[Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

2009-11-18 Thread Phil Hystad
Gang,

Thanks for all the great e-mails and answers to my first round of K3 questions. 
 Lots of good information and advice.  I do have a few more questions but I 
will limit these of one question at a time.


Several people have advised to get the sub-receiver option.  Now, this really 
puts me on the fence as I have a sub-receiver in my Icom Pro III and I almost 
never use it.  Actually, I have never used it in an actual QSO, I have merely 
played with it from time to time.

So, my first question is, Why do I want a sub-receiver?...

Maybe a little about my background helps.  I got into ham radio as a novice 
(WN7ECQ) back in the mid-1960s.  Ham radio was very rudimentary back then with 
CW mode only, a transmitter and a few crystals, but a very good receiver 
(Hammarlund, HQ-170AC).  Then, after the Novice one-year license expired I let 
the hobby go silent for 38 years.  I was relicensed and back on the air in 
February/March 2004 with a used Icom 756 transceiver.

But, my operating style reflects a lot of my Novice experience rooted in the 
technology and practices of the 1960s.  Mostly CW, some SSB for some of the 
evening nets and other stuff when the band is hot and a periodically scheduled 
SSB QSO with some of my ham friends from back in those 1960 days.  Not much of 
a contester but I very much like the technology aspect, experimentation, SDR, 
and so on.  And, I am always looking to do new things that capture my interest.

So, I may be missing out on a huge corner of this hobby by not even knowing how 
someone makes use of a sub-receiver.  Thus, my question.

73,
phil, K7PEH

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Re: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

2009-11-18 Thread WILLIS COOKE
Maybe you don't need the sub-reciever Phil, but I have one and I use it a lot.

Here is what I do.  When I am working split, I tune the DX with the main 
receiver then push the AB button to get the same frequency into the 
sub-receiver and press sub.  I adjust the volume on the sub and then when I 
determine as much as I can about where he is listening from him, the jerks on 
his frequency and the cluster I go  looking for a spot to call with the main 
receiver.  I can listen to my transmit frequency to be sure there is not a QSO 
on it while I listen to the DX and make my calls.  If the propagation is right 
and I am lucky, sometimes I can find where the DX is working and get a little 
advantage.

Sometimes when I am monitoring a dead band, like ten or six I sit one receiver 
on the SSB calling frequency and one on the CW calling frequency.

The sub-receiver must not be essential because a lot of us were using K3s 
before it was available.  But I sure like to have the sub-receiver and use it a 
lot.

Ancient Age is no excuse.  I am 69 years young and been licensed since 1956.  
My first rig was a BC-455 Command Receiver and a home brew 6AG7/6BQ6 
transmitter that ran 35 watts input and maybe 20 watts output as guessed with a 
40 watt light bulb about half brilliance.
 Willis 'Cookie' Cooke 
K5EWJ 





From: Phil Hystad k7...@comcast.net
To: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Wed, November 18, 2009 11:23:06 AM
Subject: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

Gang,

Thanks for all the great e-mails and answers to my first round of K3 
questions.  Lots of good information and advice.  I do have a few more 
questions but I will limit these of one question at a time.


Several people have advised to get the sub-receiver option.  Now, this really 
puts me on the fence as I have a sub-receiver in my Icom Pro III and I almost 
never use it.  Actually, I have never used it in an actual QSO, I have merely 
played with it from time to time.

So, my first question is, Why do I want a sub-receiver?...

Maybe a little about my background helps.  I got into ham radio as a novice 
(WN7ECQ) back in the mid-1960s.  Ham radio was very rudimentary back then with 
CW mode only, a transmitter and a few crystals, but a very good receiver 
(Hammarlund, HQ-170AC).  Then, after the Novice one-year license expired I let 
the hobby go silent for 38 years.  I was relicensed and back on the air in 
February/March 2004 with a used Icom 756 transceiver.

But, my operating style reflects a lot of my Novice experience rooted in the 
technology and practices of the 1960s.  Mostly CW, some SSB for some of the 
evening nets and other stuff when the band is hot and a periodically scheduled 
SSB QSO with some of my ham friends from back in those 1960 days.  Not much of 
a contester but I very much like the technology aspect, experimentation, SDR, 
and so on.  And, I am always looking to do new things that capture my interest.

So, I may be missing out on a huge corner of this hobby by not even knowing how 
someone makes use of a sub-receiver.  Thus, my question.

