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Detailed entries for one subject from the INDEX TO HOW TO DO IT INFORMATION.
Click on a see also (sa) or tracing (xx) to view detailed entries about a related subject.
The entries are in alphabetical order by magazine name and then in chronological sequence.
To obtain a copy of any magazine article contact your local public library or the publisher.

AMATEUR RADIO TRANSMITTER
sa   AMATEUR RADIO TRANSMITTER ACCESSORIES
xx   AMATEUR RADIO

Build this modified enclosure for the GLB synthesizer. Use it along with a bargain priced crystal controlled 2-meter f.m. transceiver.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1979 (v.35#2) pg. 34

Instructions for building the Viking-5, a 5 watt solid state transmitter for the 3.5 and 7 MHz bands.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1979 (v.35#2) pg. 40

How to add the low frequency 160 meter band to the Heath SB-220 linear amplifier.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1979 (v.35#2) pg. 46

Build a 1935-style DX transmitter. Uses two tubes and is crystal controlled. Provides stable operation on 20 meters with a power output of nearly 3 watts. Est. cost: $20.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1979 (v.35#2) pg. 56

How to build a stable, two-band (3.5 & 7 MHz) v.f.o. for the Viking-5 transmitter featured in the Feb 1979 issue.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1979 (v.35#4) pg. 32
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1979 (v.35#8) pg. 18

R.F. output measurement. Part 1. Input vs. Output power. Which is better?
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1979 (v.35#6) pg. 66

R.F. output measurement. Part 2. Building a wattmeter, an R.F. probe, and an in-line SWR/Wattmeter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1979 (v.35#7) pg. 28

CORRECTIONS to the QRP-420XC low power transceiver which appeared in a series of four articles in past CQ magazines (Nov 1977, Dec 1977, May 1978 & Oct 1978).
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1979 (v.35#7) pg. 62

An updated "Shoebox" linear amplifier. Part 1. A kilowatt linear amplifier built around five 6KD6 sweep tubes.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1979 (v.35#8) pg. 20

A two-band V.F.O. for 80 and 40 meters is capable of driving the Viking-5 transmitter on both bands.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1979 (v.35#11) pg. 51

An updated "shoebox" Linear Amplifier. Part 2.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1980 (v.36#1) pg. 13

A power amplifier for 10 meter F.M.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1980 (v.36#2) pg. 38

How to attach the vacuum relay break-in (QSK) system to the Drake T4XC-R4 combination transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1980 (v.36#3) pg. 12

Using the Drake 2B receiver with the Heath HW101 transceiver. Includes helpful modifications to the HW101.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1980 (v.36#3) pg. 24

A VXO (variable crystal oscillator) transmitter. Uses a 6L6 tube and crystal to tune the 80 meter Novice band. Capable of delivering 10 to 15 watts.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1980 (v.36#5) pg. 12

The Viking 3x5. A solid state 4 watt V.F.O. transceiver for 20 meters. Part 1. QRPp unit fits into a 3"x5"x1" box.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1980 (v.36#5) pg. 24

High S.W.R. protection for transceivers and amplifiers. This system allows a transceiver to be used with any antenna (or no antenna) without damage to the radio.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1980 (v.36#5) pg. 63

The "Frugal Final". A low-cost multi-band linear amplifier. Uses a 4-400A commercial broadcasting tube which may be available free from your local radio station. Operates on 40, 20, 15, and 10 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1980 (v.36#7) pg. 8

Schematic for a tone burst circuit accessory for the Yaesu FT-207R microprocessor based 2 meter handi-talkie. Accompanies an article reviewing the FT-207R.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1980 (v.36#7) pg. 64

The Viking 3x5. A solid-state 4 watt V.F.O. transceiver for 20 meters. Part 2.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1980 (v.36#8) pg. 14

Turn a Collins S-line transmitter into a c.w. transceiver with the addition of a full break-in (QSK) and a modified b.f.o. circuit and trap filter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1980 (v.36#9) pg. 42

Converting the Sears-Roebuck 40 channel S.S.B. Citizens Band rig to 10 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1980 (v.36#11) pg. 59

The Viking 3x5. A solid-state state 4 watt V.F.O. transceiver for 20 meters. Part 3. Additional information.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1980 (v.36#12) pg. 98
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1981 (v.37#1) pg. 48

Simple inverse switching for the Kenwood TR-7400A two meter transceiver allows you to listen to the input side of the repeater.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1981 (v.37#1) pg. 62

