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#1
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I would like to start building valve transmitters for 160/80/40 metres, does
anyone know of any suppliers of suitable xtals for valve equipment eg. the old FT243 or HC6U types. Thankyou. Simon G7CPN. |
#2
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![]() I've just finished my valve 40mtr cw tx and been all round Europe on it!! great fun, the best xtal supply I've found is http://www.quartslab.demon.co.uk/ They are very helpful and very well informed, cheap and fast from Ron g3yuh...... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 16:01:39 +0000 (UTC), "SB" wrote: I would like to start building valve transmitters for 160/80/40 metres, does anyone know of any suppliers of suitable xtals for valve equipment eg. the old FT243 or HC6U types. Thankyou. Simon G7CPN. |
#3
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![]() I've just finished my valve 40mtr cw tx and been all round Europe on it!! great fun, the best xtal supply I've found is http://www.quartslab.demon.co.uk/ They are very helpful and very well informed, cheap and fast from Ron g3yuh...... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 16:01:39 +0000 (UTC), "SB" wrote: I would like to start building valve transmitters for 160/80/40 metres, does anyone know of any suppliers of suitable xtals for valve equipment eg. the old FT243 or HC6U types. Thankyou. Simon G7CPN. |
#4
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Thanks for the information Ron, I'll give them a call.
Regards Simon G7CPN. Ron wrote in message ... I've just finished my valve 40mtr cw tx and been all round Europe on it!! great fun, the best xtal supply I've found is http://www.quartslab.demon.co.uk/ They are very helpful and very well informed, cheap and fast from Ron g3yuh...... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 16:01:39 +0000 (UTC), "SB" wrote: I would like to start building valve transmitters for 160/80/40 metres, does anyone know of any suppliers of suitable xtals for valve equipment eg. the old FT243 or HC6U types. Thankyou. Simon G7CPN. |
#5
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Thanks for the information Ron, I'll give them a call.
Regards Simon G7CPN. Ron wrote in message ... I've just finished my valve 40mtr cw tx and been all round Europe on it!! great fun, the best xtal supply I've found is http://www.quartslab.demon.co.uk/ They are very helpful and very well informed, cheap and fast from Ron g3yuh...... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 16:01:39 +0000 (UTC), "SB" wrote: I would like to start building valve transmitters for 160/80/40 metres, does anyone know of any suppliers of suitable xtals for valve equipment eg. the old FT243 or HC6U types. Thankyou. Simon G7CPN. |
#6
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"SB" wrote in message
... I would like to start building valve transmitters for 160/80/40 metres, does anyone know of any suppliers of suitable xtals for valve equipment eg. the old FT243 or HC6U types. Here's my one-valve CW transmitter, produces up to 10W on 80m and 8W on 40m: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/cwtx/index.htm. In this circuit I have found that modern HC49 type crystals work perfectly well. Before building it, I was warned that HC49 crystals are too small for valve circuits and would fracture. Fortunately I decided to give it a go anyway, and have not yet had a crystal fracture. Some have suggested that this may be due to the DC blocking capacitor in series with the crystal (see my circuit diagram). Quartzlab charge £7.50 per crystal (minimum order £10). A cheaper way is to buy a bunch of standard value crystals and lower them by painting the crystal surface with felt tip pen, see my page about it: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/penning/index.htm. In this way it would be possible to build up a bank of crystals covering a segment of the band. 3.579 (TV colour burst) crystals are available almost anywhere extremely cheaply, and I found it easy to lower it by 30KHz. 3.560 crystals are also available, it's the 80m QRP calling frequency. See the links page on the QRP website http://www.gqrp.com for some suppliers. Similarly 7.030 (Europe) / 7.040 (US) is the 40m QRP calling frequency, and they can be easily lowered to anywhere down to 7.000. My TX has 4 relay switched crystals: 3.558, 3.560, 7.010 and 7.030. All are (or were originally) HC49. After 2 years and over 400 QSO's, no fracturing. 73 Hans G0UPL http://www.HansSummers.com |
#7
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"SB" wrote in message
