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- Date: Sun, 25 Jul 93 15:46:05 -0500
- From: adams@chuck.dallas.sgi.com (Charles Adams)
- Message-Id: <9307252046.AA27972@chuck.dallas.sgi.com>
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Subject: SWR Analyzer es Keyboard de MFJ
-
-
-
- Gang,
-
- just a quick report on the trip to "Ham Holiday" the swapfest in
- Oklahoma City OK. somebody has to drive north on I35 aperiodically
- to make sure the Red River is still there and i'm here to report
- that it still is. :-)
-
- i just went up for Saturday, which was long enough for me to part
- with some of my money.
-
- i had reported last year on the net, when there was flame wars
- going on for MFJ products. i don't think that i'll ever learn.
- i'm already educated beyond my intelligence anyway.
-
-
- MFJ-451 Morse Keyboard - A Review by Chuck Adams K5FO
-
- i normally use either a Heath Ultrapro Keyboard or when i'm
- practicing on the Bencher i use an AEA MM-3 or CK-2 keyer.
- the heath is losing one of the memory chips for the 10 memory
- buffers and i hadn't taken the time to fix it, so i saw the
- MFJ-451. thought, what the hey, it was reduced i'll just buy
- one. replace the large AT keyboard with the small one i have
- on a 386 and take up less space (vertically) on the operating
- desk.
-
- the MFJ-451 keyboard has an unmodified keyboard (AT type) that
- plugs into a small box (sorry, i'm at the office and don't have
- the exact size). got it home, opened the box, plugged it in,
- and it worked outta the box. didn't even have to read the
- instructions. only two parts and parts is parts, right?
-
- ok, get the instructions, get through them in short order and
- know how to set the speed, load the two buffers, adjust the tone
- (the volume controlled with a knob on the little processor box),
- learn to program the beacon operation up to 99min 99sec delay,
- and use the serial numbering in time to use it for SS. :-)
-
- ok kids, so far so good. fire up the QRP rig on 40 for the sunday
- morning schedule and call cq. get another qrp in st louis mo.
- worked about 20 minutes at 30 wpm and stood by for the group.
- no answer and the other guy signs.
-
- fine. so far so good. ok, 40 not all that hot, let's go up to
- 30 (another fine QRP band). WHOW BUCKAROO!! it is very very
- obvious that noone at MFJ works 30 meters. this little keyboard
- sucks canal water when it comes to putting out trash on 30 meters.
- it's S9+ and then some. i can't hear the digital guys above
- 10.110 with this thing on. ;-)
-
- ok, look at the schematic. uses 80C32 Intel processor clocked at
- ***10 MHz***. only decoupling caps in the system are four 0.1uF
- caps. bad news. ok, i'll help, give me phillips. two screws to the case
- and its apart. hey, nice little board, double sided silk screened
- plated through solder masked. not bad. ok, three more screws to
- remove board and a model airplane prop-nut driver to remove volume
- control nut. board comes out and i turn it over. GEEEEZ!!!
- we have 12 year olds learning to solder here or what? the second
- worst soldering job in the world that i've seen. you guessed it
- the first place is the MFJ-249 HF/VHF SWR ANALYZER. see second half
- of this posting.
-
- i take pride in my work, no matter what it is, and i'd think that
- others do too. component leads were not cut short and overlapped
- PC board paths and on and on i could go, but i won't.
-
- it works, but once again, bad quality control for cosmetics. if it
- works, ship it!!!
-
- if you plan on working 30 meters, do not (and i repeat) do not
- buy this keyboard until you hear from me that they got the problem
- fixed. i thought that i'd play with some ferrite beads strategically
- placed, but no way am i going to spend my valuable time doing this.
- going to call them on monday and ship the little box for a revision.
- or else.
-
- i didn't pay the $89.95 list price and got a good deal, but not
- that great.
-
-
- MFJ-249 HF/VHF SWR ANALYZER - A Review by Chuck Adams K5FO
-
- this is the deluxe swr analyzer by MFJ. list price of $199.95, which
- of course i didn't pay at the swapmeet. :-)
-
- i had asked the qrp mail group about these and got a response after
- the fact and as it turns out, i made the right decision. we all get
- lucky once in a while.
-
- MFJ has another analyzer MFJ-207 which is the same without the
- frequency counter. i have a heath counter, but i prefer to put
- all my eggs in one basket and have a small self-contained unit
- like the 249. once again, outta the box, hook up 12V supply and
- fire it up. worked first time every time. hook it up to the 80
- meter long wire and check it out. GREAT. with the digital readout
- for frequency and the analog meter for direct reading SWR, it's
- very easy to see where you are and how good the antenna is doing.
