Moved in – lots of work still

So its been a month since my last update here and I figured this is long over-due.

We’ve moved into the new house and have started tackling some of the myriad projects we bought with the house. I started by installing the house’s first sump pump since it was built – it was long over due and frankly, I am shocked there wasn’t one in the first place!

We’ve still got a lot of cleaning to do – most of which exists in our “out building” / cottage. I’d like to make the loft into a radio-room, and to do so will require a pretty thorough cleaning of the entire structure. I’ve got a contractor coming by tomorrow to offer a quote on trash removal – I’m looking at the $400 mark to get rid of all the previous owner’s trash. Oh the joys!

On the tower front, I may already have permission from my YL to erect it immediately behind the cottage – I think the only stipulation may be not to go the full 80′ I could theoretically manage. I’ll be looking at the 50′ mark or so I imagine. I would also like to find a spot for my mil. spec. high-precision azimuth / elevation control system that I picked up from the Fed. I can’t wait to start trying my hand at EME.

Perhaps I will string up my G5RV Jr. to make a few QSOs tomorrow – its been far too long since I last played radio!

On an electronics related note, I’ve spent some of my over-time money that I’ve been saving for quite some time .. I’ll give out some more details soon 😉

Well, back to the projects for now!

73

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Update: Nine days and counting (down)

Well, only nine days until we take possession of our new house and I couldn’t be more excited! My intentions were to sneak some radio-time into the past few weeks and I almost succeeded. Almost.

New (to us) house

When I hooked everything up in my mobile station, I was getting a much lower than normal voltage value on the radio. Subsequent testing showed that the second battery system was putting out 12.8V (~14V while engine running) but the radio was reporting only 9.5V. I have the radio installed in the rear of the vehicle some 15′ (wire length) away from the battery. The immediate suspicion would be the length of the wire – voltage drop due to resistance. The wire is 0-gague (nearly 1/3″ thick) and its resistivity is ~0.3224 milli-Ω per meter, so voltage drop (even under high current) is negligible (compare it to 18-gague which displays ~20.95mΩ/m).

Once we are moved-in, I will take the time to further investigate this rather bizarre issue with the mobile installation.

Sound card interface prototype board layout

On the radio / electronics side of life, I’ve been busy redesigning my sound-card interface board. The objective of this project is to provide a (nearly) one-board solution which is capable of providing galvanic (electrical) isolation between computer and radio while offering PTT / CAT (Yaesu) control of the radio, along with automatically controlling the ALC via the ALC-jack found on some Yaesu equipment.

As this project progresses, it is my intention to enhance the interface board with an on-board USB sound-card to both simplify the end-user’s experience and to hone my design skills.

At present, the board houses a number of prototyping features which will not be found on the “production” version(s). This is done to verify and compare boards between PCB fabrication houses, checking tolerances and part fitment. I am doing this because I create all of my own parts in Eagle CAD using the datasheets for the components I will be using. I know that this is reinventing the wheel and that I could use already-existing libraries, however, in some cases I’ve had to create parts for components not-yet present in distributed sources. I have found that creating my own library has greatly enhanced my working knowledge of Eagle CAD and electronics design in general.

So for the next few days, we will be doing a more comprehensive boxing-up of our belongings, leaving little time or ability to enjoy my many hobbies. I’ll try to post more in the near future, perhaps with something of actual interest to some who skim my blog site.

Until then, ’73!

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Been busy …

Hi all,

I’ve been away from the hobby for a bit as Julie and I recently purchased a new home! Yay! We are mostly done all of the running around, inspections, negotiations, etc. so I should have some more free time for the time being.

We will have to start packing and planning soon as our closing date is April 11th so any projects I take on / finish will be limited by the need to pack everything up (and more or less keep it that way).

I hope to have yet another look at the Raspberry Pi APRS all-in-one solution, and part of the problem I may have been having was the use of class-4 SD cards – I’ll pick up a couple of class-10 cards to experiment with. I think that the Pi could be a fantastic solution as a TNC for APRS operation, all depending on the software decoding of course.

