CQWW Certificate

CQ WW WPX 2011 – Winner!

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Wow, I can’t believe it. I put in a modest try in last year’s CQ WW WPX CW contest, totalling just a couple hundred Q’s over some 10 hours of operating time, and I was fairly happy with that and entered in the “High Power Rookie” category. Never thought much would come of it and was actually quite happy with just the contribution it made towards my CW DXCC on LoTW. But lo and behold, received in the post today:

I’m by no means a serious contester (yet at least), but I am quite happy to have a “Winner” certificate from one of the absolutely top contests, and I think this will encourage me to become a bit more serious about the contesting part of the hobby.

IMG_1038-scaled

Chippenham Fen WFF activation fail

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Amazing weather today, 28C and sunny, so I went to Chippenham Fen, GFF-063, for another attempt at a Word Flora and Fauna activation with my new portable FT-817 station. Last time was a couple of weeks ago, where I had to abort the operation due to rain, so that was a fail in its own right but nothing like this…

Got there alright, and snapped the mandatory identification picture (click on the images to make them bigger):

I managed to get the station setup, first with the antenna about 8 meters up a tree:

Next step, parking the dog:

And setting up the station:

All well and good, so I start calling CQ. Both 14244 and 7144 are taken up by Russians chit chatting in Russian, bless them, so no calling CQ 44 on those, but I call for a while, about 5 minutes, in SSB on 20m without getting a reply, and then I switch to CW and call for a bit on 20m as well, but I don’t get anyone coming back to me. The band is pretty crowded with contest, I think the American field day so I guess that’s why. I wish I had a narrow CW filter for the FT-817…

Anyway, I start calling CQ on 40m, and I get an answer back! The only QSO of the day as it turns out. Nice one, Dave GM4PKJ from Benholm in Scotland. We exchange 59′s in spite of my 5W QRP, he’s running 100W and is a nice strong 59 as well. At least I know my FT-817 “RF clipper module” from Joachim DF4ZS is working – my audio report is good but the treble is a bit high, I guess I need to adjust it.

After that QSO I call CQ for a bit, and a dog walker comes by. I get ready to answer questions about my station but no need, she has far more sinister news … “Is that your car parked up by the main road?” – “Yes” – “Well, someone just smashed into it”. Great. I pack up in a hurry, leaving antenna, table and chair behind and go for the half-mile walk back to the main road. Sure enough, there’s a young guy who smashed my car by torpedoing it, there was apparently an oncoming car, and he didn’t have time to break – that stretch of road has got pretty good visibility so I doubt he was doing just the 60MPH, or maybe he was just inexperienced. Anyway, result as expected, his puny Vauxhall Astra didn’t stand a chance against my A8, and was totalled on the spot:

 

Luckily the guy was OK as you can see. But my car had taken a bit of damage as well:

A bit of the bumper was sticking into the wheel compartment so I didn’t want to risk the 20-mile drive back to Cambridge. We exchanged insurance details and then I called my insurance company Admiral, who on account of it being Sunday and them being closed (!!) redirected me to their accident handling agent, who can’t do any more than take the car into storage! “Please remove all your personal belongings from the vehicle as we cannot guarantee their safety and make your own way home”. Guess who’ll be looking for a new insurance company?!

Anyway, I have my HT with me and I am in range of the GB3PY repeater, Rob M0VFC kindly offers to come and pick me up, but in the meantime the guy’s sister has arrived and she offers to drive me home. I accept, and go back to my portable station to pack up. End of a lovely(!) field day/WFF activation!

When I’ve finished packing up and get back to the car, the recovery vehicle is there, it turns out he has the same insurer and the guy is going to take both our cars away. I’ll find out what happens to my car tomorrow when the insurance company is open(!!!!)…

So after a pleasant drive home (his sister Sara is driving!), with me and my dog Freja in the back seat, we say goodbye and end of mini dxpedition attempt number two.

UBER-EPIC-FAIL

Ok I got one QSO but still. Fail. Uber-fail. Now I’m carless and have to cycle to work. Not to mention that I don’t know when/if I’ll get my car back. Thanks random guy for smashing up my car!

All I can say is I’ll stick to Audi’s…

VY 73 de Thomas M0TRN

Listening to shortwave in Linrad with Soft66ADD

Soft66ADD SDR receiver – now with Linux support

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The Soft66ADD is a small software defined radio (SDR) receiver, designed and built by Kazunori Miura JA7TDO. It is a fairly simple, USB controlled SDR receiver, capable of receiving the entire HF band of frequencies at 2500khz up to 35/70MHz.  It is the latest version in the Soft66 family of SDR receivers.

