To be honest, I think those who only transmit are much to be despised (hyperbole for effect). We beacon experimenters owe a debt of thanks to those who spot and grab our signals - in my case that's a particular thanks to Guenael and Johan and others - and the best way to repay that debt is to play our own part in the reception and reporting of the signals of others. This is, after all, a street with two-way traffic!
So - I decided today was the day to cook up a receiver for my beacon.
I took as my jumping off point the excellent DC receiver section of Roy Lewallen, w7el's, Optimized QRP Transceiver for 40m . I had already enjoyed success with this circuit, having used it as the basis for the receive side of my Funster Plus rig. Now all I needed to do was modify the AF filter to give a passband in the 1.5kHz region associated with WSPR signals...
This was quickly achieved with an LTSpice model...
Now I've got the "free" toner transfer process down to a fine art, it is (almost) simpler to go straight for a PCB, rather than mess around with any other processing method - so EAGLE gave me a layout in no time...
Once the board was stuffed I was too excited to make tests or anything as organized as that - I just connected up the minimum set of elements on the bench and took it for a test drive...
You can see the new Rx board at left, with the Si570 USB Synth above it and the Low Pass Filter connecting to the antenna at right.
Here's a closer view of the new Rx board doing its thing...
Sure enough, I started spotting WSPR signals - the first from pa2wo.
The AF gain of the receiver isn't high enough - I can only get an Rx noise level of -25dB on the WSPR screen at the moment, but it still pulled in some signals...
I'll leave it running overnight and see what I can catch - despite knowing that the overall gain isn't high enough yet. Perhaps I'll sort that out tomorrow.
...-.- de m0xpd
Update:
As promised, I left the receiver on overnight with the following results (ten different stations, all spotted in the evening (nothing after 22:15 UTC)...
Hello, Paul -
ReplyDeleteHave you considered using a "Norton Amplifier" - in particular the venerable LM3900 (quad amp on a chip)? Ten-Tec used it as a bandpass audio filter in their Century 21 QRP rig and it seemed to work quite nicely. They used 3 of the 4 amps on board for 2.5, 1.0 and .500 khz bandwidth - switching in one, two or three amps. Check out
http://www.scribd.com/doc/31890363/Ten-Tec-Century-21-Owner-s-Manual on page 20. I think you could change the filter r-c components and get it just about anywhere you wanted - additionally, there's plenty of gain. Do a search for "LM3900 data sheet" - gobs of info is out there, just waiting.
Best DX with your WSPR
Bruce - KK0S