Another project which came up in conversation with a few people online is the use of an Arduino (or simply ATMega micro) as a go-between CAT interface for controlling DDS based homebrew radios. I’ve already developed the library for the Wires (Arduino) platform, so writing a pass-thru style interface should be rather trivial (yes I am inviting ridicule when this statement comes back to haunt me).

Once we move in to the new house, I’ve got quite a few non-radio tasks to be tended to so I will very likely go radio-quiet again for a short time. With any luck, I can start the planning and consultation phase of my antenna tower project. With a little over 2.5 acres to play with, I am actually considering the use of the full 80′ however, this is still subject to the site-plan.

In any event, I am still alive – just a bit more busy than I was previously. I’ll try to make some time to put something of merit up here – so check back some time soon!

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Troubleshooting an interface

After we arrived home on Saturday (29th) and unpacked everything from the trip, I set out to determine the cause of my inability to operate digital while mobile. My first suspicion was an open in the cable, so I tested the continuity between the perf. board and the 6-DIN connector – no problems there! The reason I suspected an open was because of a bad kink in the cable where it appeared to have been pinched – in my usual line of work, this would be an instant cause for additional investigation.

6-DIN connector

My next task was to confirm that the sound card audio was in fact being received at the transformer. This was made challenging by a couple of factors: 1. I was too lazy to haul out my temperamental oscilloscope and 2. the connector pins are very close to each other which makes probing them while trying to multitask a real challenge.

The arrows in the picture indicate the pins which I was attempting to probe which are the data in and ground pins.

FT-8*7 data jack pinout

 

Notice that the pins are swapped on a horizontal axis – when compared to the pinout (PDF page 35) of the FT-857D manual. This can be a source of confusion when making a sound card interface, so I’ve added a numbered pinout of the manual drawing to assist with the understanding.

Simple transformer

After finding that there was no audio making it to the 6-DIN connector, I had to confirm that the audio was being lost at the output transformer stage. Prior to testing the secondary side, I verified that I had the audio between the two “pins” of the primary winding. I then probed the secondary and it was at this stage that I found the fault in the circuit. There was no audio on the secondary side! There are only two causes which could explain this phenomenon, the first being an open circuit (ie. burnt out winding) which is easy to test – just look for infinite resistance between the two outer-most “pins”. The second cause would be a short-circuit between the pins!

In my sound card interface design (Sound-card interfaces .. home brew one!), I use a potentiometer to vary the output signal level (ie. peak-to-peak AC voltage seen by the radio). At some point, I must have adjusted the potentiometer to such a level as to present what was effectively a short-circuit to the secondary windings, preventing any useable amplitude in the audio signal.

Sound card interface board

The picture shows a blue box which is the potentiometer which caused all of the grief. After some fine-tuning while setting the computer’s audio output level to 50% and the digital gain (Menu #37) to 50% I adjusted the potentiometer so that only seven “rows” of ALC indication on the display were present.

The manual vaguely states (PDF page 66) to adjust your source audio level until a “few” dots of ALC are present but as high as “16 dots of ALC” on the meter.

Annoyingly, the manual displays a “full scale” display which happens to be “16 dots” tall! My take on this conundrum is to err on the side of caution which suggests operating so that only a total of “16 dots” are indicated which actually means a display which is only “7 rows” high.

"16  dots" of ALC

My plan is to confirm my suspicion by monitoring the RF output of the radio using my oscilloscope, watching for the first signs of “flat topping” or “bottoming out” of the RF envelope. To do this, I will be making a resistive divider RF sampler – I just need to buy an aluminum housing for the project.

So in the interim, I’ve got my station back up and running which is fantastic! I just wish that I had remembered fiddling with the potentiometer – I could have saved a lot of grief and could have actually “played radio” while on vacation. Doh!

 

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