Puxing radio – again..! Great radio

Puxing 777

This is my second blog post about these dirt cheap handheld radios (VHF and UHF). Over the past year I’ve bought more of these radioes. This time I bought the Puxing 888 that is a better version of the Puxing 777. I dont know why people must bust expensive Icom, Yaesu, Kenwood etc radioes when you can get a inexpensive “china-radio” for under 70$! These radio are maybe not so robust, but I drop my handhelds from time to time and everyone works just perfect today. Another benefit are all the cheap accessories like earpieace, extra battery, desktop chargers etc.

Here you can read reviews on these radioes

Here is a youtube video on the radio

And here you can buy radio and accessories

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Radio Remote Control 1258 – Remote control your ham radio

RRC-1258 – A complete remote control system for Amateur Radio

I Can really recommend this product for remote control you HF / VHF / UHF Ham radio over the internet. This is much better than the “usual” solution with a computer and skype. With this setup you don’t need a computer at all. All you need is a supported ham radio like Icom IC-706, Kenwood TS-480 and Kenwood TS-2000. Later this will also support Yaesu products. You also need a internet connection at both places (radio/server location and “client” location).. So now my radio are at home, and my front on my Icom IC-706 is at my office desk..

You can read more at www.remoterig.com

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SWR meter – how to measure your antenna

A SWR meter is a very important antenna measure equipment. Everyone that have a radio transmitter need this handy instrument. So If you are an radioamateur, CB radio/walkie talkie user or maybe you have a marine VHF radio in your boat, will need this instrument to tune your antenna for the frequency you want to use. If you forget to tune your antenna, parts, or all power you transmit to your antenna will reflect back to the radio and damage your transmitter.

Under you can see a video on youtube on how to use a SWR meter.

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The vertical groundplane (GP) antenna

The GP antenna is a very popular antenna. You can use it for every freqency you want as long it’s cut to the correct length. It’s a excellent HF antenna or 27 mhz CB antenna (PR-27).  The typical groundplane antenna is 1/4, 1/2 or 5/8 wavelength long.  The different length have different characteristics. 

The 1/4 will be shorter than the 1/2 or 5/8 wavelength antenna and will have a higher take-off-angle (shorter skip distance). On the other hand the antenna may work  better in a valley. (The signals will shoot out of the valley.  A 5/8 will maybe shoot the signals straight in to the mountains). Read more about take-off-angle here: http://megahertz-radio.com/2008/11/28/skip-distance-and-radiation-angle-toa/ 

The design of the antenna:

gp1

Before you build this antenna, choose your desired length after your needs. If you have the space and area for a big antenna you should make the 1/2 or 5/8 antenna. It will be a better long distance antenna. If yo want to make local contacts in your area you go for the shorter 1/4. 

Here is a little calulator: http://www.csgnetwork.com/antennagpcalc.html

The calulator is for the 1/4 antenna. The 1/2 antenna is double the length and so on. 

Radials and where to install the antenna:

Many places I see a CB antenna without any radials. Well It will look good, but that is not a very efficient antenna. The radial system is HALF the antenna. So a decent radial system will make this to a good antenna. So a home made GP antenna will often be better than a one you buy. 

If you mount the antenna on the ground (GROUNDplane antenna…) you will need a lot of radials. The radials should be from 1/10 wavelength up to 1/2 – 1 wavelength long. The length is not important when them are on the ground. You should lay down ATLEAST 8 radials. If you have the land, the “optimal” is 120 radials (!).  

The best way to make an efficient GP antenna is to have elevated radials. (atleast 2m above the ground). A good way is a roof-mount. This will also place the antenna over noisy obstacles and give a better “line-of-sight” coverage. The most important note for elevated installation is the radials NEED to be correct lengt. (ex. 1/4 long). Opposite of the groundmounted antenna where you can use random length.  You dont need more than 4 radials with this setup and will give you an excellent radial system. 

Read more on radials: http://www.steppir.com/files/radial%20systems%20for%20vertical%20antennas.pdf

 

gp2gp3

The GP antenna is fun and easy to build. with some meters with wire and a fishing-pole you can make this in minutes and you dont need a balun or a matching network. Just hook  it up to your 50 ohm coax and straight to your radio.  Before you transmit you need to check your SWR or you can blow your finals. If you have a low/high SWR the antenna is to short or to long.  If you like to build antennas, I recommend that you buy a MFJ 259B  antenna analyzer. (link)

More about SWR (link)

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Feidaxin FDC FD-150A/450A – Handheld VHF/UHF radio

FDC  FD-150A/450A

The first VHF radio I imported was a Feidaxin FDC FD-150A. This is a 2m (or 70cm) handheld radio. The price is about 60$USD. It’s a full 5 watt transmitter with everything you need. (Simplex, Duplex, CTCSS, DCS, memories..)

for 60 dollars this is a fantastic radio, but some drawbacks are there:

- Poor selectivity. 

