Radio Havana Cuba Radio Havana Cuba Dxers Unlimited's weekend edition
December 30-31 2006 By Arnie Coro radio amateur CO2KK Hi amigos radioaficionados around the world and in space Season's Greeetings and a Very Happy and Prosperous New Year 2007 for you all... I am Arnie Coro , radio amateur CO2KK, your host here in Havana, now ready to bring you short wave radio's most comprehensive radio hobby program.. The one and only that tries really hard to cover all aspects of this wonderful and fascinating hobby that you and I love... Now, talking about 2007, just around the corner... it's going to be solar minimum year, described by scientists as the Year of the Quiet Sun, something that we are already watching, as the daily sunspot count during the past seven days has gone down to ZERO in three of them...So, be prepared to deal with very low daytime maximum useable frequencies, and the bands above 20 megaHertz sounding just like another VHF band amigos !!! Item two: Very low solar activity is good news for low frequency bands users that benefit from much less ionospheric absorption , something typical of extended periods of very low solar flux... Amateur radio operators that have enough space to install antennas for the 160 and 80 meters band will be able to work some very nice DX all along this winter season, and as a matter of fact , some of them are already having a good time working far away stations on 160 and 80 meters... Likewise Tropical Broadcast bands Dxers are now able to pick up very weak stations half way around the world, like , for example listening in North America to Tropical Band stations in the Asia Pacific region. More radio hobby related information coming up in few seconds when Dxers Unlimited's weekend edition, our last program of 2006 continues... I am Arnie Coro in Havana. ....... Si amigos, yes my friends, even with a little portable radio receiver, powered from a set of batteries you can enjoy AM broadcast band Dxing from sunset to sunrise... As ionospheric absorption from the lower layer of the ionosphere just vanishes when the Sun sets at your location, AM broadcast stations located within the typical skip distance of up to two thousand kilometers will be heard even on a very low cost radio... As a matter of fact, some AM broadcast band Dxers accept the challenge of picking up the greatest number of DX stations using the simplest possible receivers. Going to the very extreme of this concept, some of them homebrew sophisticated crystal radio sets , using highly efficient high Q coils that provide amazing performance. One of the most unusual crystal set circuits is the voltage quadrupler four germanium diodes detector, that provides a high sensitivity not possible when using the typical single diode detector used in classic crystal sets. Item four: Our Technical Topics section will deal today with yet another HOW TO, that in my opinion is going to be rather useful for the many Dxers Unlimited listeners around the world that enjoy homebrewing antennas... This HOW TO deals with how to wind antenna matching transformers that are able to step up or step down the impedance ratios . A little mathematics is involved here, but it's quite logical and easy to remember. A one to one matching transformer has the same number of turns in both the primary and the secondary. Now if you want to match an antenna system that has, for example 150 ohms impedance to a 50 ohms coaxial cable, the turns ratio of the transformer is 1.73 turns to 1... For those of you familiar with mathematics, YES, its the square root of 3... Now the extremely popular four to one matching transformer that is used with standard 300 ohms loads to match the cheaper and more easily available 75 ohms coaxial cable, again, it's the square root of 4, or in other words two turns of the primary winding for every one turn on the secondary. Likewise you can make your own nine to one and sixteen to one matching transformers, the nine to one transformer requires three turns on the primary for every turn on the secondary winding. While the very useful sixteen to one transformer that I use for matching the new version of the extremely popular Arnie Coro's Tilted Terminated Folded Dipole ... requires four turns in one of the windings for every turn of the other winding. As you have already realized, you need to keep the ratio of primary to secondary turns to provide the required step up or step down ratio... Now here are two examples of typical broadband antenna matching transformers wound on ferrite rods. For a transformer that is designed to match a 450 ohms line to a 50 ohms line, the ratio is nine to one... So I experimented winding 21 turns on the side of the transformer that is connected to the 450 ohms line, and seven turns on the side going to the 50 ohms line. Using a small length of a ferrite rod from a broken down portable radio, this transformer was tested very carefully and found to have very little loss, while providing an excellent match from 5 megaHertz all the way up to 25 megaHertz, and still be useable up to 30 megaHertz. Learning more about broadband matching transformers will give you a very useful tool for working with antennas and transmission lines, one of the more than 80 ways, that you and I enjoy this wonderful hobby .... RADIO !!! ....... You are listening to Radio Havana Cuba, the name of the show is Dxers Unlimited, and YES, you can start the New Year with a nice QSL card from us, verifying reception of this program amigos... Send your signal reports and comments directly to me [EMAIL PROTECTED], and don't forget to include your radio hobby related questions, that will be