This, as well as many similar SDR receivers, works by a process called direct conversion, where a local oscillator (LO) tuned to the frequency you wish to receive is added to the RF signal using a fast mixer IC. By this process the signal is transformed from its original frequency to a baseband signal (ie. starting at 0Hz), which can be digitized by a normal sound card.

In the mixer, the signal is sampled at two points of the LO frequency, differing in phase by 90 degrees, or a quarter, the two signal levels thus obtained are held until the next oscillation of the LO and are fed to the left and right channels of the PC’s sound card. This is called I/Q, or quadrature sampling, and requires a fair bit of math to understand in detail, but the result is that your PC basically receives a whole chunk of unprocessed, raw HF spectrum that you can then further process in software, for demodulation, filtering, analysis etc. in ways that a traditional receiver can only dream about.

I have looked at many SDR designs based on these principles. Many radio amateurs make design and kits available, (with the most popular one seemingly being the SoftRock, which is only available as kit and is currently out of stock). Most of these are receivers only, but some transceiver designs are also starting to appear.

There are also commercial or semi-commercial vendors, such as Perseus SDR, and then there is what seems to be considered the “gold standard” for SDR, the venerable USRP/USRP2 from Ettus Designwhich is the primary supported device of the GNU Radio project and is extremely popular especially with highly experimenting radio amateurs. Make no mistake, if you have $1,000 or so to spend I don’t think you can go wrong buying an USRP with it’s supporting HF modules, but the devices I am talking about here are a very low cost entry into the world of SDR, and cannot be compared to the USRP (although they are very good in their own right, and can possibly be compared favourably to some of the more expensive, commercial SDR receivers available!)

What really brought on my fascination with this class of receiver were Tasić Siniša-Tasa YU1LM’s designs. His designs are born out of a philosophy of “keep it as simple as possible while achieving excellent results”, and the articles that accompany his designs provide a lot of insights and taught me much about radio design.

I wanted to build one of these, but the main problem was that most of the designs didn’t come with a local oscillator, let alone one controllable from the PC via a USB port, and building that bit seemed a bit daunting for me. Then I stumbled across the Soft66AD, and I was sold immediately. Here was a simple, low cost, and fully integrated SDR receiver, with all the functionality I wanted from YU1LM’s designs but also a built-in signal generator with USB control. Needless to say, I ordered one straight away :)

I wanted to use this under Linux as that’s the only operating system I use on a regular basis. So I started hacking a driver up straight away. My main purpose was to be able to tune the Soft66 from Linrad, a rich featured SDR receiver program, but I also want to be able to use it with GNU Radio and other software, so I needed a generic solution.

The result is libsoft66, a library that also comes with a simple tool to tune/configure/query the radio. It is currently tested with the Soft66ADD only, but it should be relatively easy to add support for the other members of the family.

Listening to shortwave in Linrad with Soft66ADD

I also wrote a quick and dirty patch for Linrad to enable it to use the library to tune the Soft66 directly. I plan to add support for this to more packages, including GNU Radio, and also to write a simple GUI application for tuning the receiver.

Please be aware that the Linrad patch should not in any way be considered final, but it will get the tuner control to work so you can enter a frequency and/or use the +/- buttons to change the frequency in 50kHz steps. I plan to improve this shortly.

You can get the library and patch from this URL: http://www.infowares.com/soft66/

It’s very simple to compile and install, just follow the instructions in the included README.

If you want to modify the code I would appreciate any patches in email. Please use the git version in that case, which you can get from here:

$ git clone git://home.horsten.com/soft66.git

You can also browse the source code here. Any and all comments and feedback will be much appreciated. I plan to do further work on both the library and the tools in the near future. If you want to be notified, leave a comment here or send me an email. If there is enough interest, I’ll set up a (general purpose) English-speaking mailing list for these receivers, please also let me know if you would be interested in this.

Edit January 2012: All comments were lost after my blog was accidentally deleted and I had to recreate it from Google’s cache!

Welcome

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So I decided to get a blog. As with my home page, I’m not sure what I’m going to use it for but now I can claim I have one :)

One use I can think of is to write up technical stuff that might be useful to others (and to myself in the future). Let’s see how this develops!

 

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