Build a noise operated COR (carrier operated relay) for a repeater.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1981 (v.37#2) pg. 18

Improve the selectivity of your TS-820 transceiver. Requires no holes. Est. cost: $60.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1981 (v.37#3) pg. 58
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1981 (v.37#7) pg. 104

Build a two-chip c.w. transmitter for 80 or 40 meters capable of delivering between 160 and 200 milliwatts. Uses only two logic chips, three coils, a crystal and a handful of resistors and capacitors.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Oct 1981 (v.37#10) pg. 9

How to modify Radio Shacks' Archer Space Patrol walkie-talkie to transmit on six meters. Useful only over a very short range with its 50 milliwatts of power.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Oct 1981 (v.37#10) pg. 100

The 30 meter band. How to modify some currently available gear for 30 meters, plus antenna hints for getting the signal out.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1983 (v.39#2) pg. 17

Converting the Swan 350C to 30 meters with a quick and simple modification.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1983 (v.39#2) pg. 23

How to modify older receivers and transmitters to operate on new amateur bands (12, 18 and 30 meters).
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1983 (v.39#2) pg. 31

Construct your own 80 meter QRP/QSK c.w. transceiver. Includes complete break-in operation with no relays, a tunable receiver offset, battery low voltage indicator, and a side tone for monitoring.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1983 (v.39#6) pg. 13

QRP transmitter is built into a small 4"x6" card file box. Built around one of the popular TTL series IC's and two or three transistors. Tunes from 80 to 20 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1983 (v.39#6) pg. 26

Build a one-tube, 10 watt c.w. transmitter on a 4"x5"x1" chassis, complete with power supply.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1983 (v.39#6) pg. 46

Build a pocket-size 30 meter QRP transceiver with internal NiCad battery pack, v.f.o. and speaker.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1983 (v.39#6) pg. 76

Replace the hardwired power-up frequency selector of the Heath VF-7401 two meter transceiver with this programmable frequency selector.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1983 (v.39#7) pg. 40

How to add 30 meters to the Yaesu FT-901 transceiver. Est. cost: $20.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1983 (v.39#12) pg. 40

More convenient mode switching for the ETO Alpha 78 linear amplifier requires only simple modifications.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1984 (v.40#1) pg. 18
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1984 (v.40#2) pg. 94

Modifications for the Heath HW-100 & HW-101. Includes an RIT control, 25 kHz divider, selectable AGC recovery time, and LED bargraph S-meter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1984 (v.40#3) pg. 22

Simple, easily assembled T-R switch compatible with a low-power c.w. transmitter. Est. cost: $10.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1984 (v.40#3) pg. 57

How to build a portable QRP station. Utilizes a converted Sony ICF-7600 receiver and a nominal 5 watt, v.f.o.-controlled 40 meter transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1984 (v.40#6) pg. 18

A 160 meter conversion for the Heath SB-201 and SB-200 linear amplifier.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1984 (v.40#6) pg. 51

Construct a dual-purpose battery pack for the ICOM IC-2, 3, 4AT series of handheld transceivers.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1984 (v.40#7) pg. 33

How to add a c.w. break-in circuit to the Kenwood TR-9000 transceiver.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1984 (v.40#12) pg. 54
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1985 (v.41#3) pg. 8

Build a 40 meter tube-type breadboard c.w. transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1985 (v.41#1) pg. 22
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1985 (v.41#6) pg. 8

A bare bones linear amplifier project will deliver 500 watts to an antenna. Uses a 3-500Z vacuum tube. Est. cost: $100.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1985 (v.41#3) pg. 13

Using the Heathkit DX-60 transmitter on 30 meters without modification.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1985 (v.41#3) pg. 90

How to get quick repeater selection on the Azden PCS-4000 2 meter transceiver.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1985 (v.41#6) pg. 47

How to build a 2 and 10 meter repeater system on a shoestring budget.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1985 (v.41#6) pg. 48

How to convert a Drake L4B from a pair of 3-500Z's to one 3CX1200A7 tube. Includes instructions for building a high voltage power supply for the new tube.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Oct 1985 (v.41#10) pg. 33
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1986 (v.42#1) pg. 8

How to build a low-price kilowatt amplifier. Est. cost: $200.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1985 (v.41#12) pg. 13

Build a homebrew linear amplifier using 813 tubes.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1986 (v.42#12) pg. 13

