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- Date: Mon, 7 Jun 93 08:41:15 PDT
- From: ed@imp.pnl.gov
- Subject: QRP PLUS Xcvr
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Reply-To: ew_kleckner@pnlg.pnl.gov
- Message-Id: <9306071541.AA11521@imp.pnl.gov.pnl.gov>
- X-Envelope-To: qrp@think.com
-
- Greetings All --
-
- I was at the SEA-PAC Ham Convention this past weekend and spent some time
- talking to a ham and looking at a couple of units billed as "A Quality
- Transceiver for the Serious Low Power Operator". Basic specs are: 5 watts CW
- & SSB 160M thru 10M, SCAF Digital Audio Filters (100 Hz to 2400 Hz Variable
- Bandwidth), 20 Memories, RIT, Split, Full QSK. Size is 5 1/2"W x 4" H x 6" D.
- Power is 140 Ma on receive, and 1 amp on xmit. Fully synthesized and LARGE
- display and lettering on front panel (I could operate this rig without my
- glasses!). Simple (but full) front panel has LCD Freq display down to 100 Hz
- though it tunes in 10 Hz steps. 20 dB switchable attenuator, Three pos switch
- for XCVE, RIT, SPLIT. REV button for split. BANDWIDTH button for adjusting
- (and displaying SCAF bandwidth). FAST button for tuning, MEM button for
- scanning through the memories (used together these buttons store to a memory).
- Mini-phones jack, S-meter, Volume/OFF control and Tuning Knob. On the back is
- Mic connector, screwdriver adjust output power level (for the milliwatters),
- sidetone level (freq seems to be fixed at 700 Hz, oh well...), power, etc.
- Most of the top of the case covers a "large" speaker chosen for efficiency.
- Got the fellow to pop the lid and looked inside. Construction was very clean
- and neat and consisted of 4 or 5 (can't remember) PC boards stacked
- horizontally and taking up most of the space. the design is a single
- conversion with up conversion to 50 MHz IF. A number of units are out for
- evaluation to fellow qrp enthusiasts and first production run in July. Price
- is listed at $595. For info you can write to:
-
- Index Laboratories
- 19913 48th Street
- Longbranch, WA 98351
-
- (206) 884-3855
-
- Comments: No detailed specs on performance -- he will send me a users manual
- with schematic, etc when available in next month or so. Was hard to judge
- perf in ham-com atmosphere with no antenna to speak of and background noise,
- etc. This might be a very nice unit at half the price and size of an Argo II.
- No separate modules compared to the Scout. If the specs and performance turn
- out to be as good as they should, this could be a real winner. I really liked
- the ability to operate split and the all-band function, as well as the
- variable bandwidth on receive. I suspect requests for info could help this
- guy gauge the market and encourage him in his endeavor. No connection at all,
- but certainly interested...
-
- 72 de N7YQR, Ed
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ~ Edward W. Kleckner K6-84 Internet: ew_kleckner@pnl.gov ~
- ~ Battelle Northwest n7yqr@amsat.org ~
- ~ Battelle Blvd. Packet: N7YQR@WA7EAQ.WA.USA.NA ~
- ~ Richland, Washington Voice: (509) 376-8425 ~
- ~ 99352-0999 FAX: 376-5368 ~
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- ======================================================================
-
- Date: Thu, 20 Jan 94 10:58:57 -0500
- From: comas@dwcu03.nyo.dec.com (andrew comas)
- Message-Id: <9401201558.AA05760@dwcu03.nyo.dec.com>
- To: qrp@Think.COM
- Subject: QRP Plus Rig Review
-
-
- Well 6 months after ordering it, my QRP Plus arrived. A small
- box (5.5"w x 4"h x 6"d) and a lot heavier than I thought, maybe 4
- pounds. The QRP Plus covers CW & SSB 160 meters through 10 meters.
- 5 Watts out on SSB and 0 - 5 watts on CW. It has a SCAF digital
- audio filter covering 100hz to 2400hz in 100hz steps. 20 memories,
- split and rit operation, and full break-in QSK. It also has a 20dB
- attenuator, a separate receiver antenna input and power/S meter. It
- claims .14 Amp (140 ma) power draw on receive and 1 Amp on transmit
- at 12 V and an automatic turn-off at 11V and below. I measured .13
- Amp (130ma) on receive with 50% volume, 147ma on 100% volume.
- Transmit drew 1.15 Amps normal and 1.51 Amps on >3 SWR. I haven't
- tried the 11V auto-off feature, but this would be great for not
- killing off gel-cels.
-
- The unit is well made. Heavy 1/8" aluminum box holds 5 pc boards, 4
- boards stacked on top of each other, separated by plastic-covered
- aluminum shields. The one other board holds the LCD and switches.
