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Dxers Unlimited
Dxers Unlimited's weekend edition for 16-17 August 2003
By Arnie Coro
radio amateur CO2KK
Hello my friends, mis amigos that love radio all around the world ! Welcome to
the weekend edition
of your favorite listener oriented and technically minded radio hobby program,
coming to you via
short-wave and also via our streaming audio from
www.radiohc.cu. I am Arnie Coro, radio amateur
CO2KK and here is item one for today. Solar active region 431 , now as large as
planet Jupiter came
to an almost standstill in growth Saturday UTC, but it is still capable of
producing large solar
flares in the M or even X categories. The solar wind speed has gone down, and I
expect quieter
propagation conditions during the next three to five days. Item two: the huge
power blackout that
affected the United States and Canada reminded many people about the importance
of amateur radio,
when , as it has happened during previous emergencies the telephone systems
collapsed due to traffic
levels that they could not handle. Once again, in both Canada and the USA, radio
amateurs
demonstrated that they could handle emergency traffic even when all the AC power
went down.
Congratulations to all radio amateurs in North America that once again
demonstrated that the radio
frequency spectrum assigned to the amateur radio service is a really worthwhile
decision by
consensus of all of the world's nations. Item three: Noise, radio frequency
noise levels went down
to practically zero during the Eastern North America blackout, proving to many
radio amateurs and
short wave listeners that their local power utilities are not taking good care
of their power lines.
I heard several comments from radio amateurs in the affected areas that once the
power came back,
the background noise level increased significantly . Some could even pinpoint
that an adjacent area
that received the electrical service first was an important source of radio
frequency
interference... Now you all can imagine that the radio frequency noise levels
went really down when
AC power operated equipment was out of service and the only source of possible
RF noise were battery
or emergency generator powered apparatus. Item four: Yes, ASK ARNIE continues to
receive a lot of
e-mail , letters and postcards with very interesting radio hobby related
questions... The latest
poll shows that it is now very close to the so far number one most popular
section of Dxers
Unlimited, our HF propagation update and forecast that is always heard at the
end of the program...
Margarita Delgado is my sound engineer and producer , standby briefly for more
radio hobby related
information coming to you from Havana... I'll be back in a few seconds amigos...
.....
This is the weekend edition of Dxers Unlimited , and as you are listening to the
program, a
worldwide amateur radio event is in progress. During this weekend ham radio
operators all around the
world set up portable stations at lighthouses and lightships , and the event
brings up a lot of
activity from stations wanting to work those special event locations. It is not
exactly a contest,
it's just another nice way of enjoying ham radio and at the same time going out
for a camping
weekend !!. Well my friends, ASK ARNIE now has a backlog... so let me see if
today we can reduce it
a little by providing shorter answers to some questions. Question one: from
Vince in Memphis ,
Tennessee USA, he wants to know what´s the difference between nickel cadmium and
nickel metal
hydride rechargeable batteries. Well amigo Vince they are certainly two very
different technologies,
so my advise is that you visit the world wide web site of several battery
manufacturers and learn
from them about the differences between the nickel cadmium and the nickel metal
hydride cells. If
you ask me about which type of cell will be best for your radio equipment, today
the answer is that
the nickel metal hydride, or NIMH cells are the best choice,BUT, listen
carefully, BUT, you must
recharge them with a battery charger especially designed for the NIMH cells, as
they can be damaged
if recharged with a charger that is not especially designed for them...
QUESTION TWO: The VHF aviation band monitoring feature that went on the air here
brought a lot of
feedback from listeners all around the world... And many of you want to know
what antenna types are
the best for monitoring the lo VHF aviation band , especially the segment from
118 to 136 megaHertz.