- checked all the bands from 160 to 10 Meters. i had my previous
- settings from measurements made at 1 watt with Oak Hills QRP wattmeter.
- they were correct (of course). but, the MFJ makes it very easy. none
- of the forward vs backward, etc. just read it and weep or smile.
-
- one of the questions i asked the friendy sales rep was how much
- does this little puppy put out. it obviously must generate rf
- to the antenna to get the swr. he didn't know and the MFJ manual
- does not say one word. so, couple of pieces of RG58U with PL259s
- and in goes the OHR QRP WM-1 meter. 2mW (that's 2 milliwatts) out
- from 1.8 to 170MHz. constant and true. good news as that is the
- requirement to not have an adjustment for meter calibration.
- i wouldn't part with the OHR for love or money. need it for
- power measurements for 10 W down to 1 mW.
-
- i assume, since the MFJ-249 device transmits outta band (i did this
- into a dummy load guys and girls and FCC) i assume that it is
- type accepted or something like that. being an avid QRPer, i
- know what 2 mW can do when the bands are right. and outside
- of the ham bands you can easily get a clear frequency. ;-)
- that why the HT mods i see posted here in rec.amateur.radio.misc?????
-
- frequency meter is accurate as tested with heath counter and
- 3.600000 output from the wwv clock. without the counter (the 207), MFJ put
- dial with freq markings and i understand from another individual
- that has one, they aren't all that great. not good if you're tuning
- an antenna from phone down to cw band or whatever.
-
- ok, let's look at the schematic? what, no schematic in the booklet
- or box!! ok, take the back off. BIG mistake big mistake (line from
- Pretty Woman, the movie). the worst soldering job i've seen. tied
- with MFJ-815B Cross-Needle 1.8-60MHz SWR/Wattmeter. close behind
- is the above keyboard system. somebody in QC outta work on this
- or start selling them as kits. i can do a better job easily.
-
- the counter is SMT (surface mount technology and i assume it was
- wave soldered) and separate from the badly soldered board. another
- board also SMT and wave soldered for RF generator. at least i hope
- so. i didn't want to see any more and put it back together.
-
- so, final results. MFJ-249 SWR Analyzer. good deal. MFJ-451 keyboard
- is a bad bad idea. wait til Christmas or later on this keyboard.
- both are new items and maybe with feedback we can get MFJ to do
- a little better.......
-
- 73 es 72 de k5fo dit dit
-
-
- ------cut here----------
- Chuck Adams, K5FO - CP60
- adams@sgi.com
-
- ======================================================================
-
-
- I want to thank everyone that was involved in the R&R Associates
- deal for the CMOS Super Keyer II deal. I received mine on Friday,
- October 8th. If you remember from posts some time ago to this
- group, the kit was for $25 + $1 for programming + $1 S&H.
-
- I keep hearing feedback from numerous places that due to the
- fire in a plastics plant in Japan, the IC market has been hit
- fairly hard causing numerous price increases, delays in components,
- etc. Motorola has a backlog for the MC68HC705C8P microprocessor,
- the one used in this kit, and there is also a price increase to $19
- each - up from $10.80 for the old price, in small quantities like
- R&R is getting. So the price of the kit is now $32 + $1 + $1 in
- the note that I got from R&R.
-
- In the kit I got the micro, associated parts, a small speaker 8ohm
- 2inch (for monitor, but I don't think I'll use it due to poor
- quality), and two small PC boards (and for the same reason I won't
- be using these). The boards were hand drilled and no way a socket
- (not included - 80 pin) is ever going to go onto the board due to
- alignment. I will be wirewrapping (I can still do that stuff) this
- critter onto a small perf board with wirewrap sockets and wirewrap
- pins. Think I'll put this in one of the NN1G xcvrs (the 40M one)
- and see how it does. It (CMOS keyer) runs for a long time on two AA cells.
-
- With the kit came a four page photocopy of the November 1990 QST
- article by KC0Q and N0II and two page photocopy of a Manual Supplement:
- Version 2.0 from Logikey K-1 CMOS Super Keyer II Kit (Copyright 1991).
- Also a one page "catalog" from R&R for PC Boards from 73, QST, and
- ARRL HB circuits. I don't think I'll be ordering any of these after
- my experience as outlined here.