73,
phil, K7PEH

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Re: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

2009-11-18 Thread Vic K2VCO
Phil Hystad wrote:

 So, my first question is, Why do I want a sub-receiver?...

I use it for two things:

1) Diversity reception. I find that weak CW reception is greatly improved with 
diversity. 
For example, on 40M, I use a dipole connected to the main antenna and a small 
vertical on 
the subreceiver. When the signal fades on one antenna, it often comes up on the 
other. And 
the response to noise seems to be different in the two receivers. The result it 
that far 
fewer characters are 'questionable', and copy is easier.

2) Pileups. I listen to the DX station on the main receiver and the pileup in 
the sub; the 
K3 is in split mode so it will transmit on the sub's frequency.  I have the K3 
set up to 
use the same antenna in this case, but I use a narrow bandwidth in the main and 
a wider 
one in the sub. I have set the K3 to send the main signal to both ears and the 
sub only to 
the left in this mode. This allows me to easily pick out the station that the 
DX is 
working and be on the right frequency when I call him.

This sounds complicated, but the K3 is designed to do this stuff (the antenna 
setup is 
sticky for diversity/non-diversity, and the channelization of the audio only 
affects 
non-diversity). Combined with the macro capability, it takes ONE button-press 
on the K3 to 
activate either of these modes.

-- 
73,
Vic, K2VCO
Fresno CA
http://www.qsl.net/k2vco
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Re: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

2009-11-18 Thread Phil Hystad
Dave,

Thanks for your comments and I do agree with the notion that given that the K3 
is so modular that ...you can always add it later  -- albeit, with a but and 
a however...

But and However -- I hear that there is an extra degree of complexity and 
rework to put in the sub-receiver later so if I think I might want it later 
then it behooves me to get it up front.  Now, I am still on the fence, it may 
come down to the cost of the whole configuration.

phil

On Nov 18, 2009, at 2:10 PM, Dave, W8OV wrote:

 Phil Hystad wrote:
 Gang,
 Thanks for all the great e-mails and answers to my first round of K3 
 questions.  Lots of good information and advice.  I do have a few more 
 questions but I will limit these of one question at a time.
 Several people have advised to get the sub-receiver option.  Now, this 
 really puts me on the fence as I have a sub-receiver in my Icom Pro III and 
 I almost never use it.  Actually, I have never used it in an actual QSO, I 
 have merely played with it from time to time.
 So, my first question is, Why do I want a sub-receiver?...
 Maybe a little about my background helps.  I got into ham radio as a novice 
 (WN7ECQ) back in the mid-1960s.  Ham radio was very rudimentary back then 
 with CW mode only, a transmitter and a few crystals, but a very good 
 receiver (Hammarlund, HQ-170AC).  Then, after the Novice one-year license 
 expired I let the hobby go silent for 38 years.  I was relicensed and back 
 on the air in February/March 2004 with a used Icom 756 transceiver.
 But, my operating style reflects a lot of my Novice experience rooted in the 
 technology and practices of the 1960s.  Mostly CW, some SSB for some of the 
 evening nets and other stuff when the band is hot and a periodically 
 scheduled SSB QSO with some of my ham friends from back in those 1960 days.  
 Not much of a contester but I very much like the technology aspect, 
 experimentation, SDR, and so on.  And, I am always looking to do new things 
 that capture my interest.
 So, I may be missing out on a huge corner of this hobby by not even knowing 
 how someone makes use of a sub-receiver.  Thus, my question.
 73,
 phil, K7PEH
 
 Phil,
 
 My operating sounds somewhat like yours.  Mostly casual ragchewing, piddling 
 around in contests, but not seriously.  I had a subreceiver in my previous 
 transceiver, but decided to save the money when I ordered the K3.  I don't 
 miss it at all.  I am able to work split without it on the few occasions I 
 need it.  The beauty of the modular system is that if you decide you need it, 
 you can always add it later.
 
 73,
 
 Dave, W8OV

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Re: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

2009-11-18 Thread Don Wilhelm
Phil,

Believe me, it is not much more trouble to install the SubRX later than 
it is during the initial construction.
I think the biggest headache of adding the SubRX is  routing the 
cables.   Some will say that removing the Front Panel to add the 2nd DSP 
board is the hardest part, but if you have assembled your K3 from the 
kit version, it will be easy for you.  That feeling of difficulty is 
natural for those who have purchased a factory built K3.  One of the 
advantages of building the kit version is that you do become familiar 
with how it goes together.