... I would like to start building valve transmitters for 160/80/40 metres, does anyone know of any suppliers of suitable xtals for valve equipment eg. the old FT243 or HC6U types. Here's my one-valve CW transmitter, produces up to 10W on 80m and 8W on 40m: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/cwtx/index.htm. In this circuit I have found that modern HC49 type crystals work perfectly well. Before building it, I was warned that HC49 crystals are too small for valve circuits and would fracture. Fortunately I decided to give it a go anyway, and have not yet had a crystal fracture. Some have suggested that this may be due to the DC blocking capacitor in series with the crystal (see my circuit diagram). Quartzlab charge £7.50 per crystal (minimum order £10). A cheaper way is to buy a bunch of standard value crystals and lower them by painting the crystal surface with felt tip pen, see my page about it: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/penning/index.htm. In this way it would be possible to build up a bank of crystals covering a segment of the band. 3.579 (TV colour burst) crystals are available almost anywhere extremely cheaply, and I found it easy to lower it by 30KHz. 3.560 crystals are also available, it's the 80m QRP calling frequency. See the links page on the QRP website http://www.gqrp.com for some suppliers. Similarly 7.030 (Europe) / 7.040 (US) is the 40m QRP calling frequency, and they can be easily lowered to anywhere down to 7.000. My TX has 4 relay switched crystals: 3.558, 3.560, 7.010 and 7.030. All are (or were originally) HC49. After 2 years and over 400 QSO's, no fracturing. 73 Hans G0UPL http://www.HansSummers.com |
#8
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Here's my one-valve CW transmitter, produces up to 10W on 80m and 8W on
40m: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/cwtx/index.htm. In this circuit I have found that modern HC49 type crystals work perfectly well. Before building it, I was warned that HC49 crystals are too small for valve circuits and would fracture. Fortunately I decided to give it a go anyway, and have not yet had a crystal fracture. Some have suggested that this may be due to the DC blocking capacitor in series with the crystal (see my circuit diagram). Quartzlab charge £7.50 per crystal (minimum order £10). A cheaper way is to buy a bunch of standard value crystals and lower them by painting the crystal surface with felt tip pen, see my page about it: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/penning/index.htm. In this way it would be possible to build up a bank of crystals covering a segment of the band. 3.579 (TV colour burst) crystals are available almost anywhere extremely cheaply, and I found it easy to lower it by 30KHz. 3.560 crystals are also available, it's the 80m QRP calling frequency. See the links page on the QRP website http://www.gqrp.com for some suppliers. Similarly 7.030 (Europe) / 7.040 (US) is the 40m QRP calling frequency, and they can be easily lowered to anywhere down to 7.000. My TX has 4 relay switched crystals: 3.558, 3.560, 7.010 and 7.030. All are (or were originally) HC49. After 2 years and over 400 QSO's, no fracturing. 73 Hans G0UPL http://www.HansSummers.com Hello Hans, Thankyou very much for the information regarding the xtals, I have been to your site many times to admire the equipment you build and is it that which has inspired me to build a piece or pieces of valve equipment. Thankyou again, Simon G7CPN. |
#9
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Here's my one-valve CW transmitter, produces up to 10W on 80m and 8W on
40m: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/cwtx/index.htm. In this circuit I have found that modern HC49 type crystals work perfectly well. Before building it, I was warned that HC49 crystals are too small for valve circuits and would fracture. Fortunately I decided to give it a go anyway, and have not yet had a crystal fracture. Some have suggested that this may be due to the DC blocking capacitor in series with the crystal (see my circuit diagram). Quartzlab charge £7.50 per crystal (minimum order £10). A cheaper way is to buy a bunch of standard value crystals and lower them by painting the crystal surface with felt tip pen, see my page about it: http://www.hanssummers.com/radio/penning/index.htm. In this way it would be possible to build up a bank of crystals covering a segment of the band. 3.579 (TV colour burst) crystals are available almost anywhere extremely cheaply, and I found it easy to lower it by 30KHz. 3.560 crystals are also available, it's the 80m QRP calling frequency. See the links page on the QRP website http://www.gqrp.com for some suppliers. Similarly 7.030 (Europe) / 7.040 (US) is the 40m QRP calling frequency, and they can be easily lowered to anywhere down to 7.000. My TX has 4 relay switched crystals: 3.558, 3.560, 7.010 and 7.030. All are (or were originally) HC49. After 2 years and over 400 QSO's, no fracturing. 73 Hans G0UPL http://www.HansSummers.com Hello Hans, Thankyou very much for the information regarding the xtals, I have been to your site many times to admire the equipment you build and is it that which has inspired me to build a piece or pieces of valve equipment. Thankyou again, Simon G7CPN. |
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