- Useless S-meter

- no 1750 hz (for opening repeaters)

- Like every other handheld: useless original antenna. 

- When scanning, it will continue to scan after 5 seconds even if it’s traffic on the frequency. 

The last year I bought 8 of these radioes on all work great! Can use if for hunting, amateurradio and even listening at the police, firedepartment etc. 

Reviews: http://www.eham.net/reviews/detail/7191

Buy: http://www.asiaradiosales.com

 

PS: This radio work like a dream in a APRS setup. (GPS Tracking)

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Windows XP will continue to live on in 2009!

Windows XP - en gamling som alle er glad i, og som nekter å dø...

A great news from Microsoft. Ealier this year Microsoft decided to put the last nail in the coffin for Windows XP.  The date was 30. june 2008.  The new expire date is now 30. May 2009. Almost one  year extension. 

The main reason for this is that Windows Vista require up-to-date hardware to run smoothly on todays new “mini-computers”. Like the Asus EEE, Acer OneNote or MSI Wind. Microsoft will make a load of license-money on these small computers. 

When we hit 30. may 2009, I’ll think a new Beta of Windows 7 will be floating the net. I testet a pre-beta of Windows 7 and the new operating system was running smoothly with only 768MB RAM.  I think Windows 7 will be a “lightweight” of Windows Vista, but with extended functionalitys and improved GUI. 2009/2010 will be a good year for Micorsoft. 

It’s good to see Microsoft tune and tweek their OS for low-spec computers!

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Homemade 1/2 wave vertical antenna for Ham radio and CB/Walkie-Talkie

I made a blogpost about a cheap CB radio, but you will need an antenna for this. The best is to make one yourself. Homebrew antenna is easy to make, cheap and will give you a satisfaction.  Later I will post about other antenna-designs. 

 

Omnidirectional Antennas (From http://www.signalengineering.com/ultimate/verticals.html)

“Omnidirectional” is generic term for an antenna that radiates equally well in all directions. There are several antennas that are considered omnidirectional.

1/2 Wavelength Vertical

Most folks lump all vertical omnidirectional antennas into the same category and call them “Ground Planes”. A ground plane antenna is actually an antenna similar to the vertical dipole. Shown in figure 1, you can see the hollow tubing is now instead brought out at a 45 degree angle (and split into 3 sections) out from where it is on the vertical dipole. These rods are usually called “radials”. This type of antenna is really not a very high gain antenna.

Figure 1 – A ground plane antenna.

A much better type of antenna that has more gain is the 1/2 wavelength vertical (Shown in figure 2). We know that the impedance of the 1/2 dipole is 70 Ohms when we attach the coax in the middle, but what if we were to attach our coax directly to the end? The impedance at this point is high, very high, so we must make a matching device to match the antennas impedance to the 50 Ohm coax. What would happen if we did not use this matching device? Well if you have been reading along, you would know that this would result in a very very high SWR.

There are several commercial 1/2 vertical antennas available, the two that I can think of most easily is the Solarcon A99 and the Shakespeare Big Stick. They provide slightly higher gain than the vertical dipole antenna.

The bandwidth of these antennas are good, they can easily span all the CB channels and more with a low SWR.

5/8 Wavelength Vertical

A higher gain antenna than the 1/2 vertical antenna is the 5/8 vertical antenna. As we can figure from the 5/8 wavelength rating the antenna is about 22 feet long (5/8 of 36 feet). This antenna is similar to the 1/2, it needs a matching device at the base to match it to the coax, it cannot be attached directly. This antenna has about 1.2 db gain over the dipole antenna and 1/2 vertical. Figure 2 shows both a 1/2 Wave vertical and a 5/8 Wave vertical antenna. It achieves this extra gain by concentrating its pattern out more at right angles from the antenna instead of wasting signal at high angles, see figure 3.

Figure 2 – A 1/2 Wave vertical is on the left the 5/8 Wave vertical is on the right. A matching device is required to match the high impedance feedpoint of these two antennas to the 50 Ohm coax. The 5/8 Wave vertical has 1.2db more gain over the 1/2 Wave vertical.