Mini-30. How to convert the "classic" QRP transceiver for operation on 30 meters. This pocket-size transmitter includes its own rechargeable battery.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1987 (v.43#2) pg. 62
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1987 (v.43#5) pg. 114

An economical way to refire the Clipperton L power amplifier. How to substitute inexpensive 811 tubes for very-expensive 572B tubes and still output about 700 watts CW.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1987 (v.43#3) pg. 62

Beef up your Heathkit SB-200/220 linear amplifier power supply.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1987 (v.43#5) pg. 48

An easy-to-build 8877 legal-limit amplifier for six meters. The first of four amplifiers which use a common power supply.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1987 (v.43#6) pg. 28

Factory-recommended field modification for Microwave Modules Ltd. 6-meter linear transverter model MMT50/28S will increase selectivity of older units.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1988 (v.44#5) pg. 64

Schematics for two classic vacuum-tube transmitters for 30 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1988 (v.44#6) pg. 64

Your first homebrew QRP rig. Build the TWOFER, a very low power transmitter that will work on 80, 40, 20, and 15 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1988 (v.44#6) pg. 70

CPR for dead HT batteries. (1) Helpful ideas on how to breathe more life into moribund nickel-cadmium packs. (2) Build a conversion unit that allows a HT to be powered by dry cell battery packs.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1988 (v.44#12) pg. 48

Add a variable power control to the Kenwood TS-930S. This modification lets SSB/CW power be continuously variable in the normal fashion, with ALC provided at any preset level of power.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1989 (v.45#1) pg. 58

Build a rechargeable, replacement battery pack for the Santec ST144UP 2-meter handheld transceiver. Est. cost: $17.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1989 (v.45#1) pg. 64

Classic rigs for your classic keys. Schematic diagrams of two 1930s-vintage transmitters which are easy to assemble and produce an impressive low-power signal on today's HF bands. (1) Double M Special. (2) Tri-Setter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1989 (v.45#3) pg. 66

Update on the HF WARC bands (12, 17, and 30 meters). Includes antenna dimensions for WARC-band operations and tips on transceivers.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1989 (v.45#6) pg. 70

Superhet 30 meter QRP transceiver project. Part 1.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1989 (v.45#11) pg. 32

A superhet 30 meter QRP transceiver project. Part 2.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1989 (v.45#12) pg. 32

Superhet 30 meter QRP transceiver project. Part 3. Conclusion.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1990 (v.46#1) pg. 28

More classic rigs described. (1) 1934 "Globe Trotter" receiver. (2) 1928 "Gil Classic" transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1990 (v.46#2) pg. 74
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1990 (v.46#5) pg. 8

Two easy-to-duplicate transmitters right out of the 1940s and early 1950s. (1) John Ruskin Special 6L6 transmitter. (2) Li'l Buddy QRP transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1990 (v.46#3) pg. 76
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1990 (v.46#6) pg. 8

Bigger is better. A dedicated 160 meter KW amplifier. Schematic and mechanical diagrams included.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1990 (v.46#4) pg. 52

The QRP-15 CW transceiver. A 15 meter (21 MHz) version of the 20 meter QRP transceiver which appeared in Ham Radio (Jan. 1989).
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1990 (v.46#9) pg. 43

An improved crystal-stabilized version of the classic Crystal Hartley transmitter. Runs 2 watts on 30 or 40 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1991 (v.47#9) pg. 102

The Transformerless Wonder. A 3 watt 30-meter transmitter that uses a floating ground and must be constructed on a wooden chassis.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1991 (v.47#9) pg. 105

Semiconductor Space Scanner. Construct a replica of one of the first home brewed solid-state transmitters (circa 1950s) which ran 90 milliwatts on 15 meters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1991 (v.47#9) pg. 106

The QRP-20 Plus 20 meter CW transceiver. How to build and enjoy using an expanded version of a popular kit.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1991 (v.47#11) pg. 20
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1992 (v.48#1) pg. 8
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1992 (v.48#4) pg. 120

QRP fun. Part 1. Miniature QRP keys with built-in transmitters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1992 (v.48#2) pg. 96

QRP fun. Part 2. Two ultra-low-cost and easy-to-build transmitter projects.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1992 (v.48#3) pg. 106

Overview on 2 meter duplexers and repeaters and how they work.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1992 (v.48#7) pg. 48

Modifications for Heathkit power amplifiers. (1) Meter protection. (2) Flashover tube protector. (3) Saturated transistor antenna switch.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1992 (v.48#9) pg. 46