-
- In summary, I think maybe the $49 kit price from Idiom Press might
- just be a better deal. It wasn't that I was trying to be cheap, but
- the price of $25 + change looked too good to be true (and it was).
- My personal opinions expressed above. I'd like to hear comments
- from the others, but they may not wish to be so open as I. Hope
- they are having better results.
-
- Anyone in this group get the Idiom Press kit?
-
-
- Is this a record? Is the first negative review that I've done?
- I think it is. OK, back to my hole where I hope it's still warm.
- :-)
-
- Hope to see you during the Fall QRP ARCI QSO Party next weekend.
-
- 73 from the ranch of k5fo dit dit
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Date: Wed, 13 Oct 1993 08:29:07 -0500 (CDT)
- From: "JEFF M. GOLD" <JMG@tntech.edu>
- Subject: Cmos Keyer
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Message-Id: <01H422L3UBWOC2JGJH@tntech.edu>
- X-Vms-To: IN%"qrp@think.com"
- X-Vms-Cc: JMG
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7BIT
-
- Hi,
-
- Well Chuck's first was a negative review, I think for the first time I
- might have to disagree a little with Chuck (sorry).
-
- I finally received my keyer kit yesterday. I own the Idiom press $50
- version which I love.. think is the best keyer I own.. and have used in
- many a contest.... The $50 kit had a board and the board parts... I nice
- thick operations manual. I needed to provide the push buttons and all
- jacks and such. The $25 kit came with the board and board parts and 4
- push buttons that already had wires coming off and a small speaker
- (haven't tried it.. real cheap looking.. but that is all you really
- need.. I never use my speaker in the other keyer except to program the
- memories and functions.. all other times use the rigs sidetone.. sounds
- better and uses the batteries much less).
-
- Well at breakfast this morning proceeded to check out Chuck's comments.
- I cleaned the bottom of the board with isopropal alcohol and took the
- chip socket out.. the socket had some bent legs.. easily straightened
- them out and the socked went right into the board.. I soldered it in and
- the board took the solder with no problem. This wasn't the best quality
- board I have seen, but certainly no problem or nothing worth complaining
- about. I noticed that one of the solder pads really was almost
- non-existent and you really couldn't solder to it. I checked the
- schematic and it isn't used anyway.. I think the other 39 legs will hold
- it to the board.
-
- If this works correctly, I feel it is one of the biggest bargains out
- there. Curtis keyer chip keyer kits are going for $39-$59. They don't
- have memories or any of the other functions.. like reversing dits and
- dashes and a mess of other stuff..I still think for $50 the idiom press
- is also quite a bargain.
-
-
- 72
-
- Jeff, AC4HF
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Date: Wed, 13 Oct 93 21:36:48 PDT
- From: dh@deneb.csustan.edu (Doug Hendricks)
- Message-Id: <9310140436.AA03864@deneb.csustan.edu>
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Subject: QQ for Oct?
-
- I see from Chuck's postings that the October issue of QQ is out. Mine is not
- here yet. Will someone send me a list of the Table of Contents so I will
- be even more anxious for my copy to arrive? Also, I want to apologize to
- the net. I am the one who originally posted the availability of the Super
- Cmos II Keyer kits from Richard Rathburn. I posted it in response to a
- request from Vicki Welch. Chuck, I did get mine and it was excellent as far
- as I could tell. Mine works great. I did replace the buttons with some from
- Radio Shack, and used a different speaker, but other than that, I love mine.
- Have to agree with Jeff on the review. But, I did not realize that he was
- going to take so loooong to deliver!! Maybe it is like a friend of mine who
- likes to tell his customers, "You can have it Good, Fast or Cheap, Pick any
- two you want." My kit was good, cheap, but boy did it take a long time to
- get here. My advice is that if you want it fast, order from Idiom Press.
- 72, Doug
-
- ======================================================================
-
- From: jpo@acd4.acd.com ( Jim Osburn )
- Message-Id: <9404111415.AA01393@IEDV5.acd.com>
- Subject: More on DSP 40
- To: qrp@Think.COM (QRP Mailing List),
- Hoover@hydra.Rose-Hulman.Edu (Keith Hoover),
- Derry@nextwork.rose-hulman.edu (Jack Derry)
- Date: Mon, 11 Apr 94 9:15:05 EST
- X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11]
- Sender: qrp-admin@Think.COM
- Precedence: bulk
-
- I saw a message about the DSP-40, a copy is attached to the end of this one,
- on one of the newsgroups.
- Being interested in DSP, I rushed right out and bought one.
