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1994-11-26
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From: Kevin Purcell (Rho) <a-kevinp@microsoft.com>
To: QRP@Think.COM
Date: Tue, 6 Jul 93 09:29:51 PDT
Subject: RE: Things that never were ?
Cc: mvjf@mvubr.att.com
One thing that suprised me while trying to come up with modifications
to the HW-7 (I have a 7 and an 8, but still haven't managed to snag a 9
yet) was what an terrible design it was EVEN for the early 1970s. They
could have copied the Wes Haywards diode DBM direct conversion design
(published in 1965 QST?) and had vastly better receiver for no increase
in production costs -- perhaps even made it cheap. I think they went
for the fashionable (at the time) 40673 and CA3035 for no particularly
good reason. The TX is almost as bad -- with random offsets on each
band. Everytime I reread Ade Weiss' 1970s writings in the QRPp column
in CQ and in the Milliwatt I am constantly amazed what those folks did
with the HW-7 and the PowerMite rigs. Maybe it forced you to be a better op!
But this is all 20-20 hindsight. Very few people were thinking about RX
performance in the way we do today.
The HW-8 is far better, but why did they leave out an RIT -- didn't
they learn anything for the HW-7!
The HW-9 again was a big leap. Using DBMs and a superhet design in the
same size box as the 7 and 8 showed some genius but they still spoil
the ship for a ha'peth of tar -- a mediocre response and poorly matched
xtal filter. Unreliable injection levels in the product detector, poor
receiver muting, drift which varied from model to model. Take a look at
the HW Handbook or QQ or SPRAT for the various solutions to these
problems and others.
The HW-10:
* would be in the same size box ad the earlier models
* would have SSB but no speech processor
* would have a commerical 2.4kHz filter, but wouldn't have a narrow CW
filter (most would appear soon after to add this).
* would have a built in keyer as an option
* would have a similar RX design to the the HW-9
* would have a similar TX design to the TenTec QRP rigs (broadband
drivers and final)
* would have a single regular VFO (not PTO or PLL)
* would have been $400 or so
* would have moved to a two board design to filt more in the same space
* would have been bought by a few hard souls
* would still be sought after today :-)
Kevin Purcell N7WIM / G8UDP
a-kevinp@microsoft.com
Sit simplex, stulte!