JUMA-TX1 Assembly Begins


The several pink and clear baggies hold the several dozen parts. If you click on the image for a bigger version, look in the lower pink baggie in its lower left corner. You may be able to see a tiny black square. That’s an integrated circuit with 10 separate connections, each of which must be carefully soldered to the circuit board, and without “bridging” any of the pins to another.

It is meticulous and exacting work.

A second PC board, to be assembled next, houses the power amplifier that boosts the RF signal on 40 or 80 meters to 5 watts, less than that of an old style night light. Coupled to an outside antenna that, ideally, is longer than the diagonal across the city-size lot on which our house sits, on a very good day, I can “talk” to other ham radio operators around the world. (On a bad day, I’ll be lucky to raise a neighbor half a mile from here.)

The third assembly will be the box that houses everything including switches and other controls to be manipulated by the operator (me). Finished, the unit is about 4x2x1.5 inches. The rig transmits only CW signals (Morse code) so, when not busy with the soldering iron and big magnifying glass, I’ll be practicing and getting my speed up to a reasonable speed again. 10 WPM would be a nice start but, to be practical, 20+ is the real goal. I could do 15 many years ago. Getting to there and then pushing on to 20 will take some time.

It begins.

History

EDSkinner.net began in 2023. Fiction and non-fiction publications are included as well as (blog) posts and supplemental materials from flat5.net (2004-present).

Comments submitted on individual pages are subject to approval. General suggestions may be sent via the Contact page.

© Copyright 2024 by E D Skinner, All rights reserved