- My intention was to use it in the contest, but I didn't get to work any
- of the contest due to other obligations (sigh).
- I did get to play with the thing for about half an hour.
- Here are my first impressions.
-
- First, since several have asked what it is, I'll try to describe it.
- It's a black plastic box with knobs on the front and connectors on the back.
- It has an 1/8" audio in jack, a 1/8" external speaker jack, and a
- coaxial power connector for 12 VDC. On the front is a 1/4" phone jack.
- An audio amplifier and speaker are built in. The speaker is mounted
- in the top of the box.
-
- On the front is a volume control which also turns the unit on and off.
- To the right of the volume control is the DSP button. With the DSP
- button out, the unit is just an audio amplifier. With the DSP button
- in, the unit is an audio DSP. Also to the right of the volume control
- is an LED that flickers to indicate audio input level, which is on solid
- when the unit is in CW mode.
-
- To the left is a function switch and a bandwidth switch. The function
- switch has three positions, NR, SSB and CW. The bandwidth switch has
- three postions, Narrow, Medium and Wide. When the unit is in the NR or
- SSB mode, it will eliminate steady audio tones. In all three modes,
- the unit will do bandpass filtering, the bandwidth varies with both
- the function selected and the bandwidth selected. I left the user's manual
- at home, but I remember that the narrowest SSB bandwidth was about 300 Hz
- to 2 kHz and the narrowest CW bandwidth was about 600 Hz to 900 Hz.
-
- The unit does work, but I would say a phone operator might be more interested
- in it than a CW operator. In the CW mode, the unit seems to me to just be
- a narrow audio filter. Frankly, I like my MFJ active filter better.
- My active filter is also cheaper, I got it used for $5.00 at a hamfest.
- The DSP-40 is about $80.00.
-
- A phone operator would like the automatic notch filter function.
- It is effective. The bandpass filtering also helps, but most rigs
- already have bandpass fitlering.
-
- I have not yet noticed that noise reduction does a lot. However,
- I've only played with it for about half an hour. Also, if you're
- listening to signals that are already good, the DSP-40 can actually
- make them worse.
-
- Yes, you can hear the quantization noise. If you're use to picking
- weak signals out of the noise, it's very noticable. I have a hunch
- this is an eight bit unit. I am experimenting with implementing
- the W9GR stuff on a TI DSP Starter's Kit that has a 14 bit AIC.
- I hope I get better results with it.
-
- You can do some silly things with the unit too. You can put it into
- SSB mode while listening to CW and see if you can copy with just the
- key clicks. You can wiggle your rig's tuning knob and see how long
- it takes the DSP-40 to adjust. You can listen to a SW music broadcast
- and see how nicely the notch filter mutilates that. You can also listen
- to AM SW as SSB using the DSP-40 to notch out the carrier.
-
- Here are my conclusions. If you're interested in learning more about
- DSP and want to play like I do, buy it. If you just want better CW
- reception, don't buy it. Buy a good active filter instead. If you're
- a phone operator that can't stand people tuning up on your QSO, buy it.
- If you only work strong stations with excellent signals, don't buy it.
-
- Those are my impressions so far. Hopefully others will evaluate and
- review the unit for us too.
-
- A copy of the post I saw about the DSP-40 is attached.
-
- 73,
-
- Jim, WD9EYB
-
- From: jwa@tellabs.com (John Albert)
- Subject: Radio Shack DSP
- Message-ID: <1994Apr6.125608.5212@tellab5.tellabs.com>
- Sender: news@tellab5.tellabs.com (News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: tellabb
- Organization: Tellabs, Lisle,IL
- Date: Wed, 6 Apr 1994 12:56:08 GMT
- Lines: 34
-
- Radio Shack is in the DSP race with their new DSP-40
- noise reduction system.
-
- It's a black box with a speaker, 12 volt and input chord.
- It has 2 three position switches and a volume control.
- One switch selects wide, medium and narrow. The other selects
- CW, SSB and NR.
-
- The CW position selects narrow audio filters and allows a
- CW tone to pass. The other positions (SSB and NR) reject CW
- or heterodynes and provide a noise reduction filter. The other
- switch selects the filter bandwidths. The volume knob controls
- the audio level and there's a 5 watt internal amplifier/speaker.
-
- The unit does a nice job nulling carriers but does very little
- noise cancelling. The narrow CW mode works fine but the I.F.
