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Old August 9th 05, 01:25 PM
Scott
 
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Ah, OK, you want to listen for beacons and you don't have a receiver. I
misread what you were looking for. I thought you had some sort of
receiver and wanted to listen to 10M and/or 6M. Sorry about that!!

Being a Tech class, you can transmit legally on both 10M (28.1-28.5) and
all bands above 6M, so you really don't have to upgrade if you don't
want to.

Here are a couple websites that may give you places to start...

http://www.af4k.com/mega/megakits.htm
http://radio.tentec.com/kits/Receiver

Good luck and have fun!!

Scott
N0EDV

Andy Ball wrote:


Hello Scott,

SAL Technically, a transverter does both transmit and
receive. Personally, I would build a transverter at
the start. If you hear someone, you will invariably
want to talk to them as well...


I don't want to talk to beacons, but I imagine I'll hear
some hams too and eventually once I upgrade my license it
would make sense to have invested in a transvertor rather
than just a receive converter. I no longer have a radio that
that can receive CW on any band though, so a transverter
doesn't help unless I buy a receiver too...

73,
- Andy, KB9YLW

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Old August 9th 05, 06:52 PM
Fred McKenzie
 
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In article t, Andy Ball
wrote:

Is anyone here able to point me in the direction of a 10m or
6m CW receiver kit? I would like something that's fairly
simple to build (I don't have a lot of test equipment) but
would perform well enough to let me monitor a few beacons
and perhaps some fairly local CW activity (if there is any).


Andy-

Check out http://www.elecraft.com/ for some quite good kits. They may not
have exactly what you are looking for, but the equipment has a first class
reputation.

I understand you can buy a simpler kit and add to it with upgrades later.
I don't know if they have a receive-only kit or not.

73, Fred, K4DII
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Old August 10th 05, 01:05 PM
Scott
 
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Oops, it has been pointed out to me that TECH class does not have access
to HF. I forgot about the "new" Tech license, being no-code and thus
not having HF priviledges. I keep thinking back to the days when I was
a TECH class (early 1980s) when the TECH class had to pass the 5 WPM
code test. It's just too hard to keep all the TECH class (Old TECH,
TECH Plus, New TECH) priviledges straight! Sorry about the confusion!!

Scott
N0EDV

Scott wrote:
Ah, OK, you want to listen for beacons and you don't have a receiver. I
misread what you were looking for. I thought you had some sort of
receiver and wanted to listen to 10M and/or 6M. Sorry about that!!

Being a Tech class, you can transmit legally on both 10M (28.1-28.5) and
all bands above 6M, so you really don't have to upgrade if you don't
want to.

Here are a couple websites that may give you places to start...

http://www.af4k.com/mega/megakits.htm
http://radio.tentec.com/kits/Receiver

Good luck and have fun!!

Scott
N0EDV

Andy Ball wrote:


Hello Scott,

SAL Technically, a transverter does both transmit and
receive. Personally, I would build a transverter at
the start. If you hear someone, you will invariably
want to talk to them as well...


I don't want to talk to beacons, but I imagine I'll hear
some hams too and eventually once I upgrade my license it
would make sense to have invested in a transvertor rather
than just a receive converter. I no longer have a radio that
that can receive CW on any band though, so a transverter
doesn't help unless I buy a receiver too...

73,
- Andy, KB9YLW

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Old August 14th 05, 11:32 PM
Andy Ball
 
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Hello Steve,

SAL Oops, it has been pointed out to me that TECH class
does not have access to HF. I forgot about the "new"
Tech license, being no-code and thus not having HF
priviledges.


If a "new Tech" passes the code test, does he or she get
Tech Plus priviliges, or are those solely for people who
earned that license when it was current?

- Andy, KB9YLW
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Old August 15th 05, 01:08 AM
Dave Platt
 
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In article et,
Andy Ball wrote:

If a "new Tech" passes the code test, does he or she get
Tech Plus priviliges, or are those solely for people who
earned that license when it was current?


The former, as I read the book.

Those who passed the Technician license prior to 3/21/1987, and thus
passed the Element 1A (5 WPM) code test, have Novice-equivalent HF
privileges as part of their Technician license.

Newer Technicians, who pass the Element 1 95 WPM) code test and are
given a CSCE as proof of passing, but who have not passed Element 3
(General written exam), have Novice-equivalent HF privileges
indefinitely. They should retain the CSCE as proof of this since the
FCC doesn't keep track of which Techs have code credit. The CSCE is
valid as credit towards the General license for only one year.

--
Dave Platt AE6EO
Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior
I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will
boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads!


  #16   Report Post  
Old August 15th 05, 01:44 AM
Fred McKenzie
 
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In article et, Andy
Ball wrote:

If a "new Tech" passes the code test, does he or she get
Tech Plus priviliges, or are those solely for people who
earned that license when it was current?


Andy-

It doesn't work that way now. However you can probably pass the General
Class test with only a little more effort than for the Technician test.
Many years ago they were the same test except for code speed. Check out
the practice tests at http://www.qrz.com.

You may be interested to know that the FCC has issued a proposal to
eliminate code from all Ham tests. It will take a while before all the
comments have been submitted and resolved. If you want the HF license now
without waiting, you'll need to pass the code test.

73, Fred, K4DII
  #17   Report Post  
Old August 15th 05, 09:01 AM
Paul Keinanen
 
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On Fri, 05 Aug 2005 06:43:34 GMT, Andy Ball wrote:

Is anyone here able to point me in the direction of a 10m or
6m CW receiver kit? I would like something that's fairly
simple to build (I don't have a lot of test equipment) but
would perform well enough to let me monitor a few beacons
and perhaps some fairly local CW activity (if there is any).


Any receiver capable of receiving SSB or DSP will be able to receive
CW i.e. some kind of BFO is required. I don't know any way to make a
CW _receiver_ in any simpler way than a DSB receiver.

Making a direct conversion receiver would be quite hard for the 10/6 m
bands, since there would be a lot of problems with stability. A more
practical approach would be to use a crystal controlled convert to
convert the signal down to say 3.5 MHz and then use a tunable direct
conversion receiver.

Most simple Rx kits for 6 m are FM only (as well as some 10 m
versions), which are usually not usable for CW reception. Of course if
there is only a single very strong CW in the band (e.g. monitoring if
a local beacon is functioning), you might take an FM kit, locate the
signal strength output at the FM-detector IC and use it to key an
audio oscillator :-). Replacing the ceramic filter in the last (455
kHz) IF with a narrow filter will also help, provided that the
receiver is stable enough, so that the signal will remain within the
narrow filter bandpass. However, such systems are useless in any
crowded bands or for receiving any weak signals.

Paul OH3LWR

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