Classic radio circuit reproductions. (1) QRP Midget tube-type 30 meter transmitter (circa 1967). (2) 1940s-style Low Boy 6L6 transmitter. (3) 1930s-style Hartley transmitter. (4) 1920s-style one-tube oscillodyne receiver.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1992 (v.48#11) pg. 126

Classic radio circuit reproductions. (1) PeeWee AM transmitter. (2) 1940s two-tube Superhet receiver. (3) 1930s-style push-pull two-tube oscillator transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1993 (v.49#1) pg. 78

QRP transmitter projects. (1) Oner is built on 1" square PC board and outputs 1 watt. (2) Sweet Nuttin' 30 meter pocket-size transceiver.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1993 (v.49#2) pg. 92

The 40 meter fun machine. How to build a 2 watt, 40 meter CW QRP transceiver in six steps. Part 1.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1993 (v.49#7) pg. 34
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1993 (v.49#12) pg. 50

The 40 meter fun machine. Part 2. The transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1993 (v.49#8) pg. 38
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1993 (v.49#12) pg. 50

The 40 meter fun machine. Part 3. The VFO and push-push doubler circuit.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1993 (v.49#9) pg. 50
Correction CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1993 (v.49#12) pg. 50

The 40 meter fun machine. Part 4. Product detector, audio preamplifier, and RC active filter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Oct 1993 (v.49#10) pg. 46

The 40 meter fun machine. Part 6. The AGC circuit and SWR bridge.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1993 (v.49#12) pg. 44

Homebrew classics from the 1950s. Part 1. Schematic for a crystal-controlled 6L6 tube-type transmitter which features wide range pi-net output, and runs 3 to 6 watts output.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1994 (v.50#2) pg. 97

Homebrew classics from the 1950s. Part 2. Schematic for the famous 6AG7 transmitter (80 meters or 40 meters).
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1994 (v.50#3) pg. 111

Constructing the classic 1960s "Bare Essentials" transmitter from "Electronics Illustrated" magazine. Uses a 50C5 miniature tube, transformerless voltage-doubler power supply, and basic crystal-oscillator arrangement. Output power is between 5 and 8 watts.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Oct 1994 (v.50#10) pg. 116

Getting started with QRP (low-power) amateur radio. Schematics for building a simple 1/4-watt CW transmitter, boosting the power to 1 watt, adding a keying switch, shifting the frequency, etc.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1994 (v.50#12) pg. 94
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1997 (v.53#8) pg. 44

Schematic for a simple 1932-style phone transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1994 (v.50#12) pg. 104

Schematic for an ultra-simple QRP transmitter is based on the HA7210 self-contained crystal oscillator IC.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1995 (v.51#3) pg. 104

Internationally famous two-chip 250 milliwatt QRP transmitter uses four 1.25 volt mini cells for power.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1995 (v.51#8) pg. 71

Build a battery powered QRP setup consisting of a one-tube regenerative receiver and 500 milliwatt 1S4 transmitter. Covers 80 and 40 meters and shortwave between 3.5 and 9 MHz.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1995 (v.51#9) pg. 48

How to build a QRP transceiver for the novice 15 meter band.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1995 (v.51#11) pg. 11

Schematic for a "one chip" micro-power 6 meter FM transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1995 (v.51#12) pg. 58

Schematic for a 1933-style phone transmitter for 10 meters that is thoroughly modern.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Dec 1995 (v.51#12) pg. 108

A typical QRP CW transmitter circuit and design philosophy. Useful information when developing circuits of your own or troubleshooting existing QRP transmitters.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1996 (v.52#3) pg. 80

Micronaut, an ultra-low-power transmitter for "sport QRP". Homebrewed batteries which power the Micronaut utilize ordinary hardware and "Tabasco" sauce. Part 1.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1996 (v.52#4) pg. 48

Micronaut. Part 2. Building from scratch vs. kit building.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL May 1996 (v.52#5) pg. 68
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Mar 1997 (v.53#3) pg. 74
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1997 (v.53#8) pg. 59

Build your own 30 meter QRP transceiver. It is a single-down-conversion superhet with two IF crystal filers and a 400 Hz audio filter for selectivity.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jun 1996 (v.52#6) pg. 11

Build a 40 meter QRP Titan 5-watt CW transmitter.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jul 1996 (v.52#7) pg. 66

