XPost: rec.radio.amateur.moderated
amateur radio - Hackaday
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Building A Hundred-Year-Old Radio Transmitter
Posted: 31 Aug 2021 10:00 PM PDT
https://hackaday.com/2021/08/31/building-a-hundred-year-old-radio-transmitter/
Our Hackaday team is spread across the world, but remains in easy contact through the magic of the Internet. A number of us hold amateur radio
callsigns, so could with a bit of effort and expenditure do the same over
the airwaves. A hundred years ago this would have seemed barely conceivable
as amateurs were restricted to the then-considered-unusable HF frequencies.
Thus it was that in December 1921 a group of American radio amateurs
gathered in a field in Greenwich Connecticut in an attempt to span the Atlantic. Their 1.3 MHz transmitter using the callsign 1BCG seems quaintly low-frequency a hundred years later, but their achievement of securing reception in Ardrossan, Scotland, proved that intercontinental
communication on higher frequencies was a practical proposition. A century later a group from the Antique Wireless Association are bringing a replica transmitter to life to recreate the event.
A free-running oscillator is today rarely seen in a radio transmitter, but
at the time their single-tube Colpitts oscillator using a UV-204
transmitting tube would have been considered a stable source. That fed a
1KW power amplifier using three more UV-204s in parallel, which in turn fed
a Marconi-style T antenna design with an earth counterpoise of multiple
radial wires. The replica was originally built for an event in 1996, and substitutes the similar 204A tube for the now unobtainable UV-204. Even
then, hundred-year-old tubes are hard to find in 2021, so they could only muster a single working example for the PA.
All in all its a very interesting project, and one of which we hope well
hear more as the anniversary approaches. If we can get the transmission
details well share them with you, and lets see whether the same distances
can be traversed with the more noisy conditions here in 2021.
To demonstrate how advanced this transmitter was for 1921, take a look at
the Alexanderson alternator, its mechanical contemporary.
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