I have just heard Solarcon is coming out with a new 5/8 antenna (its about time, this antenna design has been around since the beginning of time!). There are several 5/8 antennas, Hustler 27JR, Antenna Specialist Sigma 5/8, Maco V 5/8. They offer slightly higher gain (about 1.2db) than the popular A99 and Big Stick. Shakespeare was committing a crime claiming their ABS 1600 5/8 wave antennas had 12.5 dbi gain (the “i” means over an isotropic antenna). This was plain ridiculous. A 5/8 wave antennas is a 5/8 wave antenna. Do you think a vertical could have more gain than a beam? Never! This is the perfect example of how out of hand antenna manufactures have gotten with their advertising. Now, everyone thinks their A99 is a low gain piece of junk because Shakespeare claimed 12.5 dbi with their “new” antenna. Shakespeare no longer claims the ABS 1600 has 12.5 dbi gain, but everyone who sells it is still advertising that gain figure.

Even if you do not know the manufacture or anything about the antenna you are looking at, you can tell if the antenna is a 1/2 or 5/8 wave by its length, again 1/2 is about 18 feet and 5/8 wave is about 22 feet (at CB frequencies).

Figure 3 – How one omnidirectional antenna achieves gain over another. Note this is a view of the radiation pattern from the side (as if we were standing on the ground looking at the antenna).

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Low Cost CB Radio for 55$ Walkie-Talkie – PR27 mhz

cbradio

One day I surfed by http://www.asiaradiosales.com and I found this excellent and cheap CB radio. (27mhz). This is a lowcost 40 channel CB radio. The pricetag is 55$ USD, include shipping! As you can see this is a rather simple radio, but this is much bang for the buck. 

See more at http://www.asiaradiosales.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=109&products_id=877

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Puxing 777 – VHF or UHF, handheld radio.

Here you see a picture of the Puxing-777. This radio is DIRT CHEAP and are manufactured in Asia.  It’s  two versions of this radio. A VHF version, and a UHF.

I bought the VHF for 70$ USD from www.asiaradiosales.com earlier this year and this is the best handheld radio I ever had.  For 70$ you have a radio, beltclip, a desktop-charger and a battery. If you want better performance I recommend that you buy a longer antenna. I use a 42cm long 2m/70cm antenna from Diamond and I am very satisfied with this setup. 

I can buy 4-5 of these radioes for the price of ONE Icom / Kenwood / Yaesu. So you really don’t mind of you drop the radio to the ground and so on.  

Some friends of mine use these radioes for hunting, maritime and as a police scanner. (They only receive!) so this is a multi purpose radio. Can easily program the radio by hand, or via a computer-interface. The puxing 777 also support repeater splits and CTSS tones.  Some versions have 1750hz for opening ham radio repeaters. 

buy one at www.asiaradiosales.com . Fast delivery and shipping included in the price !!

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Amateur radio License information for Brazil – PY

Under you see some  information if you want a “visitor-license” in Brazil. That way you are allowed to use your ham radio equipment. 

Licensing information for Brazil – PY

Prepared by: OH2MCN – Veke & PY2NQ / PY1CAS
Status: April 1996, Dec ‘99 links, Jan ‘01 address of ANATEL updated

Intro: If you have a valid license you can get a visitor’s license in Brazil with the help of LABRE.

PTT:
license department in Sao Paulo 
ANATEL – Sao Paulo
Rua Vergueiro, 3073
Tel. 5576 8893 or 5576 8800
or via
Liga Brasileira de Radioamadores [LABRE]
Address: P.O. Box 00004, 70359-970 Brasilia, D.F., Brazil
Location: Setor de Clubes Esportivos Sul, Trecho 4
Lote 1/A, 70359-970 Brasilia, D.F.
Telephone: +55 (61) 223-1157 <HQ>, (84) 228-2151 <PY2BJO> 
Telefax: +55 (61) 223-1161 <HQ>
President: Mauricio Carrilho Barreto, PS7RK
Secretary: Americo Barbosa Fortes, PT2ABF
IARU liaison: Junior Torres de Castro, PY2BJO
E-mail: labre@labre.org
WWW: http://www.labre.org

Paperwork needed:
- passport
- original license
The best way to get a license:
Call regional LABRE office e.g. in Rio and ask for the director Mr. Soni (PY1SL) who will be in charge of getting a license. It takes about 20 days since the first contact with the League. LABRE/Rio de Janeiro phones: (021) 281-5868 (Voice/Fax), (021) 201-5301 (Voice), (021) 581-6273 (Voice). LABRE has also other regional offices, see above. No contact before arrival needed. 
Price:
about 35 USD

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