An ultra-simple QRP transmitter for 80 meters utilizes the Analog Devices' AD811AN op-amp.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1996 (v.52#8) pg. 60

"Big Daddy" Hartley. Constructing a replica of a 1929 "big bottle" vacuum tube radio transmitter for use on today's bands.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1996 (v.52#11) pg. 72

A 1997 rendition of the ever-popular 1967 "Sucrets" box twins. A miniature transmitter (Wee Mitter) and receiver (Wee Ceiver) each of which uses a "Sucrets" throat lozenge box as the chassis.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1997 (v.53#4) pg. 40

Circuit for a simple 1938-style 50 watt transmitter with vacuum-tube keyer.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Apr 1997 (v.53#4) pg. 54

The QRP 30 Plus. A compact 30 meter transceiver project for the more experienced builder. Features a selectable RF output of either 4 or 8 watts and uses a sensitive superhet receiver with a sharply peaked audio output at about 750 Hz. Could be used for other bands by modifying the tuned circuit.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Jan 1998 (v.54#1) pg. 9

A QRP high-power AM transmitter circuit for 75 meters that uses one of four alternative power amplifier tubes.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Feb 1998 (v.54#2) pg. 22

Circuit diagram for the miniature Tixie QRP transceiver. Includes tips on constructing the Tixie kit from Embedded Research and modifying the circuit for other bands.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Aug 1998 (v.54#8) pg. 64
Added Info CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1998 (v.54#9) pg. 51

Homebrewing surface-mount style. Assembly tips for three QRP kit projects that utilize SMT devices. Kits include an ultra-small Pixie transceiver, a universal DC-to-DC converter, and a deluxe-featured electronic keyer.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Sep 1998 (v.54#9) pg. 46

Vintage tubes and classic rigs. Part 1. (1) Starting a mini-collection of classic vacuum tubes. (2) Classic Western Electric WE311B 40 meter transmitter circuit diagram and construction tips. (3) Classic spider-web-coil equipped Reinartz 2 receiver circuit diagram and construction tips.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Oct 1998 (v.54#10) pg. 40

Vintage tubes and classic rigs. Part 2. (1) 35T triode vacuum tube transmitter circuit diagram and construction tips. (2) Twin 75TL tube RF amplifier circuit diagram and construction tips.
CQ. THE RADIO AMATEUR'S JOURNAL Nov 1998 (v.54#11) pg. 48

Modifying the Kenwood TS-940 transceiver for improved split mode operation.
DX MAGAZINE Jan 1990 (v.2#1) pg. 22

Simple modification of the Yaesu FT-101 and other rigs can eliminate transmitting on the wrong VFO in a split operation.
DX MAGAZINE Apr 1991 (v.3#4) pg. 36

Gaseous-state transmitter uses a 6L6/GC vacuum tube, wooden chassis, and a power transformer from an old TV set to put a 25-watt CW signal on the 40-meter band.
ELECTRONICS HOBBYISTS HANDBOOK 1989 pg. 128

Three-unit, 2-band ham station for $50.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Sep 1963 (v.6#5) pg. 57

Auto switching from transmit to receive and back again.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Nov 1963 (v.6#6) pg. 33

Compressor-limiter for CB and ham keeps modulation level the same.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED May 1964 (v.7#3) pg. 47

Crystal-controlled 80 and 40 meter CW transmitter with input power up to 10 watts.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Sep 1964 (v.7#5) pg. 51

Ham/CB in-line modulation monitor.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Nov 1964 (v.7#6) pg. 81

Two transistor, battery-operated CW rig has 1/2 watt input power.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Sep 1965 (v.8#5) pg. 83

Portable 40 watt, 80 meter transceiver fits into attache case and weighs 10 lbs.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Nov 1965 (v.8#6) pg. 53

"Mini-Mitter". A 28.5 oz. transmitter that can put a clean 15-watt (input power) signal on the 40-meter band. Uses two tubes.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Mar 1966 (v.9#2) pg. 27

"The Flexible Flea". A flea-power transmitter (100 milliwatts to 5 watts) which works on 20-, 40-, and 80-meters. Uses one tube.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED May 1966 (v.9#3) pg. 69

A 40-watt channelized ham transmitter. Designed for instant frequency changes with the ease and convenience of CB channel switching. Features an 11-position switch.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Jul 1966 (v.9#4) pg. 65

A one-tube transmitter for the 40-meter band. Has 15-watt input and 6-watt output. Est. cost: $15.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Mar 1967 (v.10#2) pg. 100

