Amateur Radio


Grainger County, Tennessee, USA EN61bx

John McGovern

400 Burkhart Road

Rutledge, TN 37861


My first radio was the dream ham equipment of my youth; the Heathkit Twins – an SB-401 transmitter and SB-303 receiver. The aesthetics were like-new, but both needed internal TLC. I thoroughly enjoyed the restoration and decided to put together an entire station. You see, as a boy, I grew up near a Heathkit store. They had a complete ham shack in the corner, with every receiver, transmitter, transceiver, and accessory available from the catalog. Every week, hours were spent at that corner; an enthusiastic boy salivating at the newly-introduced SB Series of equipment. So now, I was off to the races to acquire and restore a complete SB station.


  • Desk:
  • SB-600 Speaker
  • SB-303 Receiver and SB 650 Digital Frequency Readout
  • SB-401 Transmitter
  • SB-200 Linear Amplifier

  • Above:
  • HD-1410 Electronic Keyer
  • HD-15 Phone Patch
  • HM-2102 Wattmeter
  • SB-630 Station Monitor
  • SB-620 "Scanalyzer" Panadapter
  • SB-610 Station Monitor
  • SB-220 Linear Amplifier under main operating position

The Heathkits were beautiful and fun, but they certainly were not state-of-the-art. I thought it was time to upgrade to a 21st Century radio and chose the Kenwood TS-2000 as it included 2 Meters and 70 Centimeters. The radio turned-out to be an extraordinary VHF/UHF rig, but without mods, was deaf as a post, particularly on HF. I also purchased the Yaesu FT-1000MP Mark V and matching FTV-1000 6 Meter transceiver. Now I had three stations - a Vintage station as well as dedicated HF/6 Meter and UHF/VHF stations setup in two operating positions!


UHF/VHF

In Northern Illinois, I was blessed with a QTH located upon a ridge with slopes that gently swept away for up to 30 miles. It was a DXer's dream. I was also lucky enough to befriend a man who became my Elmer and friend – Ron, W9ZIH; a pioneer in UHF and up. Through his mentoring and urgings, I constructed a UHF/VHF station that performed well, far beyond my wildest dreams. This station consisted of the Kenwood TS-2000, now, with the PIN diode mod, teamed with W9ZIH preamps for 2 and 432 to help the ears. For talking, I modified an AM-6155 power amplifier for 2 meters, and used a 2 x 4CX250 W9ZIH amp for 432 (ultimately replaced by another AM-6155 modified for this band). Outside, were a pair of Cushcraft A719B’s nested between stacked Cushcraft 215WBs at 70’. The boom of these arrays was welded to a plate and mounted in a Yaesu G-5500 Alti-Azimuth rotor to provide vertical as well as horizontal polarization. The combination was fantastic.

SSB on 2 Meters and 432 was just too easy, so I found much joy on 2 Meter Simplex much to my Elmer’s dismay. On so many summer evenings, I held QSO’s on 155.52 MHz with a group in Kokomo, some 220 miles away. We spoke with ease and the Locals thought I was messing with them. I longed for openings on weekend mornings, where I would join Simplex conversations states away. One Sunday morning, there were two gentlemen I hadn’t heard before, so I dropped the Call on them. They were east of Pittsburg, PA, more than 440 miles away. We chewed for a half an hour before the Locals began to step on them. I don’t think they believed I was really in Illinois until they got my QSL cards.


Ron, was always urging me into uncharted territory. Amateur Television was next. I found a 2W ATV transceiver and a D1010 at a hamfest, bought a remote-control camera, dug up my old video equipment, and got on the air. ATV turned-out to be very technically challenging. The ZIH UHF 4CX250 amp had to be broadbanded to accept the NTSC bandwidth, monitors proved finiky, finally settled on a vintage Zenith that performed very well (seen above the Heatkits). Of course, there was the obligatory receive preamp and a SAW filter that Ron found somewhere. I was so into it I even found myself writing an article for Amateur Television Quarterly. Phew! For all my work however, I never could perform as well as my friend Ron nor Dwight, WA9EUN. These guys were hard-core, had been around the block way too long, and were way too smart. They truly had ATV superstations.


HF/6 Meters

The Mark was fed into the Heathkit SB-220 outputting to various dipoles and arrays, while the 6 Meter transverter operated barefoot at 200 Watts into a simple dipole (after all, it WAS 6 Meters!). For HF, I had wire everywhere and a Mosley PRO-67-C-3 at 80’. The Yagi was a PIA. It was big and heavy, with no way to get to the feed point without dropping the tower and standing on a 12' ladder. It was also a big disappointment, as the wires out-performed the antenna, especialy on 40 Meters where I wanted it most. To all 40 Meter buffs that want gain or F/B, try phased dipoles using an LC Network for phasing. Even at 40' they will blow you away. Overall, it was a really great station, I wasn't a Contester, my code skills were embarrassing to me and it seemed Phone was nothing but rag-chewers and that bored the Hell out of me. I did get into ESSB as it allowed me to modify my radio (YES!), but the group did not seem cohesive at the time and bleeding a bit ticked-off other hams that just had to sidle up against an ESSB conversation. I can say that the audio was GREAT!



- HF station at left: Yaesu FP-8 Speaker and FT1000MP Mark V Transceiver, SB220 Linear Amplifier (below desk), Modified Kenwood SM-220 Station Monitor, Yaesu G-1000 DXA Rotator, Diawa Wattmeters for HF/6 Meters, sound processing rack for ESSB (now expanded), Heil microphones for Phone and ESSB. Yaesu SP-29 Power Supply and FTV-1000 6 Meter Transverer at center, top. - VHF/UHF station at right: 70cm Preamp for ATV, Kenwood SP-23 Speaker and TS-2000 Transceiver, Astatic Microphone with Yaesu G-800DXA Rotator and G-5500DC Alti-Azimuth Rotator, and Daiwa Wattmeter. - ATV station shown at left, Panasonic MX-12 Video Mixer, P.C. Electronics TC-70-1 transceiver and local monitor (main monitor at Heathkit station) and Mirage D-1010 at right. - Not Shown: Racks containing 50A DC supply, AM6155 2 Meter Power Amplifier, AM6155 70cm Power Amplifier, 2 x 4X250 ATV Power Amplifier with remote cooling, Video Monitors, and other equipment.


Now, I am in Tennessee and everything is different. I once again live on a ridge with a broad valley south to the Great Smokey Mountains, some 45 miles away. But, I am bounded by ridges to the east and west and the Clinch Mountain to the north. Since moving, Ham Radio still beckons me, but I have done little but install a 2/432 FM radio in my truck – and have yet to make a QSO in these here mountains. I think I have come full-circle, and going forward HF it is, for terrain and population demand it. This time, no Yagis, no towers to climb – only wire – and then maybe 4 at most. I look forward to improving my code skills for QSO's in the cellars of the bands. I’ll keep you informed!


73's

John