I would even say that if you are mostly a casual operator (and 
especially if you are working on a budget), you may want to order only 
the basic K3 (plus KAT3 if you do not have all resonant antennas) and 
operate it for a while before deciding on the additional filters and 
options that you would like to have in it.  Once the SubRX is in place, 
adding filters to the main board is more difficult, so you ideally would 
want to determine the filter set you want to end up in both the main and 
SubRX before actually adding the SubRX - that is only my opinion, others 
may (and will) differ.

73,
Don W3FPR

Phil Hystad wrote:
 Dave,

 Thanks for your comments and I do agree with the notion that given that the 
 K3 is so modular that ...you can always add it later  -- albeit, with a but 
 and a however...

 But and However -- I hear that there is an extra degree of complexity and 
 rework to put in the sub-receiver later so if I think I might want it later 
 then it behooves me to get it up front.  Now, I am still on the fence, it may 
 come down to the cost of the whole configuration.

 phil
   

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Re: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

2009-11-18 Thread Andrew Faber
Phil,
 It's no big deal to add the subrx later.  Don't make a decision based on 
that as an issue.
  73, andy, ae6y
- Original Message - 
From: Phil Hystad k7...@comcast.net
To: Dave, W8OV w...@verizon.net
Cc: Elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 2:17 PM
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module


 Dave,

 Thanks for your comments and I do agree with the notion that given that 
 the K3 is so modular that ...you can always add it later  -- albeit, 
 with a but and a however...

 But and However -- I hear that there is an extra degree of complexity and 
 rework to put in the sub-receiver later so if I think I might want it 
 later then it behooves me to get it up front.  Now, I am still on the 
 fence, it may come down to the cost of the whole configuration.

 phil

 On Nov 18, 2009, at 2:10 PM, Dave, W8OV wrote:

 Phil Hystad wrote:
 Gang,
 Thanks for all the great e-mails and answers to my first round of K3 
 questions.  Lots of good information and advice.  I do have a few more 
 questions but I will limit these of one question at a time.
 Several people have advised to get the sub-receiver option.  Now, this 
 really puts me on the fence as I have a sub-receiver in my Icom Pro III 
 and I almost never use it.  Actually, I have never used it in an actual 
 QSO, I have merely played with it from time to time.
 So, my first question is, Why do I want a sub-receiver?...
 Maybe a little about my background helps.  I got into ham radio as a 
 novice (WN7ECQ) back in the mid-1960s.  Ham radio was very rudimentary 
 back then with CW mode only, a transmitter and a few crystals, but a 
 very good receiver (Hammarlund, HQ-170AC).  Then, after the Novice 
 one-year license expired I let the hobby go silent for 38 years.  I was 
 relicensed and back on the air in February/March 2004 with a used Icom 
 756 transceiver.
 But, my operating style reflects a lot of my Novice experience rooted in 
 the technology and practices of the 1960s.  Mostly CW, some SSB for some 
 of the evening nets and other stuff when the band is hot and a 
 periodically scheduled SSB QSO with some of my ham friends from back in 
 those 1960 days.  Not much of a contester but I very much like the 
 technology aspect, experimentation, SDR, and so on.  And, I am always 
 looking to do new things that capture my interest.
 So, I may be missing out on a huge corner of this hobby by not even 
 knowing how someone makes use of a sub-receiver.  Thus, my question.
 73,
 phil, K7PEH

 Phil,

 My operating sounds somewhat like yours.  Mostly casual ragchewing, 
 piddling around in contests, but not seriously.  I had a subreceiver in 
 my previous transceiver, but decided to save the money when I ordered the 
 K3.  I don't miss it at all.  I am able to work split without it on the 
 few occasions I need it.  The beauty of the modular system is that if you 
 decide you need it, you can always add it later.

 73,

 Dave, W8OV

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Re: [Elecraft] Newbie Questions for K3...subreceiver module

2009-11-18 Thread Ron D'Eau Claire
Phil wrote: 

I hear that there is an extra degree of complexity and rework to put in the
sub-receiver later so if I think I might want it later then it behooves me
to get it up front.  Now, I am still on the fence, it may come down to the
cost of the whole configuration.

--

Phil, go to www.elecraft.com and download the KRX3 manual. It contains the
full installation instructions written for someone who may have never opened
up a K3 before. That should give you a good idea of the amount of work
involved. 

Ron AC7AC


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