A 160-meter ham station. Part 2. The transmitter, 100 watts input on AM phone or CW.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Sep 1967 (v.10#5) pg. 67

Three-transistor transmitter for 80-meter band with 2.5 watts input. Fits in a small carrying case along with a transistor radio which is used as the receiver. Battery powered.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Jan 1968 (v.11#1) pg. 57

A 40- and 80-meter CW transmitter contains only the bare essentials and costs only $7 to build.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Mar 1968 (v.11#2) pg. 29

Junior ham transmitter is a modulated CW rig which operates in the 27-mc license-free band. Input limited to 100 mw.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED May 1968 (v.11#3) pg. 86

Wireless CW monitor is triggered by the transmitter's RF output of 30 watts or more. Est. cost: $10.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Jul 1968 (v.11#4) pg. 93

A 20-watt transmitter that operates on 40- or 80-meters by changing coils. Est. cost: $20.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Sep 1968 (v.11#5) pg. 42

Robot operator transmits audio material recorded on a 2- or 4-track tape recorder over ham radio.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED May 1969 (v.12#3) pg. 42

Crystal-controlled solid-state ham transmitter for 40- and 80- meters uses two transistors for 18 watts of input power.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Jan 1971 (v.14#1) pg. 25

Filter eliminates spurious harmonic radiation from any low-power transmitter (under 100 watts input).
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED May 1971 (v.14#3) pg. 60

Flea power ham transmitter puts out 1 watt with a 12-volt power source.
ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Sep 1972 (v.15#5) pg. 32

A 40-meter ham transmitter with continuously variable power inputs from 1/4 to 20 watts.
ELEMENTARY ELECTRONICS Nov-Dec 1970 (v.10#5) pg. 75

Gaseous-state transmitter. Inexpensive 25-watt transmitter for the 40-meter ham band uses a 6L6/GC vacuum tube, a wooden chassis, and a power transformer from an old TV set.
HANDS-ON ELECTRONICS Nov 1987 (v.4#11) pg. 63

Those indestructible novice transmitters. A review of 1950's crystal-controlled novice transmitters for morse code. Tips on locating and using these old tube-style transmitters.
HANDS-ON ELECTRONICS Dec 1988 (v.5#12) pg. 43

Myths and misinterpretations surrounding the use of high-power linear amplifiers for boosting a signal.
HANDS-ON ELECTRONICS Jan 1989 (v.6#1) pg. 92

Build a license-free transmitter for 1,700 meters.
MODERN ELECTRONICS [2] Sep 1987 (v.4#9) pg. 78

Vacuum-tube transmitter will send code transmissions in the 40-meter amateur band. A low-power (QRP) one-tube unit based around a type-3A5 twin-triode vacuum tube. Powered by a 3-volt and a 135-volt battery. Est. cost: $100 (kit).
POPTRONIX HOBBYISTS HANDBOOK Winter 1996 pg. 19

Choosing your first ham station rig. Includes a list of equipment readily available on the used market.
POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Jan 1990 (v.8#5) pg. 55

Convert CB walkie-talkies to 6, 10 or 15 meter operation.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Apr 1964 (v.20#4) pg. 61

Short-range CW transistorized transmitter doubles as a CPO.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] May 1964 (v.20#5) pg. 89

Transistorized transmitter tune-up meter circuit.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Aug 1964 (v.21#2) pg. 77

Companion 6-meter phone transmitter has only two tubes.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Sep 1964 (v.21#3) pg. 53

Paragon 144. A 2-meter phone transmitter rated at 20 watts input on AM phone.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Apr 1965 (v.22#4) pg. 55
Correction POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jun 1965 (v.22#6) pg. 12

Single transistor flea-power "Milliwatter" transmits readable CW signals over a distance of 3 miles without a battery by using a steam-driven generator.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jul 1965 (v.23#1) pg. 55

Camper's special, a battery operated 80-meter CW transmitter for use in the field or as a standby. Est. cost: under $10.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Aug 1965 (v.23#2) pg. 48

Converting a 6-meter transmitter to FM by means of this FM modulator will eliminate television interference.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Feb 1967 (v.26#2) pg. 73

The incredible VFO. A stable, passive, variable-frequency oscillator (VFO) eliminates the need for crystals on some transmitters.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Apr 1967 (v.26#4) pg. 69