answered via e-mail as soon as possible and will also be part of the program in the most popular section of this show "ASK ARNIE"... and here it is , in our last program of 2006, ASK ARNIE, answering a question asked by listeners in 23 countries... and I think this is a record for a single question... Our friends in those 23 countries all want to know if Solar Cycle 24 is really going to be a very active one, and five listeners are hoping for a match with record breaking cycle 19 that had a peak average sunspot for a single month of 207... the highest ever recorded by solar astronomers... ANSWER: According to a very well documented scientific paper, solar cycle 24, due to start by the end of 2007 or a little later, is expected to peak with an average monthly sunspot count of no less than 40 more than cycle 23...and some scientists say that by the years 2009 and 2010 we may already be witnessing a very active Sun... Forecasts for the actual peak of cycle 24 are still not very precise, as researchers need to watch how the cycle starts up in order to make a more accurate forecast... If you want to draw your own conclusions, get set for two more years of very low solar activity, so you will have more than enough time to experiment with low frequency bands antennas amigos !!! ..... Antenna topics, the number three most popular section of Dxers Unlimited according to the e-mail messages and letters that I receive here at my e-mail account : [EMAIL PROTECTED] and VIA AIR MAIL to Arnie Coro, Radio Havana Cuba , Havana, Cuba... Yes, all who write regularly to my program agree that after ASK ARNIE, and the HF propagation and low band VHF update and forecast, the third most popular section of this show is the one devoted to antennas... And today , the antenna topics section will be devoted to a very compact and easy to homebrew antenna for the frequency range from 110 to 150 megaHertz, that will give you nice reception of the VHF aircraft band and the 2 meters amateur band. It is a vertically polarized FAN DIPOLE, made using a center insulator from which three half inch diameter elements are connected to each side of the insulator. So, you certainly need a heavy piece of TEFLON or Polyethilene in the form of a block that must be at least three quarters of an inch thick, that is 19 millimeters, in order to support the heavy weight of the six elements that form the antenna. The elements are cut to a length of 60 centimeters of about two feet, and they are all of the same length. They are held to the center insulator using stainless steel hardware, so as to reduce to a minimum corrosion problems. The center insulating plastic block has a hole in the middle for the support boom. This is required because the vertical broadband fan dipole has to be side mounted on the supporting mast or tower, and separated from it by at least 60 centimeters or two feet, or better yet by three feet or about one meter away from the mast or tower. The antenna is fed with standard 50 ohms half inch diameter coaxial cable RG213, and will provide excellent reception of the VHF AIR BAND that extends from 110 to 136 megaHertz, and also will allow picking up point to point and mobile services in the 136 to 144 megaHertz range, and provide you with a nice almost omnidirectional antenna for the two meters amateur band that will provide a nice match to any amateur radio transceiver that you may want to use with this antenna. By the way, a listener recently asked about VHF AIR Band monitoring, as he happens to own a SONY ICF 2010 that has that band included, and he wanted to know if he can hear planes even if he lives quite far away from an airport... So, let me now use a little time here for a second round of ASK ARNIE, and tell amigo Justin from Montana, USA, that high flying commercial jet aircraft can be heard at distances of up to 100 or even sometimes 150 miles away or more while they check their flight path with Air Traffic Control and if you happen to live within about 50 miles from an airport, monitoring both the terminal , that's the Air Traffic Control that takes care of the inbound and outbound flights when they are flying below a certain altitude , is a really fascinating experience... Yes amigos, monitoring the VHF air band is one of the three different ways that you can listen to planes flying not only near your home, but also those that are crossing the oceans at high altitudes, and use HF single side band to communicate with the LDOC, or Long Distance Operating Centers... And now, just before going QRT, here is our HF plus low band VHF propagation update and forecast amigos... Solar activity is very low, but moving up slowly, expect very quiet magnetic conditions for the next two days, but that may change by mid week. Nice AM broadcast band DX conditions during New Years Eve... Now I wish you all a Very Happy and Prosperous 2007, and invite you to keep listening to Dxers Unlimited, a labor of love for the worldwide community of radio hobby enthusiasts... Send you comments about the program to [EMAIL PROTECTED], and help me make it better during 2007 !!! ---[Start Commercial]--------------------- Preorder your WRTH 2007: http://www.hard-core-dx.com/redirect2.php?id=wrth2007 ---[End Commercial]----------------------- ________________________________________ Hard-Core-DX mailing list Hard-Core-DX@hard-core-dx.com http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx http://www.hard-core-dx.com/ _______________________________________________ THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License published by Michael Stutz at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/dsl.html