- filter in my Kenwood 440 does a much better job. The unit
- makes a great mobile speaker for my H.T. and it runs on 12 volts
- but $80.00 is a little steep for a mobile use. I purchased it
- so I can compare it to the Hamblaster which does a much better
- job reducing noise.
-
- Inside is a PCB that's partially covered with a sheild. Under the
- bottom sheild there's a Texas Instruments chip with unknown markings.
- It's probably a custom chip with a TMS320C10 core. The top side
- probably has the A-D/D-A. I didn't look at the number.
-
- ---
- Jack Albert WA9FVP Fellow Radio Hacker
- Tele (708) 378-6201
- Tellabs Operations, Inc. FAX (708) 378-6721
- 1000 Remington Blvd. jwa@tellabs.com
- Bolingbrook, IL 60440
-
- ======================================================================
-
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Subject: Re: Keyer Info
- Date: Fri, 04 Jun 1993 20:25:46 -0700
- From: Clark Savage Turner WA3JPG <turner@safety.ICS.UCI.EDU>
- Message-Id: <9306042025.aa23389@Paris.ics.uci.edu>
-
- Doug Hendricks is interested in a Memory Keyer. My own take on this situation
- is that the CMOS Super Keyer II in the (nov?) 1990 QST is easy to build
- and has adequate memory for my contesting tastes. It is really great
- to operate, cheap, etc. Love it to death. Really. The feel of the keyer
- is far better than any other I have ever used. Now if I could just find
- the right paddles (Bencher is "adequate" for the job.)
-
- The only possible drawback is the amount of memory and the basic 4 locations
- for those memories. If you get real fancy with contesting, it may not
- do the trick. If you are interested, write me directly and I can tell you
- more about my experience with the CMOS Super Keyer II.
-
- Clark
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Date: Mon, 07 Jun 1993 11:05:44 -0500 (CDT)
- From: "Jeff M. Gold" <JMG@tntech.edu>
- Subject: Keyers
- To: qrp@Think.COM
-
- HI,
-
- I agree, my first ham radio kit was the Super keyer using the Idiom
- Press parts kits. The keyer without even the memory is worth the price.
- It has the best self-completing dots and dashes and feel I have ever
- used. I have built at least 4 keyers (avoid the "Cheap Keyer" from the
- Handbook.. the worst.. I use it mobile and hate it), and find this to be
- the best. For contest use, we at the University Club, always use it. The
- way it was set up for contesting is much easier to use and much better
- thought out than any I have come across.
-
- 73
-
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Date: Tue, 25 May 1993 08:49:15
- From: hlester@as.arizona.edu (Howard Lester)
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Subject: keeping the tradition alive
- Message-Id: <QC023FFC@mmpc6>
-
- I have a new Vibroplex Brass Racer iambic paddle to replace the Bencher I had
- borrowed for several months. The Vibroplex is wonderful, and, as David
- Letterman would say, "easy on the eyes". It is a heavy brushed brass piece
- on a triangular rosewood base. Simply made, its tension on each paddle is
- adjusted with sliding magnets - no springs. The price is similar to a
- Bencher: $65.
-
- You have just read an unsolicited testimonial from:
-
- Howard KE7QJ
-
- ======================================================================
-
- From: vikki@precipice.chi.il.us (Victoria Welch)
- Subject: Thoughts on keyers and keys...
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Date: Sat, 5 Jun 1993 19:05:24 -0500 (CDT)
-
- ....
-
- As for the key itself, get a Kent, you'll never regret it. I had a
- bencher and was less than impressed with it. I never did get it
- adjusted (and it wasn't for lack of trying :) and if disturbed it
- would erupt in a shower of parts (I hear the new ones are better about
- that) or if undisturbed, it would go off at 0300 due to the
- expansion coefficients of dissimilar metals (my husband loved that :)
- as I like movement to be minimal.
-
- The Kent, on the other hand, makes you WANT to do cw. Its solid and
- VERY easy to adjust (I don't mind someone else adjusting this one as it
- is so easy to get re-adjusted). I have had the Kent for about the
- same amount of time (now) that I had the bencher and have probably
- used it 20+ times as much, its really a pleasure. I even replaced the
- plastic paddles with oak using the plastic ones as a template ! I am
- quite pleased and several people I know have gotten them after using
- mine (and I from using KE9GGs). Someone here stateside is supposed to
- be carrying them now so you don't have to wait for Dayton or Dallas or
- mail order it from England.
-
- As a last note, the thing is also SOLID. Mine spent a couple of
- months bouncing around in by briefcase with no problems at all. I
- wanna see someone with a bencher try that <grin>.