Amateur radio for CB'ers. How to convert a citizens band radio to the 10-meter amateur band as an inexpensive start in amateur radio. Part 1.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] May 1967 (v.26#5) pg. 51

Amateur radio for CB'ers. How to convert a citizens band radio to the 10-meter amateur band as an inexpensive start in amateur radio. Part 2.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jun 1967 (v.26#6) pg. 59

Build the QRP midget. A two-tube battery-powered transmitter that will fit in the palm of your hand. Works on 80-, 40-, or 20-meter CW with 2.5 watts input. Est. cost: $10.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jul 1967 (v.27#1) pg. 51

Hart-65 transmitter. Novice CW transmitter with an input of 65 watts for the 80- and 40-meter bands. Use only one tube. Designed for minimum television interference. Est. cost: $20.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Oct 1967 (v.27#4) pg. 41

Modulation monitor for ham and CB AM phone transmissions.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Mar 1968 (v.28#3) pg. 35

Convert a low-cost, low-power AM multiband amateur transmitter, like the Globe Scout 680, to a modern 6-meter rig.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jun 1968 (v.28#6) pg. 33

Low-cost, low-power 40-meter transmitter delivers up to 10 watts. Est. cost: $25.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Mar 1969 (v.30#3) pg. 48

Battery-operated 40-meter transmitter uses a FET crystal-oscillator and ferrite toroid core coil.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Feb 1971 (v.34#2) pg. 39

One-watt transmitter for the 1750 meter (160-190 kHz )band requires no operator's license.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jan 1972 (v.1#1) pg. 58

How to calculate actual effective radiated transmitter power and some ways to improve on it.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] May 1973 (v.3#5) pg. 34

Getting the most from your transmitter. Some helpful hints for the ham or CB'er.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Aug 1973 (v.4#2) pg. 94

Resurrecting an old amateur radio transmitter. What to look for when purchasing and restoring old ham equipment.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] May 1989 (v.6#5) pg. 96

Economy Six. Build a 6-watt Morse-code transmitter for the 40-meter band. Est. cost: $20.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Aug 1992 (v.9#8) pg. 45

The use of double-balanced frequency mixers in ham radio equipment.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Oct 1994 (v.11#10) pg. 87

Build a vacuum-tube transmitter for the 40-meter amateur band. This low-power (QRP) code sender operates on batteries. Est. cost: $100 (kit).
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Feb 1996 (v.13#2) pg. 31

Getting started in QRP. Part 2. Tips on building and operating the Ramsey QRP-30 (30-meters) transmitter kit.
POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Dec 1998 (v.15#12) pg. 55

A 6-meter, solid-state, 1/4 watt walkie-talkie transmitter. Est. cost: $35.
RADIO-TV EXPERIMENTER #780 Apr-May 1966 (v.20#2) pg. 29

An ideal first transmitter for the novice ham. Has one tube and 3-band switching. Can be used to tune the 20-meter band when general-class license is secured. Est. cost: $30. (less crystals).
RADIO-TV EXPERIMENTER #806 Oct-Nov 1966 (v.21#2) pg. 39

Tips on eliminating "chirp", the carrier shifting in frequency each time the transmitter is keyed.
RADIO-TV EXPERIMENTER Apr-May 1967 (v.22#2) pg. 69

Two circuits for flea-power transmitters. One operates on a 3.5- to 3.8-MHz CW band and the second is equipped for both phone and CW on the 15-meter band.
RADIO-TV EXPERIMENTER Feb-Mar 1968 (v.24#1) pg. 50

Four-band QRP low-power transmitter has less than 10 watts input using a 6-volt DC power source. Output is either on the 15-, 20-, 40-, or 80-meter amateur CW bands. Entire unit fits in a 4"x4"x6" case.
RADIO-TV EXPERIMENTER Feb-Mar 1968 (v.24#1) pg. 51

Modifications for the Heathkit HW-16 novice CW transceiver.
SCIENCE & ELECTRONICS [1] Aug-Sep 1970 (v.28#4) pg. 65

A 4-band CW transistorized transmitter covers 15-, 20-, 40-, and 80-meter amateur bands. Flea-powered rig (less than 10 watts input). Uses a six or nine volt power source.
SCIENCE & ELECTRONICS [1] Dec 1970-Jan 1971 (v.28#6) pg. 35

Battery-powered code monitor allows sender to hear the code being transmitted.
SCIENCE & MECHANICS May 1968 (v.39#5) pg. 88