- Attached to the top cover is a large 3.5" speaker. The wiring is
- well laid out. The PC boards are connected with a detachable ribbon
- cable. I believe Bruce Franklin of Index Laboratories makes medical
- equipment and he applied those high standards to this little rig.
- Large switches, buttons and knobs make it a pleasure to operate. The
- display is easy to read, nice large .5" numbers on a .75" display.
- The fuse is mounted on the back in a standard fuse holder.
-
- The heart of this rig is an Intel 80C39 microcomputer chip. The chip
- controls the synthesizer (frequency control), display, filters, RIT,
- split frequency operation, iambic keyer, sidetone, and memories. I
- spent some time talking with Bruce about his selection of this chip.
- (My first job out of college was using these microcomputer chips to
- build embedded systems). I asked him why he used the 8039 instead of
- the 8051 (a slightly newer and more functional chip). He said that
- the 8051 was more RF sensitive. Well I have seen RF reset 8051s many
- times myself and spent plenty a night trying to prevent just that. He
- has put plenty of research into this rig. Another example is the
- easy-to-access, standard lithium battery (for memory backup),
- as well as recessed pots to set CW power, sidetone and mic-gain. He
- also includes a nice large tuning dial with a finger point for easy
- tuning.
-
- Having a nice tuning dial is very important, especially since all
- your selections are done by it. You press a FAST, MEMORY, or
- BANDWIDTH button (or combination to store into memory or set keyer
- speed) and then turn the main tuning dial to select. In frequency
- mode one full turn is 4Khz, in fast frequency mode one full turn is
- about 60Khz. You cover all the BANDWIDTH filters in a half turn,
- all 20 memories in 3 1/2 turns.
-
- The head phone jack is set for walkman type stereo headphones (don't
- try mono headphones; they won't work unless you plug them in half-
- way). The volume output for the headphones is more than
- adequate. I never get beyond 3/4.
-
- The receiver really shines. I could hear a lot more then I could
- ever hope to work and the SCAF filter is remarkable. You press the
- BANDWIDTH button and the display shows you the SCAF filter frequency
- in Khz. At 2.0 Khz, SSB is really clear, at .1 Khz it's a CW pile-up
- solver (or so says Bruce). The filters work very smoothly.
-
- Other nice features are:
- There are three recessed pots on the back which set:
- Mic Gain
- CW output power 0 - 5 watts continuous
- Sidetone volume (not frequency)
- The MEMory button toggles between the frequency in memory and the
- working frequency. A nice way to monitor a net or sked.
-
- The iambic keyer is not ready yet, but will be a free update when it
- is. The box is pre-drilled and labeled for the plug. So all that's
- needed is to upgrade the EPROM (the key is simulated in software like
- the CMOS Super Keyer II is) and the jack. The keyer speed is set via
- the main tuning knob and a button press.
-
- As with everything I have my complaints. The antenna connect is via
- a standard BNC instead of an SO-259 connector. The FAST tuning
- button moved at 60Khz per tuning dial turn. There needs to be a 1Mhz
- rate for quickly tuning bands. Of course this is only a pain until
- you set memories and use them to set bands. (The rig has some preset
- band frequencies which you can re-load into memory). I would have
- added a light for the LCD, but Bruce decided to save the 20-30ma and
- not add one (I asked him about this). I built my own mic from the
- Radio Shack speaker mic, but I couldn't get the mic gain to give more
- than 1 Watt out on SSB. Bruce said people were having mixed results
- with building their own. Index Labs will be selling one as an
- option.
-
- Other observations: As we see more and more things controlled by
- computers, functionality won't be our complaints, software bugs will
- be. And I hit one. When in RIT mode, pressing REVerse is suppose to
- give you the transmit frequency. It doesn't. It sets the receive
- and transmit frequencies to the RIT frequency. Nothing major and
- Bruce promises to fix it with the iambic keyer upgrade. Also the
- display frequency on my rig has a tendency to drift down 100hz after
- the first transmit. This is solved by switching into SPLIT mode.
- The SPLIT mode locks the frequency in and disables the tuning knob
- (and yes this means the BANDWIDTH control is locked out too, another
- software bug to be fixed). But on the upside, a software controlled
- rig allows for more functionality. Bruce is talking about letting
- the user set the QSK break-in time, paddle reverse all of which can be
- accomplished via software. The rig does not reduce power on high SWR
- since the transmit components are rated at much higher power levels
- than 5W, but may produce spurious signals.
-
- Overall this is a fabulous rig for the money ($595). It was built by
- a man who loves QRP for the QRP lover and it shows.
-
- The usual disclaimers: I do not work for Index Laboratories nor am
- in any way compensated. Just a happy customer. Opinions expressed
- by the author are not necessarily those of Digital Equipment Corp.
-
-
-