Well amigos, the antenna of choice in my humble opinion is the classic
DISKCONE...because it
provides the bandwidth required, is easy to build and at the same time has a
vertical radiation
pattern ideal for the job. The DISKCONE also produces an almost perfect match
for 50 ohm coaxial
cable. One of the listeners that wrote about VHF aviation band monitoring
commented in his e-mail
that his homebrew DISKCONE fed with a 10 meter length of 50 ohm RG213 type cable,
and installed on a
small 3 meters above the roof mast, was bringing in aircraft communications from
up to 200 miles
away regularly, and during a recent tropospheric ducting event, he heard planes
flying almost 600
miles away from his QTH... QUESTION THREE: This one came also from many
listeners, and asks me why I
have insisted so much in homebrewing regenerative radio receivers instead of
standard direct
conversion or super-heterodyne radios... Well amigos, the fact is that both
vacuum tube and solid
state regenerative radios in my opinion are not only easy to build , but they
also offer high
sensitivity and selectivity when properly operated, without having to invest in
expensive electronic
components.. For example, my ultimate regenerative receiver is an almost perfect
match for CW Morse
radiotelegraphy reception to my excellent Kenwood TS820 transceiver, one of the
best ham radio sets
ever made. The TS820 when equipped with the 500 Hertz bandwidth filter is a
dream radio... BUT , my
easy to build three vacuum tube regenerative will compete with the
professionally built commercial
Kenwood set while working 40 and 30 meter CW DX.There are two important things
to consider when
building a high quality regenerative or regenerodyne receivers, one is the need
to use very high
quality air spaced ceramic insulated variable capacitors for the main tuning,
the bandspread tuning
and in some circuits the feedback control or so called throttle variable
capacitor. The other thing
that you must really take care about, is the use of a variable link coupling
between the detector
and the antenna... It is amazing how the performance of a regenerative changes
for the better when
you use high quality air spaced ceramic insulated capacitors and a well designed
and built variable
link antenna coupling. I may add that operating a regenerative receiver from
regulated DC voltages
is also essential in order to achieve best possible reception. Maybe one day in
the future we will
see a really high performance regenerative radio receiver in kit form, so that
the painstaking
process of gathering the parts and doing the metal work will not be required by
the builders...By
the way , I have some new regenerative receiver's circuit diagrams that are in
compact dot jpg files
format, so they can be sent via e-mail. Send for the REGENERATIVE RECEIVER INFO
PACKAGE SECOND
EDITION by sending an e-mail to arnie@rhc.cu
amigos, and remember that I will send it from my own PC
as soon as your mail arrives... As always its a real pleasure to help you all
enjoy this wonderful
hobby by learning more about it !!!
....
Attention Radio Havana Cuba listeners around the world... your attention please...
our engineering
department needs your help... We are now testing our 9600 kiloHertz frequency
with a new
transmitter. It is on the air starting at 00 UTC, that is 8pm Eastern , 7 pm
Central, 6 PM mountain
and 5 pm Pacific time... again the frequency is 9600 kiloHertz and the new
transmitter under test
will be on the air from 00 to 05 UTC... The program we are broadcasting on that
frequency is in
Spanish, but you can easily identify the station because we do ID quite often,
and use the same
interval signal that is used on our regular English language programs... Send
your reports to
arnie@rhc.cu amigos, and we will be sending
back to you a special transmitter test QSL card that I
will autograph for you...Friday evening , when we first tested the new
transmitter it was sounding
really good, with excellent modulation quality, as heard via ground wave here in
Havana... We are
also now using on a regular basis from 05 to 07 UTC our 250 kiloWatt transmitter
on 9820 kiloHertz
with the Pacific Coast of North America Curtain Array... By the way the new
transmitter is a 100
kilowatt rig, but we are running it at 70 kiloWatts during the test period...
The antenna used on
9600 kiloHertz is beaming to Venezuela, but many of you in NOrth America can
pick up the back of the
beam quite easily according to my calculations .
You can also send your reports via AIR MAIL to Arnie Coro, Radio Havana Cuba,
Havana , Cuba, and
don't forget to include your postal mailing address in all of your
correspondence to the station, so
that we can send you our nice QSL cards that verify your reception reports...
.....
This is Radio Havana Cuba, the name of the show is Dxers Unlimited, we are on
the air and on the web
twice weekly with a program content that is targeted to both newcomers and
oldtimers that are
enjoying this wonderful hobby... Here is now item five of today's show: one of
the most important
things to learn how to do it, and do it well, is how to solder electronic
components... your radio
hobby career be it short or long will always require that you know how to use a
soldering iron and
the special type of rosin core solder that is used for electronics work... Never
use acid flux or
acid core solder when working with electronic equipment amigos... The best
solder now available has
about two percent silver, and melts at a rather low temperature, something that
is becoming more and
more important as commercially built equipment tends to increase the density of
components in order
to reduce the size ...You may want to start practicing how to solder by using a
medium power
soldering iron, between 30 and 50 Watts will be ideal... Never attempt to learn
how to solder using
low power soldering irons amigos !!!
And now, as always at the end of the program , here is Arnie Coro's Dxers
Unlimited's propagation
update and forecast... The largest sized sunspot group at this moment stopped
developing on
Saturday, but it is still capable of producing M or even an X class solar flare...
The number of
sunspots is expected to diminish during the next several days, but this may
change if the new
sunspot active region now about to rotate into view has a complex structure...
Expect much better
radio reception during the next three days as compared to the previous three
days, and the reason
for this improvement is the much lower geomagnetic activity expected. The number
of sunspots from
optical observations is between 80 and 90, and the solar flux is hovering
between 120 and 130 units.
Expect a nice an low A sub P or planetary geomagnetic disturbance indicator on
Monday UTC if no
further coronal hole or flare activity changes this forecast. I will recommend
the 19 and 16 meters
international short wave broadcast bands for easy listening from shortly before
sunrise to about 2
hours after sunset in the case of 16 meters and much later into the local
evening for the 19 meter
band. Amateur radio operator's best DX chances continue to be on the 20 meter
band , with 30 meters
running a close second. See you all at the mid week edition of the program, and
don't forget to
check our 9600 kiloHertz frequency in Spanish from 00 to 05 hours UTC and send
your reports to
arnie@rhc.cu .