- ...
- Take care es 72, Vikki.
- --
- Vikki Welch, SysAdm Welch Research, WV9K, DoD#-13, NEIQRP# 13, ARCI#(NOT)
- vikki@precipice.chi.il.us(daily), vikki@wv9k.atl.ga.us(weekly), arrl(NOT)
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Date: Mon, 28 Jun 1993 10:14:28 -0500 (CDT)
- From: "Jeff M. Gold" <JMG@tntech.edu>
- Subject: Kent Keys
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Message-Id: <01GZWPC8CMN69JD4CS@tntech.edu>
-
- I received and built my 2 Kent Key kits.
-
- The first one I buildt was the Twin Paddle Morse Key kit. It
- has a real heavy steel base. The main parts are machined
- from brass bar. It has ball race bearing, solid silver
- contacts and fine pitch screw threads with instrument knuled
- heads that allow precision and individual adjustement on
- each of the two contacts and springs.
-
- The kit comes with the main pars assembled. It was fun to
- put together.. and very easy. I suggest reading each
- sentence of the instructions a few times before acting on
- it. The directions are kinda backwards in my opininion.. EX:
- it will tell you to mount a part with a certain size screw..
- after you have put on the necessary washer and solder lug..
- instead of telling you to put on the solder lug, washer and
- then mounting the part.. no big deal.. still easy to put
- together.
-
- Really pretty key... the plastic paddles can be mounted
- either with the pointed parts up or down.. I tried it both
- ways and mounted them up.. fits the way I send perfectly.
-
- The paddles work GREAT.. you can adjust them down to "breath
- on them" level of sensitivity. I sold my Benchers
- immediately after using them. They can't fly apart like
- Benchers.. the arms are solid.
-
- Next I put together the Solid Brass Morse Key kit.. a BIG
- straight key.. Had fun putting it together. This key is tied
- with the nicest feeling straight keys I have ever used..
- still also like my Merrick solid brass from Canada. The Kent
- has all brass parts on a nicely finished piece of wood that
- has weights that go inside it.
-
- The Kent is really nicely weighted...precision adjustable..
- haven't had time to try every possible adjustment yet.. but
- easily got it to the point of loving the feel. Has a big
- knob with the flat underpiece..I am experimenting with a
- different approach to sending with it...I think it is like
- the old telegraph style.
-
- A great key.. only thing I don't like is they should have
- used a harder wood.. the wood can be indented with any
- pressure.. not good for really using it environment.
-
- I feel both keys were bargains.. don't remember exactly the
- prices (sent them in with the order). I think the paddles
- were around $65 and the straight key around $75 or visa
- versa.
-
-
- R. A. Kent Engineers
- PO Box 809
- Mount Ida, AR 71957-0809
-
-
- 73
-
- Jeff, AC4H
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Jun 1993 11:32:43 -0500 (CDT)
- From: "Jeff M. Gold" <JMG@tntech.edu>
- Subject: Simple home made paddles
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Message-Id: <01GZ7MTQI908K6P3DF@tntech.edu>
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- Hi.. here is my idea:
-
- for my backpack I came up with a simple and inexpinsive rugged set of
- paddles to use for QRP. You can see a picture of them in the new ham
- section of Feb. 1993 QST.. think I even described them.
-
- I took a plexiglass organizer and hacksawed off the pencil holder
- (probable can find one for about .98 or use something else). It is about
- a one inch square by 4". I tried all types of levers and finally came up
- with a simpler and better approach. I used the metal pieces that are in
- the back of almost every IBM clone as place holder for adding
- peripherals (when you add a peripheral.. you throw these away.. very
- easy to come by). They have the back bent over and a screw hole already.
-
- I cut some holes in the middle of the plexiglass and used very sensitive
- momentary pushbuttons... had some small RS pushbuttons, but they didn't
- work as well. You can get a good selection at ham fests usually.
-
- I bolted the metal pieces on the back of the plexiglass with 2 screws
- each. I bent them around the buttons till slight pressure closed the
- switches. I cut a small finger grip size (used rounder English style
- rather than Bencher) plexiglass pieces and bolted them to the front of
- the metal pieces. I mounted the plexiglass on a piece of wood and bolted
- some brass weight to the bottom.
-
- Worst case is that I have to slightly bend the metal to the feel i like
- when I get where I am going. They work real well and have been using
- them for quite some time now. They can be built for about $3.00 or so..
- or you might have everything you need.
-
- 73
-
- Jeff,AC4HF
-