will multiply into the band. I thought about using my BC-221 as a VFO. Will the BC-221 provide enough volts out to stabilize the xtal oscillator ?? What would be the best way to cable from the output of the BC-221 (some previous owner added a pl-259) to the xtal socket of the rig ?? It sees a 47K resistor to ground from the grid and is DC blocked by a capacitor. I need to assure myself that the BC-221 will not be damaged. Has anyone ever done this ?? |
#2
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Its been many years since I've owned a BC-221, but I remember that
they were very harmonic 'rich'. Thats OK for a freq meter, not so good for a VFO. Might be worth taking a look at before putting it on the air. Steve William Mutch wrote in message ell.edu... At last spring AWA meet I picked up a homebrew novice transmitter of unknown provanence. It has a close resembleance to the one in the 1976 Handbook (except that it uses an electron coupled 12BY7 instead of a 6DK7) and was built by a fine craftsman who did a first rate job on it. The previous owner got it at an estate sale and didn't know who built it. Last weekend I got around to bringing it slowly up to working voltage on a variac and tuning it into a dummy load with a variety of Xtals. The 6146B final will deliver between 40 and 60 watts to the load on 80, 40 and 20, but I had to stop testing before I got up to 15 meters as my Tek 922 scope expired. Since the rig will deliver power to both 40 and 20 I thought to see if I can put it on 30 meters, but I haven't any Xtals which will multiply into the band. I thought about using my BC-221 as a VFO. Will the BC-221 provide enough volts out to stabilize the xtal oscillator ?? What would be the best way to cable from the output of the BC-221 (some previous owner added a pl-259) to the xtal socket of the rig ?? It sees a 47K resistor to ground from the grid and is DC blocked by a capacitor. I need to assure myself that the BC-221 will not be damaged. Has anyone ever done this ?? |
#3
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![]() William Mutch ) writes: At last spring AWA meet I picked up a homebrew novice transmitter of unknown provanence. It has a close resembleance to the one in the 1976 Handbook (except that it uses an electron coupled 12BY7 instead of a 6DK7) and was built by a fine craftsman who did a first rate job on it. The previous owner got it at an estate sale and didn't know who built it. Last weekend I got around to bringing it slowly up to working voltage on a variac and tuning it into a dummy load with a variety of Xtals. The 6146B final will deliver between 40 and 60 watts to the load on 80, 40 and 20, but I had to stop testing before I got up to 15 meters as my Tek 922 scope expired. Since the rig will deliver power to both 40 and 20 I thought to see if I can put it on 30 meters, but I haven't any Xtals which will multiply into the band. I thought about using my BC-221 as a VFO. Will the BC-221 provide enough volts out to stabilize the xtal oscillator ?? What would be the best way to cable from the output of the BC-221 (some previous owner added a pl-259) to the xtal socket of the rig ?? It sees a 47K resistor to ground from the grid and is DC blocked by a capacitor. I need to assure myself that the BC-221 will not be damaged. Has anyone ever done this ?? I can't help you with specifics, but it was definitely done. I can picture an article in CQ from the late fifties or early sixties that used a BC-221 as a VFO, though that might have been an SSB rig. Old books would describe how to couple a VFO into a crystal socket. There was often a coupling network right at the crystal socket. Michael VE2BVW |
#4
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![]() 1947 RADIO Handbook ( not ARRL ) has construction detail on using 221 as vfo . 6AG7 as driver etc. "William Mutch" wrote in message ell.edu... At last spring AWA meet I picked up a homebrew novice transmitter of unknown provanence. It has a close resembleance to the one in the 1976 Handbook (except that it uses an electron coupled 12BY7 instead of a 6DK7) and was built by a fine craftsman who did a first rate job on it. The previous owner got it at an estate sale and didn't know who built it. Last weekend I got around to bringing it slowly up to working voltage on a variac and tuning it into a dummy load with a variety of Xtals. The 6146B final will deliver between 40 and 60 watts to the load on 80, 40 and 20, but I had to stop testing before I got up to 15 meters as my Tek 922 scope expired. Since the rig will deliver power to both 40 and 20 I thought to see if I can put it on 30 meters, but I haven't any Xtals which will multiply into the band. I thought about using my BC-221 as a VFO. Will the BC-221 provide enough volts out to stabilize the xtal oscillator ?? What would be the best way to cable from the output of the BC-221 (some previous owner added a pl-259) to the xtal socket of the rig ?? It sees a 47K resistor to ground from the grid and is DC blocked by a capacitor. I need to assure myself that the BC-221 will not be damaged. Has anyone ever done this ?? |
#6
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1. You will not harm the vfo. Remember, they were used during a war.
2. There is not enough output from the BC-221 to drive the 12BY7 directly, and it is true that the harmonics are lively in it. So, you can build a tuned class A amplifier to build up the voltage, provide selectivity and also isolate the BC-221 from the rig to prevent frequency pulling. I have used a number of BC-221/LM frequency meters into vfos, turned one into a regen receiver and presently have a solid state LM meter as a vfo in my Central Electronics 20A. It has a crystal controlled mixer for output on the different bands. Sorry if I offended the tube purists with the last paragraph. The calibration book was lost and I got bored one night. Colin K7FM |
#7
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Your mention of the Central Electronics 20A brings back fond memories of my
shack shortly after graduation from HS. I bought a brand new 20A from a store in Philadelphia's electronics row. I used a conversion kit sold by CE to create a VFO from a war surplus "command set". In addition to the 20A, I also bought a "signal slicer" kit from CE and used it with my Hammarlund HQ140X. Finally, my final was a pair of 100TH triodes http://www.uli.de/tubes/100th.htm running in grounded cathode mode. The final used a B&W plug-in link coupled tank coil. Yes, those were the good old days. I had as much fun with that equipment then, as I do now with my Ten-Tec Orion driving a Drake L-4B. John, N9JG "COLIN LAMB" wrote in message .net... [stuff] I have used a number of BC-221/LM frequency meters into vfos, turned one into a regen receiver and presently have a solid state LM meter as a vfo in my Central Electronics 20A. It has a crystal controlled mixer for output on the different bands. [stuff] |
#8
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In article . edu, wcm1
@NOSPAM.cornell.edu says... Thanks guys. I've made up a cable with a tuned circuit in the line to reduce undesired harmonics and will try it out...maybe this weekend. as... de KC2LVQ At last spring AWA meet I picked up a homebrew novice transmitter of unknown provanence. It has a close resembleance to the one in the 1976 Handbook (except that it uses an electron coupled 12BY7 instead of a 6DK7) and was built by a fine craftsman who did a first rate job on it. The previous owner got it at an estate sale and didn't know who built it. Last weekend I got around to bringing it slowly up to working voltage on a variac and tuning it into a dummy load with a variety of Xtals. The 6146B final will deliver between 40 and 60 watts to the load on 80, 40 and 20, but I had to stop testing before I got up to 15 meters as my Tek 922 scope expired. Since the rig will deliver power to both 40 and 20 I thought to see if I can put it on 30 meters, but I haven't any Xtals which will multiply into the band. I thought about using my BC-221 as a VFO. Will the BC-221 provide enough volts out to stabilize the xtal oscillator ?? What would be the best way to cable from the output of the BC-221 (some previous owner added a pl-259) to the xtal socket of the rig ?? It sees a 47K resistor to ground from the grid and is DC blocked by a capacitor. I need to assure myself that the BC-221 will not be damaged. Has anyone ever done this ?? |
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